“Hurrah! first glimpse of the old place!”
Helen cried this, with her head out
of the Ark. The dust rolled up in a cloud behind
them as they topped the hill. Here Mary Cox had
met Ruth and Helen that first day, a year ago, when
they approached the Hall.
There was no infant in the coach now
save Jane Ann. And the chums were determined
to save the western girl from that strange and lonely
feeling they had themselves experienced.
There was nobody in view on the pastured
hill. Down the slope the Ark coasted and bye
and bye Cedar Walk came into view.
“Shall we get out here, girls?”
called Madge Steele, with a glance at Mercy.
“Of course we shall,”
cried that sprightly person, shaking her fist at the
big senior. “Don’t you dare try to
spare me, Miss! I am getting so strong
and healthy I am ashamed of myself. Don’t
you dare!”
Madge kissed her warmly, as Ruth had.
That was the best way to treat Mercy Curtis
whenever she “exploded.”
Suddenly Helen leaned out of the open
half of the door on her side and began to call a welcome
to four girls who were walking briskly down the winding
pathway. Instantly they began to run, shouting
joyfully in return.
“Here we be, young ladies,”
croaked Old Dolliver, bringing his tired horses to
a halt.
They struggled forth, Jane Ann coming
last to help the lame girl-just a mite.
Then the two parties of school friends came together
like the mingling of waters.
One was a very plump girl with a smiling,
rosy face; one was red-haired and very sharp-looking,
and the other two balanced each other evenly, both
being more than a little pretty, very well dressed,
and one dark while the other was light.
The light girl was Belle Tingley,
and the dark one Lluella Fairfax; of course, the red-haired
one was Mary Cox, “The Fox,” while the
stout girl could be no other than “Heavy”
Jennie Stone.
The Fox came forward quickly and seized
both of Ruth’s hands. “Dear Ruth,”
she whispered. “I arrived just this morning
myself. You know that my brother is all right
again?” and she kissed the girl of the Red Mill
warmly.
Belle and Lluella looked a bit surprised
at Mary Cox’s manifestation of friendship for
Ruth; but they did not yet know all the particulars
of their schoolmates’ adventures at Silver Ranch.
Heavy was hurrying about, kissing
everybody indiscriminately, and of course performing
this rite with Ruth at least twice.
“I’m so tickled to see
you all, I can’t tell!” she laughed.
“And you’re all looking fine, too.
But it does seem a month, instead of a week, since
I saw you.”
“My! but you are looking bad
yourself, Heavy,” gibed Helen Cameron, shaking
her head and staring at the other girl. “You’re
just fading away to a shadow.”
“Pretty near,” admitted
Heavy. “But the doctor says I shall get
my appetite back after a time. I was allowed
to drink the water two eggs were boiled in for lunch,
and to-night I can eat the holes out of a dozen doughnuts.
Oh! I’m convalescing nicely, thank you.”
The girls who had reached the school
first welcomed Jane Ann quite as warmly as they did
the others. There was an air about them all that
seemed protecting to the strange girl.
Other girls were walking up and down
the Cedar Walk, and sometimes they cast more than
glances at the eight juniors who were already such
friends. Madge had immediately been swallowed
up by a crowd of seniors.
“Say, Foxy! got an infant there?” demanded
one girl.
“I suppose Fielding has made
her a Sweetbriar already-eh?” suggested
another.
“The Sweetbriars do not have
to fish for members,” declared Helen, tossing
her head.
“Oh, my! See what a long
tail our cat’s got!” responded one of the
other crowd, tauntingly.
“The double quartette!
There’s just eight of them,” crowed another.
“There certainly will be something doing at
Briarwood Hall with those two roomsful.”
“Say! that’s right!”
cried Heavy, eagerly, to Ruth. “You, and
Helen, and Mercy, and Jinny, take that quartette room
on our other side. We’ll just about boss
that dormitory. What do you say?”
“If Mrs. Tellingham will agree,”
said Ruth. “I’ll ask her.”
“But you girls will be ’way
ahead of me in your books,” broke in Jane Ann.
