Sundays, that is to say, Boarding
School Sundays, are apt to be longer than any of the
other days in the week.
Certainly it was so of Seddon Hall.
Mrs. Baird thought the girls needed “time off
to think,” as she expressed it, so that, after
the morning service in the little village church,
the rest of the day was free.
It had always proved a good idea,
for after a week spent in obedience to bells, a whole
day to do as you please in, has an exhilarating effect.
But this particular first Sunday looked
as if it were going to disprove the efficiency of
the plan.
It was the day after the Welcome Dance
to the new girls, and it was raining. Not a nice,
heavy pouring rain, but a dreary persistent drizzle.
The girls wandered aimlessly about the corridors in
the most woe-begone fashion, for there was no chance
of getting out of doors for a walk.
The dance the night before had proved
a great success. Instead of each old girl taking
a new girl, as had formerly been the custom, Polly’s
versatile brain had decided on a far better plan.
The new girls arrived in a body in
Assembly Hall and were received by their class and
formally introduced to one another. Then a daisy
chain started and was so arranged that before it was
over, every one had met and spoken to every one else
in the school. By the time the refreshments arrived,
all the girls were in a gale and not a tear was shed.
Sunday, however, was a different matter.
Everybody felt damp and cold in church, and the sermon
had been very long. Even Betty was out of sorts.
“Do you know,” she said,
crossly she and Angela were in Polly’s
and Lois’ room the early part of the afternoon.
“I’m tired of us. We are all so afraid
of letting anybody else into our select company that
we are growing positively stuck up. Deny it,
if you can,” she persisted, as Polly looked
up in surprise. “Here we sit like graven
images, when we ought to be in Assembly Hall.
Come on.”
“Oh, Bet, you’re so energetic,”
Angela drawled, “and we’re so comfy.”
“Assembly Hall won’t be
any fun,” Polly protested. “I’m
crazy to do something too, but
“Let’s go get Fanny,”
Lois suggested. “She’s bound to make
us laugh. I was talking to her before church
this morning. She was fussing about having to
carry so many subjects; when she got to geometry she
waxed eloquent. ‘I declare there’s
no use my wasting my time on arithmetic,’ she
said, and when I told her there was a slight difference
between the two, she wouldn’t have it.
’It’s all the same thing; maybe one’s
a tiny bit more elaborate than the other, but what’s
the use of proving all those angles equal. I
don’t reckon I’ll ever be a carpenter;
so there’s just no sense in it.’
I had to laugh at her,” Lois finished.
“Oh, Fanny’s rare,”
Betty agreed. “Let’s go see if she’s
in her room instead of asking her down here.
I’m tired of Senior Alley.”
Polly and Lois agreed with alacrity,
but Angela insisted she had letters to write and they
left her knowing quite well there would be no jam left
when they returned.
Fanny was in her room, but instead
of opening the door to Polly’s knock, she called
out:
“Who all’s there?”
“We are,” Lois answered for them.
“May we come in?”
The annoyed tone vanished from Fanny’s voice.
“Oh, you all,” she called;
“come in, of course;” and as
they entered “I thought maybe it
was some of those impertinent young Freshmen coming
to give me advice, and I just couldn’t be bothered
with them. That’s why I didn’t sound
too cordial.”
She was sitting on the floor in the
middle of her room, surrounded by letters and bands
of every color ribbon.
“I hope we’re not disturbing
you?” Polly said, rather taken aback at the
sight of her. She couldn’t quite understand
all the letters, but she had her suspicions.
Betty found a place to sit, or rather perch, on the
bed.
“Playing postoffice?” she asked with a
grin.
But Fanny refused to be teased.
She continued to sort out her letters, while she explained
their presence.
“You see,” she began dreamily,
“these here notes are all from my boy friends;
some of them are three years old.”
“The friends?” queried Lois.
“No, stupid, the letters,”
Betty said hastily in an aside. “Yes, go
on,” she encouraged Fanny.
