The Phantom Treasure
Harriet Pyne Grove
eBook
(, Aug. 18, 2014)
âThereâs a package for you, Janet.â A smiling face was thrust within the partly open door.âApril fool,â replied Janet, not looking up from her book for a moment. Then with a twinkle in her blue eyes, she raised her hand impressively and began to recite in sonorous tones the lines that she was learning.âExactly like Miss Sanders! Do it that way in class, Janet! I dare you!ââI would, but it might hurt her feelings to do it in earnest as she does. No, I want to read poetry like Miss Hilliard,âbut I canât say that I like to commit it. I want to pick out my own kind, Allie May.âAllie May came inside the door and leaned against it. âWell, Janet,â she said, âI think that you might believe me when I tell you that there is a package for you down in the office. Honest. No April fool. Miss Hilliard said for me to tell you to come down. I donât know why she didnât give it to me to bring up. Perhaps she wants to see you anyhow. This is what she said: âJanet has a box. Please tell her to come down to the office.âââHâm. Lina and I had our light on after hours last night. But it was not long, and we had a grand excuse. Lina lost a page of her short story that she had to hand in this morning. Honestly, Allie May, is there a package for me? I never had a box in my life except things sent from the store.â Janet had put her book down now and was on her feet starting toward the door and her schoolmate.âYou havenât! Poor you! I hope that itâs a grand cake with lots of good things. Maybe the box was so big that Miss Hilliard knew I couldnât bring it up!âAllie May made big eyes as she linked her arm in Janetâs and walked with her to the top of the stairs.âIf it is, you shall have the first and the best out of it. But it isnât. Itâs probably something brought here by mistake. Thanks, Allie May.âJanet was half way down the long, dark staircase that led to the lower hall when she finished her remarks. Allie May saw her friendâs fluffy, golden locks fly out in the wind created by the rapid descent. Smiling, she went to her room, next to Janetâs, somewhat struck with the fact that Janet had never received a âbox,â that delight of a school-girlâs heart.The lower hall was dark on this rainy first of April. None of the doors were open, and Janet Eldon, slight, active girl of fourteen years, stood poised on the lower step for a few moments, looking out through the mullioned panes of the tall, wide door at the entrance. Eaves were dripping and she heard the beat of the drops upon the tin roof of a porch outside.