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Mike's Mystery

Page 6

by Gertrude Chandler Warner

"It was a very good idea," said Henry, "having Mike's Mother's Place. I

  never get tired of selling pies. The men are so glad to get them."

  Mrs. Wood said, "When you go back to school, I can hire two girls to

  help me. I know two nice girls."

  "Some day we ought to have a party," said Jessie. "The people have been

  so kind."

  "A Pie Party!" cried Benny. "Give everybody a pie."

  Mrs. Wood laughed. "Not a whole pie, Benny," she said. "We could give

  everybody a piece of pie, and some coffee."

  "And milk," said Benny.

  "Well, all right, milk," agreed Mrs. Wood.

  "Have it Saturday night, when all the men could come," said Violet.

  "Have it

  this

  Saturday night!" shouted Benny.

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  "We can ask Mr. Carter and Mr. Gardner," said Henry.

  "And we can make pies all day," said Jessie, "and have the party in the

  evening."

  Everyone thought this was a fine idea. When they told Mr. Gardner he

  laughed. He said, "Go ahead. I'll help you. It will surely be very

  lonesome here when you four Aldens go back to school in the Fall."

  Mrs. Wood and Jessie and Violet wore white. They made white caps.

  They made white caps for the boys, too. They made big white aprons. The

  boys got a printing set and printed MIKE'S MOTHER'S PLACE on the front

  of their big aprons. They had many cans of milk and hot coffee.

  Then the people began to come to the party. The two dogs ran around

  having a wonderful time. They loved everybody, and they were good dogs.

  There were plenty of chairs, because Mr. Carter had sent them. He sent

  movies too.

  He said, "I have some beautiful pictures of the

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  The Party 119

  [PICTURE NOT SHOWN]

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  South Seas. The people will like to see the banana trees and the

  monkeys."

  When it was dark, the movies began. The people sat in rows and watched

  the show. They clapped and laughed at the monkeys. Watch had a chair

  between Jessie and Benny. He watched the picture with the rest. Next

  came Mike and then Spot. Mr. Carter sat on the end near the door. All

  the windows were open and the door was open. Benny whispered to Mike,

  "This would be a good time for somebody to blow up the mine."

  "No, the watchmen are there," Mike whispered.

  Mike put his arm around Spotty's neck. Everyone looked at the picture

  except Mike. He never knew why he looked out the door, but he did and

  Spotty looked too. He saw a man walking slowly by. Then suddenly he felt

  the hair on Spotty's neck move. Spotty looked at the door and growled.

  Mr. Carter heard Spotty growl. He jumped up, and dashed out of the door.

  Mike and Spotty dashed after him.

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  They all saw a man running in the darkness. But Spotty could run faster

  than the man. Soon he caught the man's leg. He held him, growling, until

  Mr. Carter came. Mike never knew how strong Mr. Carter's hands were.

  The watchmen ran up and soon the man was taken away.

  "The man in the blue hat!" cried Mike.

  "Yes, Mike, I think it is," said Mr. Carter. "Spotty knew him."

  "Spotty ran faster than he did in the race," said Mike.

  "I guess he did," said Mr. Carter. "Now, Mike, don't say a word. Just go

  back quietly."

  "Can't I tell Ben?" asked Mike.

  "Yes, if you whisper. Don't let anyone else know about this. It will

  spoil the party."

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  CHAPTER 14

  Ben or Mike?

  When Mike and Spotty went back, Mike whispered, "Ben, we just caught the

  man in the blue hat."

  "You did?" said Benny. "Did he have on a blue hat?"

  "He didn't have on any hat at all," said Mike. "I told you he wouldn't."

  "I wish you had told me before," said Benny. "Watch and I would have

  come, too."

  "I had no time," said Mike. "Sh-h-h, don't say a word!"

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  Ben or Mike?

  Then the show was over. The lights went on. Everyone sat around eating

  pie and drinking coffee. Mr. Carter came back very quietly.

  The boys looked at him but they did not say a word.

  "It's all over," Mr. Carter whispered to Mike and Benny.

  "Where is that man?" asked Mike.

  "Well, he is in jail again. This time he will stay there," said Mr.

  Carter. "That man was wanted in four states! You boys helped me a great

  deal. "And best of all, you did not talk."

  "Wait till I tell Henry!" cried Benny. "He thinks I can't stop talking."

  "I'll tell him myself," smiled Mr. Carter. "And Jessie will like to

  know, too. She's a mother to you, Benny."

