As Senior President, Lois was a decided
failure. It was not through any lack of interest
on her part in the class and its affairs, but rather
because the fairies at her christening had failed to
bestow upon her the gift of leadership with which
Polly was so richly endowed.
She just couldn’t think of the
hundred and one practical things that needed attending
to. Perhaps Miss Crosby was partly to blame.
She had taken a decided interest in Lois from their
meeting on the stairs, and had given her permission
to use the studio at any time. She had criticized
her work and gave her helpful points not infrequently
in her own room, where Lois often dropped in at tea
time.
But progress in art, though beneficial
to Lois, was of no use to the Senior class. Polly
was at her wit’s end. Lois had called a
class meeting the day before and forgotten to come
to it. School had been running smoothly for over
a month by now, and all the strangeness of the first
few weeks had worn off. With Thanksgiving in sight,
the girls felt that they were well into the year.
To-day was Friday. After dinner
the election for the basket ball captain was scheduled
and nothing was arranged.
Polly, after looking in the gym and
some of the classrooms for Lois, returned to Senior
Alley. She was excited about the election, but
she was more deeply concerned about Lois. She
was thinking and she walked slowly in consequence.
As she entered the corridor Dot Mead’s voice,
high pitched and angry, made her stop abruptly.
“Not a thing planned, the slips
not ready, and here it is Friday afternoon. Lois
wasn’t like this last year. If she accepted
the office of president why doesn’t she act
up to it! Why, even the Freshmen are criticizing.”
Her voice subsided into a grumble of displeasure.
Polly shook her head slowly and went
quietly into her own room. The Dorothys were
growling as usual. She had to admit that this
time there was a little cause, too.
What had come over Lois. Polly
realized with a sudden drawing together of her eyebrows,
that she was seeing less and less of her all the time.
“Art!” she said, aloud, and laughed.
Then she went out to find Betty.
“Something’s got to be
done,” she announced, when she found her with
Angela, “and we’ve got to do it. Ange,
you print the notice of the election in red ink, and
put it on the bulletin board. And, Bet, you make
the ballot box. There’s a big square wooden
box under my bed you can cut a hole in
it. I’ll go and find Phylis and Jane and
get them to help me tear up paper slips. They’ll
love it, and they’ll keep quiet about it.”
“What’ll we tell the rest?”
Angela asked. “They ought to appreciate
our saving them this trouble, but they won’t,”
she added dryly.
Polly hesitated a moment.
“We’ll post a notice on
the board for a meeting to be held at two fifteen,”
she said boldly.
“But it’s three o’clock,”
Angela protested, but Betty understood.
“I’m ashamed of your deceit,
Polly,” she said with pretended scorn, adding:
“It’s a bully idea.”
“No, it’s not; I hate
it; it’s really a written fib, but
Well, I’d do a lot more than that for Lo,”
Polly answered.
“Do you mean put up the sign
so that the other girls will think we had a meeting,
and they didn’t come?”
Angela was flabbergasted at the idea.
“Exactly.”
“Oh, I see. They’ll
be awfully cross we didn’t send for them, and
I love the two Dorothys when they’re mad.
But, Poll, for goodness’ sake give Lois a lecture;
we don’t want this to happen too often, one fib’s
enough,” she finished with a yawn. “Now,
I’ll go paint the sign.”
Jane and Phylis were only too anxious
to help make the slips hero worship shone
from their eyes as they took the sample from Polly.
“Aren’t you excited?”
Phylis asked. “Landy, I’d be standing
on my head if I thought ” She stopped
and clapped her hand over her mouth.
Phylis’ frank adoration really
amused Polly. She found it very hard sometimes
to face it with the proper Senior dignity. The
excited little Freshman reminded her of herself at
the same age. She almost wished the youngsters
could make the sub team as she and Lois had done.
“I’m not excited, because
I don’t think I have much chance,” she
answered, which was exactly what both girls had expected
her to say.
“Bring those slips down to my
room when you’ve finished, and don’t say
that you helped, will you? It wouldn’t do
for any one to think that the Seniors had favorite
helpers,” she said as she left them.
After she had gone, Jane and Phylis
locked their door and talked in whispers, while they
worked.
Polly went down stairs, printed out
the notice of the class meeting and pinned it on the
bulletin board. She had an uncomfortably guilty
feeling, tinged with pride and a certain amount of
satisfaction when it was up. For it took real
courage for Polly to lie, even for Lois. Then
she went to Betty’s room, helped her with the
box and did several other things.
It was time to dress for dinner before
she returned to her room. She was brushing her
hair before the dresser when Lois burst in upon her.
“Polly!” she exclaimed.
“Isn’t this awful! I forgot about
to-night and all the things there were to do.