“And every now and then I like
to read them over; some of them are awfully sweet,
especially Jack’s.”
“Who’s Jack?” her listeners demanded
in chorus.
“Oh, Jack’s my favorite
admirer,” she admitted, rather than stated.
“He’s crazy about me, or so he says.
I reckon I’ll just have to marry him one of
these days. He’s so handsome ”
She paused, a sentimental smile of remembrance wreathing
her face.
“How thrilling! do tell us,”
Betty begged. She was gurgling with joy inside,
and like Polly and Lois, she was highly amused.
They were all laughing at Fanny, rather than with
her, which was unkind and inexcusable, as they had
encouraged the recital, but her sentimental attitude
was beyond their understanding.
Boys figured largely in all their
thoughts, it’s true, but in a totally different
way. Polly, for instance, quite frankly admired
Bob Farwell. She endowed him with every virtue.
He was tremendously clever. He was the most wonderful
athlete, and he loved dogs especially Polly’s
dogs in fact he was altogether perfect in
her eyes but she couldn’t imagine
tying up his letters in baby blue ribbons and keeping
them in her top drawer.
And Lois, who was quite extravagantly
fond of Frank Preston, would have repudiated and emphatically
denied any suggestion of his being a suitor.
As for Betty the idea of
liking a boy just because he was handsome, was too
foolish to even consider. The fact that Dick Saxon supposedly
her arch enemy, but really her best friend had
flaming red hair and was undeniably homely may,
of course, had something to do with her disgust for
good looks. Like lots of other girls, The Three
judged boys by their ability to do; while the road
to Fanny’s heart was by way of graceful and
charming compliments.
“You were saying ” Polly interrupted
Fanny’s dream.
“Why, let me see about
Jack? He’s really stunning in his uniform he
goes to military school I have a lot of
buttons off his coat.”
At this point, Lois, much to the disgust
of Polly and Betty, instead of waiting for more of
Jack, inquired:
“Why have you all these colored
ribbons to tie up your letters? I thought all
love letters had to be tied in blue?”
Fanny picked up the various bands,
looked at them while she went over in her mind whether
or not she would tell them her special system.
It was a clever idea, so she decided she would.
“Blue is for love letters,”
she told Lois, “because blue is true. I
tie all Jack’s letters in blue. Yellow
means fickle ” She paused. “Well,
there is a boy,” she proceeded reluctantly, “down
home, who used to like me until he met a cousin of
mine, and she just naturally cut me out; so I tie
his letters with yellow ribbon. This here green,”
she took up two letters tied with a narrow piece of
baby ribbon, “is for hope.”
“Hope?” Lois stifled a
laugh. “Do you mean you hope for more?”
Fanny had heard the giggle and looked
up in surprise. A little hurt look stole across
her face.
“I reckon you all think I’m
silly,” she said, slowly, “but you see,
down home, there’s not much to do between holidays,
when the boys come, except write letters and wait
for mail, and all the girls I
She stopped; a big lump rose in her
throat, and her eyes filled with tears.
The Three felt properly ashamed of
themselves. Polly finally broke the embarrassed
silence.
“We don’t think you’re
silly at all,” she fibbed consolingly. “If
you want to keep your letters, why shouldn’t
you tie them up in appropriate colored ribbons?”
“But you wouldn’t keep
yours,” Fanny replied with more insight than
they had given her credit for.
“Well, no; I wouldn’t,
that is, I don’t,” Polly answered, lamely.
And Betty seized the first opportunity to change the
subject.
“What did you say about the
Freshmen bothering?” she asked, when Fanny was
in smiles again.
“They most certainly did, two
of them, Jane and Phylis. They came in and wanted
to know if I was homesick.” Fanny looked
indignant. “I told them no. Then they
looked at all the pictures on my bureau, and Jane,
the sassy little thing, told me if I wanted to get
along at Seddon Hall, I’d have to stop being
boy crazy. I just told them to go on about their
business, right quick, and they went,” she finished
triumphantly.
