Ulyth went to her bedroom that evening
in much agitation of mind. She was torn by conflicting
impulses. At one moment she longed to tax Rona
frankly with a breach of school rules, air the whole
subject, and state her most emphatic opinion upon
it. If Rona alone had been concerned in the matter
she would have done so without hesitation, but the
knowledge of the number of girls who were involved
made her pause.
“I might do more harm than good,”
she reflected. “After the way Tootie has
been inciting them to take sides against the seniors,
they’d be up in arms at the least hint.
It will be worse if they know they’re discovered,
and yet go on in an even more underhand fashion.”
Ulyth’s abstraction was so marked
that her room-mate could not fail to notice it.
“What’s the matter with
you to-night?” she asked. “I’ve
never seen you so glum before. Have you been
getting into a row with Teddie?”
“I’m all right. One
can’t always be talking, I suppose,” returned
Ulyth rather huffily. “Some people go on
like a perpetual gramophone.”
“Meaning Corona Margarita Mitchell,
I suppose? As you like, O Queen! I’ll
shut up if my babble offends the royal ears. There!
Don’t look so tragic. I don’t want
to make myself a nuisance. But all the same it’s
depressing to see you looking like a mixture of Hamlet
and Ophelia and Iphigenia and and Don
Quixote. Was he tragic too? I forget.”
“Hardly,” said Ulyth, smiling in spite
of herself.
“Well, I get mixed up among
history and literature, can’t always remember
which is real and which is make-up. It’s
a fact. I put down Portia as history in my exercise
yesterday, and said the story of the Spanish Armada
was told by Chaucer. Now you’re laughing,
and you look more like Ulyth Stanton. Sit down
on this bed. There! Open your mouth and
shut your eyes, and see what the king will send you!”
Rona was fumbling in her drawer as
she spoke. She turned round, seized her friend
boisterously and forced her on to the bed, then, holding
a hand over her eyes, crammed a chocolate almond into
her mouth.
“Rona! What are you doing?”
protested Ulyth, shaking herself free. “Where
did you get this chocolate?”
Rona pulled a face expressive of mingled
secrecy, delight, and triumph.
“Rats!” she chuckled enigmatically.
“Little girls shouldn’t ask questions.”
“But I want to know.”
“That’s not sporty!
Take the goods the gods send you, and don’t ask
’em what tree they picked them from.”
“But, Rona ”
“Are you two girls still out
of bed and talking?” said an indignant voice,
as Miss Lodge opened the door and glared reproval.
“Make haste. I give you three minutes,
and if you’re not ready by then I shall report
you. Not another word! I’m astonished
at you, Ulyth, for breaking the silence rule.”
“I didn’t hear the half-past
nine bell,” replied Ulyth, abashed.
“Then it’s your business
to hear it. It’s loud enough. Everybody
else on the landing is in bed.”
Miss Lodge put out the light and walked
away, with a final warning against further conversation.
Rona was asleep in a few minutes, breathing calmly
and peacefully as was her wont, but Ulyth lay awake
for a long time watching a shadow on the wall cast
from the beech-tree outside. Where had Rona got
her chocolates? The answer was perfectly plain.
With the little brooch for evidence there could be
no mistake.
“She’s not so bad as the
others, because I really don’t think she quite
realizes even yet what school honour means. But
Tootie and her scouts know. There’s no
excuse for them. Well, only two days now, and
Mrs. Arnold will be here. What a tower of strength
she is! I can tell her everything. Friday
will very soon come now, thank goodness!”
But those two days were to bring events
of their own, events quite unprecedented in the school,
and unexpected by everybody. How they affected
Ulyth and Rona will be related farther on in our story;
but meantime, for a true understanding of their significance,
we must pause to consider a certain feature of the
life at The Woodlands. When Miss Teddington had
joined partnership with Miss Bowes she had added many
new ideas to the plan of education which had formerly
been pursued.
She was determined that the school
should not be dubbed “old-fashioned”,
and by all means in her power she kept it abreast of
the times. So well did she succeed that the girls
were apt to complain that their second Principal was
a crank on education, and fond of trying every fresh
experiment she could get hold of. The various
enterprises added an atmosphere of novelty, however,
and prevented the daily life from degenerating into
a dull routine. No one ever knew what scheme Miss
Teddington might suggest next; and even if each course
was not pursued for very long, it did its work at
the time, and was a factor in the general plan.
All kinds and varieties of health exercises had had
their day at The Woodlands poles, dumb-bells,
clubs, had been in turn discarded for deep breathing
or for swimming motions. Slow minuets or lively
tarantellas were danced, according to the fashion of
the moment, and had the virtue of teaching stately
dignity as well as poetry of motion. It was rumoured
sometimes that Miss Teddington, with her eye on the
past, contemplated a revival of backboards, stocks,
and chest-expanders; but those instruments of torture,
fortunately, never made their appearance, much to
the relief of the intended victims, who had viewed
their advent with apprehension.
Naturally, dancing and indoor P.T.
went on mostly in the winter months, their place being
taken by outdoor drill during the summer term.
The Camp-fire movement had appealed to Miss Teddington.
She would herself have liked to be “Guardian
of the Fire” and general organizer of the League,
but her better judgment told her it was wiser to leave
that office to one who had not also to wield the authority
of a teacher. She supported the League in every
way that came within her province. As Camp-fire
honours were given for nature study, astronomy, and
geology, she took care that all had a chance to qualify
in those directions; and lately, acting on a hint
from Mrs. Arnold, she had made a special point of
manual training. Since Christmas the studio had
assumed a new importance in the school. It was
a big glass-roofed room at the top of the house, reached
by a small stair from the west bedroom landing.
A carpenter’s bench stood at one end of it,
and wood-carving went on fairly briskly. The
girls might come in at any time during their recreation
hours, and the occupation was a great resource on wet
days. Bookbinding, stencilling, clay modelling,
and fretwork were included among the hobbies, and
though there might not be definite lessons given,
there were handy primers of instruction on the book-shelf,
and it was interesting to try experiments.
“Do something on your own initiative.
Take the book and puzzle it out, even if you make
a few mistakes,” urged Miss Teddington.
“Nothing but practice can give you the right
feel of your tools; you’ll learn more from a
couple of failures than from a week’s work with
a teacher at your elbow the whole time, saying ‘Don’t!’”
So the girls struggled on, making
merry at each other’s often rather indifferent
efforts, but gaining more skill as they learnt to handle
the materials with which they worked. If the
mallet hit the chisel so vigorously as to spoil a
part of the pattern, its wielder was wiser next time;
and the experimenters in pyrography soon learned that
a red-hot needle used indiscreetly can dig holes in
leather instead of ornamenting it. Such “dufferisms”,
as the girls called them, became rarer, and many quite
creditable objects were turned out, and judged worthy
of a temporary place on the view-shelf.
Since Christmas a very special feature
had been added to the handicraft department.
Miss Teddington had caused apparatus to be fixed for
the working of art jewellery. A furnace and a
high bench with all necessary equipment had been duly
installed. This was a branch much too technically
difficult for the girls to attempt alone, so a skilled
teacher had been procured, who came weekly from Elwyn
Bay to give lessons. Those girls who took the
course became intensely enthusiastic over it.
To make even a simple chain was interesting, but when
they advanced to setting polished pebbles or imitation
stones as brooches or pendants, the work waxed fascinating.
Some of the students proved much more adept than others,
and turned out really pretty things.
There was not apparatus for many pupils
to work, so the class had been limited to seniors,
among whom Doris Deane, Ruth White, and Stephanie
Radford had begun to distinguish themselves. Each
had made a small pendant, and while the craftsmanship
might be amateurish, the general effect was artistic.
Miss Teddington was delighted, and wishing to air
her latest hobby, she decided to send the three pendants,
together with some other specimens of school handiwork,
to a small Art exhibition which was to be held shortly
at Elwyn Bay. Miss Edwards, the teacher who came
weekly to give instruction, was on the exhibition committee,
and promised to devote a certain case to the articles,
and place them in a good light. Though small
shows had been held at The Woodlands occasionally
in connection with the annual prize distribution, the
school had never before ventured to send a contribution
to a public exhibition, and those whose work was to
be thus honoured became heroines of the moment.
On the very evening after Ulyth’s
and Lizzie’s excursion down the garden, a number
of girls repaired to the studio to view the objects
that Miss Teddington had chosen as worthy to represent
the artistic side of the school.
“I wish I were a senior,”
said Winnie Fowler plaintively. “I’d
have loved this sort of thing. To think of being
able to make a little darling, ducky brooch!
It beats drawing hollow. I’d never want
to touch a pencil again.”
“You’ve got to have some
eye for drawing, though,” said Doris, “or
you’d have your things all crooked. It’s
not as easy as eating chocolates, I can tell you!”
“I dare say. But I’ll try some day,
when I am a senior.”
“Are these the three that are
to go to the exhibition?” asked Rona, pushing
her way to the front. “Which is which?”
“This is mine, that’s
Ruth’s, and that’s Stephanie’s,”
explained Doris.
“Why isn’t Ulyth’s
to go? It’s just as nice as Stephanie’s,
I’m sure.”
“Miss Teddington decided that.”
“How idiotic of her! Why
couldn’t she send Ulyth’s? I think
hers is the nicest, and it’s just the same pattern
as Stephie’s exactly.”
“Do be quiet, Rona!” urged
Ulyth, laying her hand on the arm of her too partial
friend. “My pendant has a defect in it.
I bungled, and couldn’t get it right again afterwards.”
“It doesn’t show.”
“Not to you, perhaps; but any
judge of such things would notice in a moment.”
“Well, your work’s as
good as Stephanie’s any day, and I hate for her
name to be put into the catalogue and not yours.
Yes, I mean what I say.”
“Oh, Rona, do hush! I don’t
want my name in a catalogue. Here’s Stephie
coming in. Don’t let her hear you.”
“I don’t mind if she does.
It won’t do her any harm to hear somebody’s
frank opinion.”
“Rona, if you care one atom for me, stop!”
Rather grumbling, Rona allowed herself
to be suppressed. She was always ready to throw
a shaft at Stephanie, though she knew Ulyth heartily
disliked the scenes which invariably followed.
She took up Ulyth’s pendant, however, and, after
ostentatiously admiring it, laid it for a moment side
by side with Stephanie’s.
“There isn’t a pin to
choose between them,” she murmured under her
breath, hoping Stephanie might overhear.
Ulyth was at the other side of the
room, but Stephanie’s quick ears caught the
whisper. She looked daggers at Rona, but she made
no remark, and Ulyth, returning, gently took her pendant
away and placed it with the other non-exhibits on
the bench. It had been a wet afternoon. No
outdoor exercise had been possible that day, and the
girls were tired of all their usual indoor occupations.
“I wish somebody’d suggest
something new to cheer us up,” yawned Nellie
Barlow. “There’s a quarter of an hour
more ‘rec.’ It’s too short to
be worth while getting out any apparatus, but it’s
long enough to be deadly dull.”
“Can’t someone do some tricks?”
asked Edie Maycock.
“All right, Toby; sit on your
hind legs and beg for biscuits,” laughed Marjorie
Earnshaw.
“I mean real tricks conjuring
and fortune telling; the amateur wizard, you know.”
“I don’t know.”
“Then you’re stupid.
Have you never seen amateur conjuring coins
that vanish, and things that come out of hats?”
“Yes; but I couldn’t do
it, my good child. Being in the Sixth doesn’t
make me a magician.”
“We tried a little bit at home,”
pursued Edie. “We had a book that told
us how; only I never could manage it quickly.
People always saw how I did it.”