I was painting in the studio oh, a duck
of a picture, the corner of the house that you see
from the window, and I forgot all about the time.
What, under the sun, will I do?”
Polly’s chance had come, and
she had no intention of letting it escape her.
“Rather late to do anything,
don’t you think?” she asked indifferently,
still brushing her hair.
Lois was taken by surprise. “But,
Poll, you’ve got to help me,” she begged,
“think how furious the Dorothys will be.”
“Can you blame them?”
Polly held her brush in mid air. “As an
organized and governing class we are rather a joke,
and the Dorothys don’t like to be laughed at,”
she finished, cuttingly.
This was too much for Lois. She
had been working hard all afternoon over her picture
and she was tired. She threw herself down on her
bed and burst into tears.
“Polly,” she sobbed, “don’t
act like that. I know I’m no good as a
president. I’ll resign to-night, only oh,
dear ” The rest was muffled in the
pillow.
Polly made a start forward, stopped,
made a last effort to be severe, and gave in.
“Lois, dear, don’t,”
she pleaded, kneeling beside the bed, “don’t
cry any more, sit up and listen to me. Everything’s
all right.” Lois dabbed at her eyes.
“We’ve had a class meeting, the box is
ready, the slips are fixed and the notice is up.
We’re supposed to have had a meeting, that is,
I put a sign up that there’d be one at two-fifteen,
only ” Polly hesitated. “I
put it up at three o’clock. The Dorothys
and Evelin and Helen will think we had it without
them.”
“Polly!” Lois was beginning
to understand. “You deliberately did that
to save me. You darling, I promise I’ll
resign to-night.”
“Resign!” Polly stood
up, a sparkle in her eye. “Lois Farwell,
if you resign, I’ll never, never speak to you
again. I mean it.”
Lois was apparently frightened into
submission, for she said:
“All right, Poll, I won’t.”
Very meekly.
That evening the two Dorothys were
astonished and not a little put out with the ease
with which the election was gone through with.
They had seen the class meeting sign, and with Evelin
and Helen accepted it without a doubt, which added
considerably to Polly’s discomfort.
Lois, now that she was really awake
to the necessity, acted the part of senior president,
and announced and directed, quite properly.
The votes were cast in the Assembly
Hall. Each girl wrote the name of her choice
for captain on a slip of paper and put it in the box.
Then, all the girls who had been on the big team the
year before, with the assistance of the Seniors, counted
the votes.
The whole thing on this particular
evening was gone through with in deadly silence, which
was nerve racking, particularly to Polly. Not
for worlds would she have confessed what it meant
to her, but ever since her Freshman year, she had
wanted to be captain. She had condemned the wish
as foolish, but she had continued to hope.
After what seemed an endless wait,
the names were sorted and counted, written on a sheet
of paper and presented to Lois. She looked at
it, gave a shout of joy, jumped up from her seat,
and then, remembering the two Dorothys’ love
of form, she said quietly: “I have the honor
to announce that Polly Pendleton has won the election
by a sweeping majority.”
And so it happened
When the school heard it a little later everybody
said:
“Why, of course. We knew
it; no one else had a chance,” and hurried to
Polly to congratulate her. She said: “Thank
you” to them all, and tried hard to fight down
the silly, but uncontrollable longing to cry.
Lois slipped away the very first chance
she got and went down stairs. On her way she
met Betty.
“Where are you going?” she demanded.
Lois smiled, mysteriously.
“To send a telegram to Bob,” she answered.
“He made me promise I would.”
The next day at luncheon, Polly found
a yellow envelope at her place at table.
“What under the sun!”
she demanded, looking at it. “Who do you
suppose it’s from?”
“Opening it would be a good
way to find out,” Betty suggested.
Polly tore open the envelope.
“Why it’s from Bob! Lois, you wretch,
listen!”
And she read the message. “Lois
wired me the good news. Hearty congratulations,
and good luck. Bob.”
“Don’t call me a wretch.”
Lois protested, with a wicked grin. “Bob
made me vow I’d wire him the minute little Polly
was elected.”
For the rest of the meal Polly was teased unmercifully.
After school the three held council,
while she took down Lois’ Princeton banner for
a week was up and triumphantly put up her
own.
“I don’t envy you your
job, Polly,” Betty began, “who are you
going to choose for your team?”
“Isn’t it a blessing the
Dorothys don’t play?” Lois laughed, “or
we’d have to have them.”
“Why the main team is easy,”
Polly said. “There’s you and Bet,
and Evelin and myself already on it, and all Seniors;
that only leaves two more to choose, and they’ll
have to be Juniors. Let’s get Evelin and
go over to the gym and see what’s doing.”
They found sweaters and caps, called
Evelin, and started off. Angela met them on the
way.
“I’m going, too,”
she insisted; “even if I can’t play, my
advice is invaluable.”
