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"That 'nice man' must have been the detective," growled Ben. "Oh, he's a real 'nice man.' If Willie was larger I'd take the baseball bat to him for talking too much!"
"Well, you won't," warned his mother dryly. "Willie is only a baby, and didn't know what he was saying. But you'd better go and apologize to d.i.c.k Prescott."
"Huh!" was Ben's undutiful retort. Then he went outside with Toby.
"So d.i.c.k didn't tell?" mused Toby. "It was your kid brother?"
"Don't you tell that to any one!" warned Ben Alvord, flus.h.i.+ng.
"Why, you'll have to tell it yourself," protested Toby. "You'll surely have to beg d.i.c.k Prescott's pardon after what you said to him before the whole crowd. If you don't, then I'll tell myself. I'm not going to see d.i.c.k blamed for what he didn't do."
"If you blab to any one," warned Ben angrily, "I'll give you a good thras.h.i.+ng."
"Try it, and perhaps you'll get more of what d.i.c.k gave you this afternoon," Toby shot back as he walked through the gate.
Toby was as good as his word. He told the news at school the next day, and Ben Alvord's stock went even lower. After school that afternoon Dave Darrin made Ben apologize. So did Reade, Holmes, Hazelton and Dalzell.
It was a bitter pill for young Alvord to swallow. The fights that the other chums had claimed were now called off. They felt Ben to be beneath their notice.
CHAPTER XXI
AB. DEXTER MAKES A NEW MOVE
"Did you hear the latest from Ab. Dexter?" asked Dave, as he met d.i.c.k one Sat.u.r.day afternoon in November.
"No; nothing very good, was it?"
"That's hardly to be expected," laughed Dave, as the two chums came to a halt on a street corner. "Did you happen to remember that Dexter and Driggs were due to come up for trial in court this afternoon?"
"No; I had forgotten the date."
"Well, this was the day. Justice Lee, if you remember, bound them over to answer at court."
"Yes; I remember that."
"Well, neither of them showed up, and so the court declared forfeited the cash bail that Dexter put up for the pair."
"The money ought to be worth more to the county than both men put together," laughed d.i.c.k.
"I guess that's the way the court looked at it."
"I hope Dexter and Driggs are both a mighty long way from Gridley, and that they will stay. Mrs. Dexter isn't having any bother at all, these days, is she?"
"You ought to be the one to know that," teased Dave. "You're the one she sends for whenever she takes it into her head that she wants to reward us for some jolly good fun that we had in helping her."
"I had a note from Mrs. Dexter a few days ago," d.i.c.k went on. "Maybe I forgot to tell you about it. She wanted me to call on her, and I wrote back that I was awfully sorry but that my evenings just then had to be put in getting ready for the monthly exams. I haven't heard a word from her since then."
"She's a fine woman," nodded Dave, "but she certainly has the reward habit in bad shape."
"Feels some like snow, doesn't it?" inquired d.i.c.k, looking up at a lead-colored sky.
"It'll rain," predicted Dave. "It isn't yet cold enough for snow."
"I'll be mighty glad when the snow comes."
"Maybe I won't," uttered Darrin. "That's the best time of the year--winter."
"Unless you call summer the finest time."
"Of course in summer we have the long vacation and plenty of time to have fun."
"Better duck," advised d.i.c.k suddenly. "Here comes Mrs. Dexter now."
"Looks as though she'd been crying, too," murmured Dave, scanning the approaching woman.
"Then we won't scoot," advised d.i.c.k, changing front instantly. "It doesn't look very fine to run away from any one who's in trouble."
Strangely enough Mrs. Dexter didn't appear, at first, to want to talk with the boys. She nodded, smiled wanly and said:
"Good afternoon, boys! Are things dull to-day?"
"Just quiet, Mrs. Dexter," d.i.c.k answered.
Then Dave, with some of his usual impulsiveness, put in, earnestly:
"You look as though you had heard bad news, Mrs. Dexter."
The woman had started to go on her way. Then she turned about again.
"Perhaps I have heard bad news," she smiled wearily.
"It isn't anything that we could help you about, is it?" asked d.i.c.k. He felt that he was taking a liberty in putting the question, yet he could not hold his inquiry back.
"I--I am afraid not, this time," she answered slowly. "Besides, I don't want to see any of you get into any more trouble on my account."
"Then it's--it's Mr. Dexter?" hazarded Dave.
The woman swallowed hard, seemed to be trying to choke back something, and then replied:
"Yes."
"Has he dared to get troublesome again?" flashed d.i.c.k.
"N-n-n-o matter. Please don't ask me. You can't help me any this time."
Once more Mrs. Dexter looked as though she would follow her way, but some other instinct prompted her to add: