Polly Pendleton and Lois Farwell returned
to Seddon Hall as seniors.
Up the long hill that led from the
station their carriage crawled as it had done on every
other opening day.
From the summit of the hill the low,
red-roofed buildings of the school smiled a welcome
from their setting of blazing Autumn leaves, and all
around them girls were calling out greetings.
There was a marked change in the two
girls’ outward appearances their
hair was up and their skirts were longer, their whole
bearing was older. They were different from the
two youngsters whose Freshman year has already been
recorded. That is, they looked different, and
if you had asked them about it they would have assured
you that they were indeed different.
But, the old-time twinkle in Polly’s
eyes and Lois’ sudden merry laugh gave you a
comforting feeling that, after all, in spite of assurances
and looks, they were still the same Polly and Lois.
Nothing very eventful had happened
in either one of their lives, during the past years.
They had spent their Winters at Seddon Hall and their
vacations at Polly’s old home in New England
with Mrs. Farwell. Polly’s uncle, Mr. Pendleton,
and Dr. Farwell, had come up on visits when they could.
Bob, Lois’ big brother, had come, too, but less
frequently of late. He was at college now and
working very hard.
They had made new friends, but, what
is more important, they had kept their old ones.
This well ordered way of living, however,
had to change. Time had gone on slowly, but steadily
and now, suddenly, they were Seniors. It was an
exhilarating thought and Polly and Lois hugged each
other whenever it struck them afresh.
Their carriage finally reached the
door. In a second they were in the reception
room, and, after they had greeted Mrs. Baird and the
faculty, they dashed up the front stairs a
privilege only accorded the Seniors and
found their room, a big corner one, which they were
to share in Senior Alley. Rooming together was
another Senior privilege.
“Poll, we’re back.”
Lois threw her suitcase without regard to contents
on one of the beds and looked around her.
“Yes, we’re back, and
we’re Seniors and, what’s more, we’ve
the best room on the Alley,” Polly answered,
enthusiastically. “We’ll put your
window box there.” She indicated a broad
bow window, overlooking the campus and gym. “And
we’ll
“Oh! don’t let’s
fuss about the decorations now,” Lois interrupted.
“Let’s find Betty and the other girls.
I’m dying to know who’s back.”
“I am too, sort of,” Polly
agreed reluctantly, as they left the room and started
for the Assembly Hall. “Do you know, Lo,
I always feel funny about the new girls.”
“Why?”
“Oh, I can’t exactly explain,
but I don’t like them; I wish they hadn’t
come. We were so all right last year. Why
couldn’t just the old girls come back and go
on where we left off?”
“Why, you silly,” Lois
laughed. “Some of last year’s girls
were new and you liked them. Anyway, cheer up,
and don’t worry about it now. Listen to
the racket they’re making in the hall.”
Polly gave herself a little shake,
a trick she had when she wanted to dismiss a thought
from her mind, but her face failed to reflect Lois’
smile of anticipation. She was a queer puzzle,
was Polly. Uncle Roddy once described her as
a tangle of deep thoughts, completely surrounded by
a sense of humor. And Mrs. Farwell always insisted
that she discussed the weightiest problems of life
when she was running for a trolley. Lois was
the exact opposite, an artist, a dreamer of dreams,
who, when her mind was off on some airy flight, was
maddeningly indifferent to everything else. They
were ideal friends, for they acted as a balance, the
one for the other. They were so much together
that no one ever thought of them singly.
A shout of welcome from the old girls,
and eager silence from the new ones, greeted their
entrance into the Assembly Hall. There was a hubbub
of hellos for a minute, and then Betty descended upon
them.
Betty, the freckled face she
wasn’t a bit changed. She still wore a
ribbon on her hair, and her nose was as snubbed and
impudent as ever. Of course, she was taller and
her skirts were longer, but no one realized it.
That was the difference. With Polly and Lois the
years had really added themselves and marked a change,
but Betty was still Betty and years mattered not at
all.
“Jemima!” she exclaimed,
joyfully, “but I’m glad you’ve come.