When they reached the gym a game was
under way, and much to their surprise, Fanny Gerard
was in the thick of it.
“Jemima! look at that!”
Betty exclaimed, as she made a difficult basket.
“Now who’d have thought it!”
They had not seen much of Fanny in
the last month. They had no idea she had taken
their ridicule to heart. She had rebelled against
it at first, and then, gradually, other interests
had blotted out her resentment. Lately she had
been playing basket ball every day.
Evelin was the only one of the girls
watching who was not surprised.
“She’s the right build,”
she said, “and I know she’s been at it
all the time but, of course, she doesn’t
expect to make the team.”
“She ought to. Look at
that!” Lois drew attention to another play.
“Imagine any one apparently as slow and dreamy
as she is, playing such a rattling game. Let’s
put her down for a sub, anyway.”
Polly, who had not been paying much
attention to the rest, said suddenly:
“We’ll have to put her
on the main team. We need two girls, and there’s
only one other Junior besides Fanny who can play, and
that’s Eleanor Trent. She was on the team
at the school where she went last year. There
she is, the girl with the auburn hair. She’s
used to boys’ rules, but otherwise she’s
a good player.”
“Jemima! two new girls!”
Betty said dolefully. “Well, it can’t
be helped. Certainly the old ones are a hopeless
lot.”
“When do we tell them?”
Evelin inquired. “Let’s do it now.
Goodness! I remember how thrilled I was when
I was put on last year.”
“Let’s call them out of
the game; that’ll make them feel so important,”
Lois suggested.
So Polly asked permission from Miss
Stewart, the gym teacher, and Fanny and Eleanor came
over to them.
Polly, as captain, told them they
had been chosen for the big team. Eleanor had
rather expected it. She was a good player, but
she was delighted and promised to try and make good.
But Fanny! No words can express
her excited raptures. She couldn’t believe
her good luck, and she sent the girls into peals of
laughter by solemnly asking Polly to take her oath
on it.
“I knew she’d be rare,”
Betty exclaimed on their way back to school. “I
was sure she’d weep for joy.”
“I hope it’s all right,”
Lois said, doubtfully. “I wish she wasn’t
quite so excitable.” Lois played basket
ball with her head.
“Oh, she’ll be all right
if she doesn’t go at it too hard,” Polly
said, assuringly. “Wonder if we have any
mail?” She stopped before the Senior letter
box. “One for you, Lo, from your mother,
and one for me. Let’s go in English room
and read them. Mine’s from Bob.”
The other girls found their mail,
and went up to their rooms.
Lois and Polly, left alone, opened
their letters and read them through.
“Mother’s is awfully short,”
Lois said, before Polly had finished hers. “She
says she knows something awfully nice that’s
going to happen Thanksgiving, but she has promised
Bob not to tell. What’s yours about?”
“Oh, Lo! poor Bobbie has sprained
his ankle and he can’t run any more.”
Polly’s voice trembled. “I’ll
read you what he says:
“Dear Old Polly:
“Telegraphing congratulations
is no good. It costs too much to be eloquent.
Besides, I’ve a lot of things I want to say,
but, first of all, Three Cheers for you.
Seddon Hall is darn lucky to have such a corking
little captain and you’ll lead them
to victory and have your name on the cup.
Make them put it on extra large.”
“Old tease,” Polly laughed,
and Lois said: “Just like Bob.”
“And now, I’m going to
talk about myself. Two weeks ago I sprained all
the ligaments in my foot, and well, there’s
not much use my trying to be cheerful about it not
to you anyway. It means I probably won’t
be able to run again and so, good-by to
my hopes of winning my H. Remember the long talks
we used to have about it? I guess instead
of watching me cross the tape from the grand stand,
you’ll sit beside me next May and listen to me
groan while some other fellow runs in my place,
which reminds me:
“I’ve planned
a surprise for you and Lois on Thanksgiving. I
don’t
like to boast, but it’s
rather nice even mother says so.
“Drop me a line,
Miss Basket Ball Captain, and tell me you’ll
accept.
“Yours,
“Bob.”
“How exciting! What do
you suppose it is?” Lois demanded, as she followed
Polly upstairs. “It’s a shame about
Bobbie’s foot. Vacation begins next week.
Isn’t it thrilling! I do hope he has sense
enough to bring home some one nice but
I suppose it will be his roommate, Jim Thorpe, as
usual, and I don’t like him much.”
They had reached their room by now.
“I’ll bet the surprise
is a football game, don’t you?” Lois persisted.
“Oh, keep still, Lo!”
Polly said, crossly, “and leave me alone.”
Lo glanced up in surprise, and suddenly
decided to look for Betty. She left Polly standing
before the Crimson banner, blinking hard.