“Rona’s the girl for that,” suggested
Hattie Goodwin.
“Is she? Come here, Rona,
I want you. Can you really and truly do conjuring?”
“Oh, not properly!” laughed
Rona. “But when I was on board ship there
was a gentleman who was very clever at it, and I and
some boys I’d made friends with were tremendously
keen at learning. We got him to show us a few
easy tricks, and we were always trying them. I
could manage it just a little, but I’m out of
practice now. You’d see in a second how
it was done, I’m afraid.”
“Oh, do show us, just for fun!”
“What do you want to see?”
“Oh, anything!”
“The vanishing coin?”
“Yes, yes. Go ahead!”
“Then give me two pennies or shillings, either
will do.”
The audience who had clustered round
looked at one another, each expecting somebody else
to produce a coin. Then everybody laughed.
“We haven’t got so much
as a copper amongst us! We’re a set of absolute
paupers!” declared Doris. “Can’t
you do some other trick?”
“There is nothing else I could
manage so well,” said Rona disconsolately.
“This was the only one I really learnt.”
“Can’t it be done with anything but coins?”
“Something the same size and round, perhaps?”
“My pendant?” said Ulyth,
fetching the trinket from the bench. “It’s
just as big as a penny.”
“Yes, I could try it with this
and another like it. Give me Stephanie’s.”
“No, no! You shan’t
try tricks with mine!” objected Stephanie indignantly.
“I won’t do it a scrap of harm.”
“Oh, Stephie, don’t be
mean! She’ll not hurt it. Here, Rona,
take it!” exclaimed several of the girls, anxious
to witness the experiment.
Stephanie’s protests and grumbles
were overridden by the majority, and Rona, in her
new capacity of wizard, faced her audience.
“It’ll be rather transparent,
because you oughtn’t really to know that I’ve
got two pendants,” she explained apologetically.
“Please forget, and think it’s only one.
I must put some patter in, like Mr. Thompson always
used to do. Ladies and gentleman, you’ve
no doubt heard that the art of conjuring depends upon
the quickness of the hand. That’s as it
may be, but there is a great deal that can’t
be accounted for in that way. Ladies and gentlemen,
you see this coin or rather pendant, as
I should say. I am going to make it fly from
my left hand to my right. One, two, three pass!
Here it is. Did you see it go? No. Well,
I can make it travel pretty quickly. Now we’ll
try another pretty little experiment. You see
my hand. It’s empty, isn’t it?
Yet when I wave it over this desk Miss Stephanie Radford’s
pendant will be returned to its place. Hey, presto!
Pass! There you are! Safe and sound and back
again!”
Stephanie took up her treasure and examined it anxiously.
“This isn’t mine!” she declared.
“Rubbish! It is.”
“I tell, you it isn’t!
Don’t I know my own work? This is Ulyth’s.
What have you done with mine?”
“Vanished under the wizard’s wand,”
mocked Rona.
“Give it me this instant!”
cried Stephanie angrily, shaking Rona by the arm.
Rona had been standing upon one leg,
and the unexpected assault completely upset her balance.
She toppled, clutched at Doris, and fell, bumping
her head against the corner of the table. It was
a hard blow, and as she got up she staggered.
“I feel all dizzy!” she gasped.
An officious junior, quite unnecessarily,
ran for Miss Lodge, magnifying the accident so much
in her highly coloured account that the mistress arrived
on the scene prepared to find Rona stretched unconscious.
Seeing that the girl looked white and tearful, she
ordered her promptly to bed.
“It may be nothing, but any
rate you will be better lying down,” she decreed.
“Go downstairs, girls, all of you. Nobody
is to come into the studio again to-night.”
“Rona had my pendant in her
hand all the time,” grumbled Stephanie to Beth
as she obeyed the mistress’s orders. “She
dropped it as she fell. I’ve put it back
safely, though, and I don’t mean to let anybody
interfere with it. I shall complain to Miss Bowes
if it’s touched again.”