What under the sun did you wait until the late train
for. I’ve been here all day and I’ve
felt like a fish out of water. There’s a
raft of new girls, but no Senior specials, thank goodness.
The two Dorothys are here,” she paused
and wrinkled her nose just the least little bit in
disapproval, and then rushed on. “I’m
rooming with Angela, you know. Isn’t it
mean Connie isn’t back? Ange misses her
already.”
Constance Wentworth, of whom she spoke,
was one of the old girls and Angela Hollywood’s
chosen companion. She had not returned this year
because her music professor had insisted upon her starting
in at the Conservatory of Music, for she was a remarkable
pianist. The girls realized that no one would
ever quite fill her place.
“Where is Ange?” Lois
inquired, when Betty paused for breath.
“In her room, I mean our room;
she’s moping,” Betty answered. “She
said three distinct times that she wished Connie were
back, and so I left. I’m not sensitive,
but ” Betty left the rest unsaid,
but her look expressed volumes.
“Poor Ange!” Polly said
with exaggerated feeling. “I don’t
blame her; let’s go find her; she must need
cheering up; besides, I’m tired of meeting new
girls.”
Angela answered their knock a few
minutes later with a “Come in,” uttered
in her own particular drawl. She was sitting on
her bed in the midst of clothes. Apparently,
she had made little or no progress in unpacking her
suitcase, for nothing was put away.
Angela had always been, and was still,
the unrivaled beauty of Seddon Hall. Her complexion
was as soft and pink as a rose petal, and her shimmering
golden hair and big blue eyes made you think of gardens
and Dresden china. She was never known to hurry,
and she spoke with a soft lazy drawl, which, curiously
enough, never irritated any one. She had won
quite a renown as a poet, but was too quiet to be generally
popular.
“Hello, you three!” she
greeted, as the girls entered. “I’m
awfully glad you’re back. Isn’t this
a mess?” She included the room with a wave of
her arm. “I don’t know where to begin.”
“It’s exactly the way
it was when I left you,” Betty exclaimed with
pretended wrath.
“I know it; but you’ve
been so piggy with the dresser drawers and the wardrobe
that there’s no room for my things,” Angela
teased back.
She was apparently willing to leave
the argument so, for as the girls dropped into comfortable
positions on the floor and window seat, she discarded
the shoe she was holding, stuffed a pillow behind her
and folded her hands. Her guests stayed until
dinner time and talked. It was almost a class
meeting; for it was a well established fact that when
these four girls decided anything the rest of the class
agreed with an alacrity that was very flattering to
their good judgment.
It was not until Mrs. Baird, who sat
at the Senior table the first night as a special favor,
asked them if they had discovered any homesick new
girls, that they realized that as Seniors, holding
responsible positions in the school, they had failed
already.
After dinner they stopped to consult
on the Bridge of Sighs the covered way
that connected the two main buildings of the school.
“Well, what’s to be done?”
inquired Lois. “Instead of deciding what
color shoes we’d wear at commencement we should
have been drying somebody’s eyes.”
“Quite right,” Betty mimicked
Lois’ righteous tones. “We were very
selfish; in fact, I’m ashamed of us.
Let’s go to Assembly Hall and be giddy little
cheerers up.”
Polly laughed.
“Oh, Bet, be sensible!
Hasn’t your observation in the past taught you
that homesick girls don’t go to Assembly Hall
to cry? They tuck their silly heads under their
protecting pillows in their own room. Let’s
go to Freshman Lane.”
“Why Freshman?” Angela
inquired softly. “Freshmen are too young
and excited to be homesick so soon. Let’s
go to the Sophs quarters.”
They went, tapping gently at every
door all the way down the corridor, but received no
response.
“They’re a heartless lot,”
Betty declared at the last door. “Not one
of them in tears. It’s not right, they’re
entirely too cheerful for so young a class.”
And she scowled wrathfully as an indication of her
displeasure.
“Never mind, Bet,” Lois
laughed, “maybe we’ll have better luck
with the Juniors.”
Betty took heart and led the way.
Lois was right, though the doleful
sobs that met their ears at the door of Junior Mansions nicknamed
the year before because the present Seniors had been
so very elegant could hardly be called luck.
