Affairs at Briarwood went at high
speed toward the end of the term. Everybody was
busy. A girl who did not work, or who had no interest
in her studies, fell behind very quickly.
Ann Hicks was spurred to do her best
by the activities of her mates. She did not like
any of them well enough-save those in the
two neighboring quartette rooms in her dormitory building-to
accept defeat from them. She began to make a
better appearance in recitations, and her marks became
better.
They all had extra interests save
Ann herself. Helen Cameron was in the school
orchestra and played first violin with a hope of getting
solo parts in time. She loved the instrument,
and in the evening, before the electricity was turned
on, she often played in the room, delighting the music-loving
Ann.
Sometimes Ruth sang to her chum’s
accompaniment. Ruth’s voice was so sweet,
so true and tender, and she sang ballads with such
feeling, that Ann often was glad it was dark in the
room. The western girl considered it “soft”
to weep, but Ruth’s singing brought the tears
to her eyes.
Mercy Curtis even gave up her beloved
books during the hour of these informal concerts.
Other times she would have railed because she could
not study. Mercy was as hungry for lessons as
Heavy Stone was for layer-cake and macaroons.
“That’s all that’s
left me,” croaked the lame girl, when she was
in one of her most difficult moods. “I’ll
learn all there is to be learned. I’ll
stuff my head full. Then, when other girls laugh
at my crooked back and weak legs, I’ll shame
’em by knowing more out of books.”
“Oh, what a mean way to put it!” gasped
Helen.
“I don’t care, Miss!
You never had your back ache you and your legs go
wabbly-No person with a bad back and such
aches and pains as I have, was ever good-natured!”
“Think of Aunt Alvirah,” murmured Ruth,
gently.
“Oh, well-she isn’t just human!”
gasped the lame girl.
“She is very human, I think,” Ruth returned.
“No. She’s an angel.
And no angel was ever called ‘Curtis,’”
declared the other, her eyes snapping.
“But I believe there must be
an angel somewhere named ‘Mercy,’”
Ruth responded, still softly.
However, it was understood that Mercy
was aiming to be the crack scholar of her class.
There was a scholarship to be won, and Mercy hoped
to get it and to go to college two years later.
Even Jennie Stone declared she was going in for “extras.”
“What, pray?” scoffed
The Fox. “All your spare time is taken up
in eating now, Miss.”
“All right. I’ll
go in for the heavyweight championship at table,”
declared the plump girl, good-naturedly. “At
least, the result will doubtless be visible.”
Ann began to wonder what she was studying
for. All these other girls seemed to have some
particular object. Was she going to school without
any real reason for it?
Uncle Bill would be proud of her,
of course. She practised assiduously to perfect
her piano playing. That was something that would
show out in Bullhide and on the ranch. Uncle
Bill would crow over her playing just as he did over
her bareback riding.
But Ann was not entirely satisfied
with these thoughts. Nor was she contented with
the fact that she had begun to make her mates respect
her. There was something lacking.
She had half a mind to refuse Belle
Tingley’s invitation to Cliff Island. In
her heart Ann believed she was included in the party
because Belle would have been ashamed to ignore her,
and Ruth would not have gone had Ann not been asked.
To tell the truth Ann was hungry for
the girls to like her for herself-for some
attribute of character which she honestly possessed.
She had never had to think of such things before.
In her western home it had never crossed her mind
whether people liked her, or not. Everybody about
Silver Ranch had been uniformly kind to her.
Belle’s holiday party was to
be made up of the eight girls in the two quartette
rooms, with Madge Steele, the senior; Madge’s
brother, Bobbins, Tom Cameron, little Busy Izzy Phelps,
and Belle’s own brothers.
“Of course, we’ve got
to have the boys,” declared Helen. “No
fun without them.”
Mercy had tried to beg off at first;
then she had agreed to go, if she could take half
a trunkful of books with her.
Briarwood girls were as busy as bees
in June during these last few days of the first half.
The second half was broken by the Easter vacation and
most of the real hard work in study came before Christmas.
There was going to be a school play
after Christmas, and the parts were given out before
the holidays. Helen was going to play and Ruth
to sing. It did seem to Ann as though every girl
was happy and busy but herself.
The last day of the term was in sight.
There was to be the usual entertainment and a dance
at night. The hall had to be trimmed with greens
and those girls-of the junior and senior
classes-who could, were appointed to help
gather the decorations.
“I don’t want to go,” objected Ann.
“Goosie!” cried Helen. “Of
course you do. It will be fun.”
“Not for me,” returned
the ranch girl, grimly. “Do you see who
is going to head the party? That Mitchell girl.
She’s always nasty to me.”
“Be nasty to her!” snapped Mercy, from
her corner.
“Now, Mercy!” begged Ruth, shaking a finger
at the lame girl.
“I wouldn’t mind what Mitchell says or
does,” sniffed The Fox.