“Jemima! the little ”
Betty stopped from sheer astonishment. Polly and
Lois exchanged understanding glances.
The next day all the girls assembled
in the gym, a round building about a hundred feet
from the school. A basket ball court took up most
of the floor space. A balcony for spectators
ran around three sides of the room. Every possible
device hung from the ceiling, rings, ladders, trapèzes
and horizontal bars, but for the most part, these were
dusty and disused.
Seddon Hall centered all its faculty
on basket ball. Twice a year, in February and
June, the team played outside schools and almost always
came out victorious.
To-day, because it was raining still,
most of the girls entered for the first try out.
The Seniors sat in the balcony and watched, while every
girl had a chance to pass the basket ball and try for
a basket.
“Not a very likely crowd,”
Polly mused, “hardly a decent play.”
“It’s too early to tell, in all this mob,”
Lois answered.
“I’m dizzy watching them.
I see that little imp of a Jane with Phylis Guile
over in the corner. Let’s go and thank them
for the flowers?” she suggested.
Polly groaned “All
right, come on; you know we’ve got to put our
foot I mean feet down now hard, and I suppose
we should talk to them about being so rude to Fanny.
What do you suppose they really said?”
Jane and Phylis were sitting in front
of the lockers. They saw the two Seniors coming
towards them, but, because they were very much embarrassed,
they pretended they didn’t.
Lois started the conversation, rather
abruptly. She was afraid to let Polly say much.
Polly was a little bit too frank in her opinion, and
Lois dreaded hurt feelings above all things.
“We found your flowers in our
room Saturday night,” she said, smiling.
“They were very pretty, and we want to thank
you for them.”
“But you mustn’t send
any more,” Polly put in, quite gently for her.
“We really appreciate the thought, but
Well, you both know how easy it is for all the rest
of the girls to cry Crush Crush.”
“Oh, but we didn’t, haven’t,”
Jane and Phylis blurted out, “really, Polly.”
“Of course you haven’t
a crush,” Lois said, soothingly. “We
know that you don’t believe in them, or you
would never have lectured Fanny so about sentimentality,
yesterday.”
Polly gasped; was Lois really sarcastic personally she
preferred the direct attack.
“You know,” she began
firmly, “you had no right to talk that way to
a Junior it was disrespectful, and Fanny
had a right to be angry.”
Jane and Phylis hung their heads.
“I know it; we didn’t
really mean to be fresh,” Jane said, apologetically.
“We just thought maybe Fanny was homesick, and
we’d cheer her up.”
“We were going in to advise
her who to vote for as captain, really,” Phylis
took up the tale, “but she wouldn’t give
us a chance. After we hinted that she shouldn’t
be boy crazy she sent us out. It doesn’t
really matter; she’ll vote for you ”
Phylis stopped. Tears of mortification came to
her eyes. “Anyway,” she finished,
hastily, “we won’t send you any more flowers,
if you don’t want us to, and, honestly, we won’t
have a crush.”
Polly laughed good naturedly and put
her arm around Phylis’ shoulder.
“That’s all right; we
don’t want you to; but, I’ll tell you something.
If you would really like to do something we would like learn
to play a good game of basket ball. You might
be needed some day.”
“Poll, what made you hold out
hopes to those children?” Lois asked later,
as they waited for their tubs to fill. They had
played basket ball with some of the old girls after
they had left Jane and Phylis.
“Because I thought they needed
something to think about besides hurt feelings; I
don’t think they’ll get their hopes up
for the team.”
“Well, you may have been right,”
Lois agreed slowly. “Anyway our little
lecture did them good. Fanny stopped me after
practice and told me they had apologized.”
Polly said: “Oh, did they?”
indifferently, and went to her tub to turn off the
water.
Her head was in a whirl, and, suddenly,
tempting hopes ran riot. She stood looking at
the water a minute and shivered in anticipation of
the plunge.
“Captain of the basket ball
team,” she whispered. “I wonder