“Jemima!” Betty exclaimed.
“A deluge, our search proves fruitful at last.”
Polly went to the door through which
the sounds came and pushed it open.
The room was dark. The light
from the hall cast a streak over the bare floor and
discovered a heap of something half on, and half off
the bed. At one side of the room a wicker suitcase
stood beside the dresser, its swelling sides proclaimed
it still unpacked. A hat and coat were flung
on the chair but these were minor details.
The heart-breaking sobs filled every corner of the
room, and the figure on the bed heaved convulsively
with each one.
Polly was the first to speak.
“What’s the matter, homesick?”
she asked cheerfully as she pressed the electric button
and flooded the room with light.
On closer inspection they saw that
the girl had heaps of black hair that had become unfastened
and lay in a heavy coil on the bed. Also, she
had on a crumpled silk waist and a dark green skirt.
Lois and Betty helped her on to the
bed and Polly bathed her face with cold water.
Angela was tongue-tied, but she patted her hand and
murmured incoherent things. Finally the sobs
stopped.
“We’ve got to get her
out of here,” Lois whispered. “Don’t
you want to do up your hair and come down to the Assembly
Hall?” she said aloud. “Everybody’s
dancing.”
The new girl she was still
just the new girl, for she had refused to tell her
name, or say one word sat up and smoothed
her waist.
Betty sighed with relief.
“Come on, that’s right,”
she said encouragingly. “Don’t mind
about your eyes, all the other new girls will have
red ones too. Why when I was a new girl,”
she said grandly, “I cried for weeks.”
Polly and Lois and Angela gasped.
Betty had never been known to shed a tear. As
for weeks of them, that was a bit extravagant.
But the fib had the desired effect. The new girl
turned her large, drenched gray eyes on Betty and
studied her carefully.
“I reckon you looked something
like a picked buzzard when you got through,”
she said with a broad Southern accent.
There was an astonished silence for
a second, then the girls burst into peals of laughter.
It was contagious, happy laughter, and the new girl,
after a hesitating minute, joined in. After that,
it was an easy matter to make conversation and to
persuade her to leave her room.
The girls found out that she was Fanny
Gerard, and had come straight from South Carolina.
Her father she had no mother had
brought her to school and then returned to the city
by the next train. Unfortunately, it had been
Miss Hale, the Latin teacher nicknamed the
Spartan years before by Betty, the only unpopular
teacher in Seddon Hall who had shown Fanny
to her room.
“She just opened the do’
and pointed at that little old plain room with her
bony finger and said: ‘This is you alls
room, Miss Gerard,’ and left me. I tell
you I like to died.”
The tears threatened to burst forth
again. Betty and Polly hastened to explain that
the Spartan was not even to be considered as part of
Seddon Hall. And they brought back the smiles
when they explained that the Bridge of Sighs was so
named because the Spartan’s room was at the end
of it.
All together, they made a very satisfactory
cure and when they left Fanny for the night, after
having unpacked her suitcase for her, she was quite
bright and contented.
“What do you think of her?”
Polly demanded, when she and Lois were alone, after
the good night bell.
Lois considered a minute.
“She’s rare, and I think
she’s going to be worth cultivating. Certainly
she’s funny,” she said.
“Seddon Hallish, you mean?” Polly inquired.
“No, not exactly.”
“She couldn’t take Connie’s place
for instance?”
“Never in a thousand years!”
“Lois.”
“Yes.”
“You’re thinking about the same thing
I am.”
“What are you thinking of?”
“The five boy’s pictures she brought in
her suitcase.”
“Yes, I was. Sort of silly of her.
Maybe they are her brothers.”
“They’re not, she’s an only child.”
“Well, all Southern girls are sentimental.”
Polly was almost asleep.
“Maybe we can cure her,” she said.
“Maybe,” Lois answered drowsily.
“We’re Seniors, Lo.”
“Yes. This is the first night of our last
year.”
“I know, pretty much all right rooming together,
isn’t it?”
“You bet.”
“Goodnight.”
“Goodnight.”