“Fibber!” exclaimed Mercy.
“I never tell lies, Miss,” said Mary Cox,
tossing her head.
“Humph!” ejaculated the
somewhat spiteful Mercy, “do you call yourself
a female George Washington?”
“No. Marthy Washington,” laughed
Heavy.
“Only her husband couldn’t
lie,” declared Mercy. “And at that,
they say that somebody wished to change the epitaph
on his tomb to read: ’Here lies George
Washington-for the first time!’”
“Everybody is tempted to tell a fib some time,”
sighed Helen.
“And falls, too,” exclaimed Mercy.
“I must say I don’t believe
there ever was anybody but Washington that didn’t
tell a lie. It’s awfully hard to be exactly
truthful always,” said Lluella. “You
remember that time in the primary grade, just after
we’d come here to Briarwood, Belle?”
“Do I?” laughed Belle Tingley. “You
fibbed all right then, Miss.”
“It wasn’t very bad-and
I did want to see the whole school so much.
So-so I took one of my pencils to our teacher
and asked her if she would ask the other scholars
if it was theirs.
“Of course, all the other girls
in our room said it wasn’t,” proceeded
Lluella. “Then teacher said just what I
wanted her to say: ’You may inquire in
the other classes.’ So I went around and
saw all the other classes and had a real nice time.
“But when I got back with the
pencil in my hand still, Belle come near getting me
into trouble.”
“Uh-huh!” admitted Belle, nodding.
“How?” asked somebody.
“She just whispered-right
out loud, ’Lluella, that is your pencil and you
know it!’ And I had to say-right off,
‘It isn’t, and I didn’t!’ Now,
what could I have said else? But it was an awful
fib, I s’pose.”
The assembled girls laughed.
But Ann Hicks was still seriously inclined not to
go into the woods, although she had no idea of telling
a fib about it. And because she was too proud
to say to the teacher in charge that she feared Miss
Mitchell’s tongue, the western girl joined the
greens-gathering party at the very last minute.
There were two four-seated sleighs,
for there was a hard-packed white track into the woods
toward Triton Lake. Old Dolliver drove one, and
his helper manned the other. The English teacher
was in charge. She hoped to find bushels of holly
berries and cedar buds as well as the materials for
wreaths.
One pair of the horses was western-high-spirited,
hard-bitted mustangs. Ann Hicks recognized them
before she got into the sleigh. How they pulled
and danced, and tossed the froth from their bits!
“I feel just as they do,”
thought the girl. “I’d love to break
out, and kick, and bite, and act the very Old Boy!
Poor things! How they must miss the plains and
the free range.”
The other girls wondered what made
her so silent. The tang of the frosty air, and
the ring of the ponies’ hoofs, and the jingle
of the bells put plenty of life and fun into her mates;
but Ann remained morose.
They reached the edge of the swamp
and the girls alighted with merry shout and song.
They were all armed with big shears or sharp knives,
but the berries grew high, and Old Dolliver’s
boy had to climb for them.
Then the accident occurred-a
totally unexpected and unlooked for accident.
In stepping out on a high branch, the boy slipped,
fell, and came down to the ground, hitting each intervening
limb, and so saving his life, but dashing every bit
of breath from his lungs, it seemed!
The girls ran together, screaming.
The teacher almost fainted. Old Dolliver stooped
over the fallen boy and wiped the blood from his lips.
Dont tech him! he croaked. Hes broke evry bone in
his body, I make no doubt. An hed oughter have a doctor-
“I’ll get one,”
said Ann Hicks, briskly, in the old man’s ear.
“Where’s the nearest-and the
best?”
“Doc Haverly at Lumberton.”
“I’ll get him.”
Its six miles, Miss. Youd never walk it. Ill
take one of the teams-
“You stay with him,” jerked out Ann.
“I can ride.”
“Ride? Them ain’t ridin’ hosses,
Miss,” declared Old Dolliver.
“If a horse has got four legs
he can be ridden,” declared the girl from the
ranch, succinctly.
Take the off one on my team, then-
“That old plug? I guess not!” exclaimed
Ann, and was off.
She unharnessed one of the pitching,
snapping mustangs. “Whoa-easy!
You wouldn’t bite me, you know,” she crooned,
and the mustang thrust forward his ears and listened.
She dropped off the heavy harness.
The bridle she allowed to remain, but there was no
saddle. The English teacher came to her senses,
suddenly.
“That creature will kill you!”
she cried, seeing what Ann was about.
“Then he’ll be the first
horse that ever did it,” drawled Ann. “Hi,
yi, yi! We’re off!”
To the horror of the teacher, to the
surprise of Old Dolliver, and to the delight of the
other girls, Ann Hicks swung herself astride of the
dancing pony, dug her heels into his ribs, and the
next moment had darted out of sight down the wood
road.