“We needn’t be ahead of
you in sleeping, and in fun,” laughed Heavy,
pinching her.
“Don’t be offish, Miss
Jinny,” said Helen, calling her by the title
that the cowboys did.
“And my name-my dreadful,
dreadful name!” groaned the western girl.
I tell you! exclaimed Ruth, were all friends. Lets
agree how we shall introduce Miss Hicks to the bunch. She must choose a
name-
“Why, call yourself ‘Nita,’
if you want to, dear,” said Helen, patting the
western girl’s arm. “That’s
the name you ran away with.”
“But I’m ashamed of that.
I know it is silly-and I chose it for a
silly reason. But you know what all these girls
will do to ‘Jane Ann,’” and she
shook her head, more than a little troubled.
“What’s the matter with
Ann?” demanded Mercy Curtis, sharply. “Isn’t
’Ann Hicks’ sensible-sounding enough?
For sure, it’s not pretty; but we can’t
all have both pretty names and pretty features,”
and she laughed.
“And it’s mighty tough
when you haven’t got either,” grumbled
the new girl.
“‘Ann Hicks,’”
quoth Ruth, softly. “I like it. I believe
it sounds nice, too-when you get used to
it. ‘Ann Hicks.’ Something dignified
and fine about it-just as though you had
been named after some really great woman-some
leader.”
The others laughed; and yet they looked
appreciation of Ruth Fielding’s fantasy.
“Bully for you, Ruthie!”
cried Helen, hugging her. “If Ann Hicks
agrees.”
“It doesn’t sound so bad
without the ‘Jane,’” admitted the
western girl with a sigh. “And Ruth says
it so nicely.”
“We’ll all say it nicely,”
declared The Fox, who was a much different “Fox”
from what she had been the year before. “‘Ann
Hicks,’ I bet you’ve got a daguerreotype
at home of the gentle old soul for whom you are named.
You know-silver-gray gown, pearls, pink
cheeks, and a real ostrich feather fan.”
“My goodness me!” ejaculated
the newly christened Ann Hicks, “you have already
arranged a very fanciful family tree for me. Can
I ever live up to such an ancestress as that?”
“Certainly you can,” declared
Ruth, firmly. “You’ve just got
to. Think of the original Ann-as Mary
described her-whenever you feel like exploding.
Her picture ought to bring you up short. A lady
like that couldn’t explode.”
“Tough lines,” grumbled
the western girl. “Right from what you girls
call the ‘wild and woolly,’ and to have
to live up to silver-gray silk and pearls-M-m-m-m!”
“Now, say! say!” cried
Belle Tingley, suddenly, and seizing upon Ruth, about
whom she had been hovering ever since they had met.
“I want to talk a little. There
aren’t any more infants to christen, I hope?”
“Go on!” laughed Ruth,
squeezing her. “What is the matter, Bella
mia?”
“And don’t talk Italian,”
said Belle, shrugging her shoulders. “Listen!
I promised to ask you the minute you arrived, Ruthie,
and now you’ve been here ten at least.”
“It is something splendid,”
laughed Lluella, clapping her hands, evidently being
already a sharer in Belle’s secret.
“I’ll tell you-if
they’ll let me,” panted Belle, shaking
Ruth a little. “Father’s bought Cliff
Island. It’s a splendid place. We were
there for part of the summer. And there will
be a great lodge built by Christmas time and he has
told me I might invite you all to come to the house-warming.
Now, Ruth! it remains with you. If you’ll
go, the others will, I know. And it’s a
splendid place.”
“Cliff Island?” gasped Ruth.
“Yes. In Lake Tallahaska.”
“And your father has just bought it?”
“Yes. He had some trouble
getting a clear title; but it’s all right now.
They had to evict an old squatter. I want you
all to come with me for the mid-winter holiday.
What do you say, Ruthie?” asked Belle, eagerly.
“I say it’s a long look
ahead,” responded Ruth, slowly. “It’s
very kind of you, Belle. But I’ll have
to write home first, of course. I’d like
to go, though-to Cliff Island-yes,
indeed!”