  "Yes, I know," said Benny.

  "She always keeps care of you, Ben," said Mike.

  "Takes

  care of me," said Benny.

  "Well,

  takes

  care, then," agreed Mike. He didn't

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  even start to argue. Benny was quite surprised.

  With everyone gone, the Woods, the Aldens and Mr. Carter were left alone

  in the big room.

  Mr. Carter said, "Please sit down, all of you. I want to tell you

  something."

  When they were quiet, he said, "The hunt for the man in the blue hat is

  over. The man has been caught, and the mystery is solved."

  "Oh, how?" asked Aunt Jane in excitement.

  Then Mr. Carter told her about the man. He told her about Spotty

  growling.

  "You don't need to growl any more, Spotty," said Mr. Carter. He patted

  the dog's smooth head. "The man has gone away."

  "Well, I am glad," said Violet softly. "I know it was exciting for the

  boys, but I didn't like it at all."

  "No," said Mr. Carter, looking at Violet with a smile, "neither did I."

  "Well," said Mike, "now it's all over, it was my mystery, wasn't it?"

  "Oh, no, it wasn't!" cried Benny. "It was mine!"

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  Ben or Mike 125

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  "My dog found the blue hat!" shouted Mike.

  "But my dog helped him. And Watch found the tin can!" said Benny.

  Then Mike suddenly stopped. He said, "Yes, Ben, I think it was your

  mystery after all. Because it was your mine."

  "Well," said Benny slowly, "maybe it was yours, because it was your

  house that burned up."

  "Well, well!" said Henry, smiling at Mike. "How you have changed, Mike!"

  "That's what I say," said Mrs. Wood. "Mike is getting to be a very nice,

  thoughtful boy. He doesn't argue so much. I said it did him good to play

  with Benny."

  Henry laughed. "And you remember I said it was good for Benny to play

  with Mike! They are quite a pair."

  "Yes, boys, you are quite a pai
r," said Mr. Carter. His eyes began to

  twinkle. "Let me give you something to think about. Maybe you two boys

  will be together next summer, too. But not here."

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  "Where," cried Jessie, "will we all be together?"

  "Well, you children will all be together, but the rest is a secret."

  "Oh, a secret? Grandfather's secret, I suppose," said Henry. "He is

  always a little ahead of us."

  "Yes, I can tell you that much. You children and Mike, and your

  grandfather are included in the secret."

  "And Spotty and Watch?" asked Mike.

  "Yes, Watch, but not Spotty."

  The children were thinking hard. They had no idea what it was all about.

  Jessie asked the last question. "Will you be there, too, Mr. Carter?"

  "No," said Mr. Carter. He looked at Jessie with a funny little smile.

  "And I shall certainly be very sorry for myself."

  After that, Mr. Carter shook his head at every question. He would not

  tell another thing.

  Then Mike said, "I'm not going to ask Mr. Carter any more. He don't want

  to tell us. I mean

  doesn't."

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  "Well, well, you're learning, Mike," said Henry. "Maybe you'll be a

  schoolteacher yet."

  "Oh, no, I won't. I'm going to be an FBI man," said Mike.

  "Yes, and he may," said Mr. Carter. "He and Benny talk all the time. But

  I want you all to know that they know when to keep still."

  Benny was thinking. Then he went over to Mr. Carter and put his hand on

  Mr. Carter's shoulder. "I think this really was Mike's mystery," he

  said. "It was his dog that found the hat. And he would have found it if

  I had stayed home with Grandfather, and never come out here at all."

  "Good for you, Benny," said everyone.

  "What a kind boy you are, Benny," said Mrs. Wood.

  "That was good of you, Ben," said Mike. "Thank you."

  Mike was so polite that everyone laughed. But it was Mike's mystery

  forever and ever.

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  One warm night four children

  stood in front of a bakery,

  No one knew them. No one knew

  where they had come from.

  Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny used to live alone in a

  boxcar. Now they have a home with their grandfather and

  are spending the summer out west on Mystery Ranch.

  The excitement begins when they meet their old friend,

  Mike. When Mike is blamed for starting a fire, the Boxcar

  Children know he's innocent. But can they discover who's

  really behind Mike's Mystery - before it's too late?

  Look for more Boxcar Children adventures. The books in

  this exciting series are available in hardcover from Albert

  Whitman Company.

  ALBERT

  WHITMAN

  COMPANY

 

 

 


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