The rest of Thanksgiving vacation
was so pale in comparison with the game that it is
not worth recounting. Only one thing of lasting
importance occurred.
Sunday morning, while Lois and Polly
were still in bed Lois was staying with
Polly at Uncle Roddy’s apartment on Riverside
Drive the bell rang. Mrs. Bent the
housekeeper opened the door and Mrs. Farwell walked
in.
“Good morning,” she said
hurriedly and catching sight of Mr. Pendleton
in the library added, “I know I’m
much too early for dinner, Roddy the doctor
said you wouldn’t be up, but I have such exciting
news for the girls. Where are they?”
“Still in bed. I think
they’re having breakfast. You might go see.
Tell me about the excitement first,” Uncle Roddy
answered, as he helped her with her coat.
“I found a letter from Mrs.
Banks, when I got home from the theater last night,”
Mrs. Farwell explained. “It had been forwarded
from Albany. They are back from Canada.”
“The Banks, eh! How is
Maud?” Uncle Roddy inquired with sudden interest.
“Very well, and Mrs. Banks wants
to send her but I must tell the girls,”
she interrupted herself, and hurried down the hall.
The Banks need a word of explanation
to those who have not read the story of the first
summer that Polly and Lois spent in the former’s
old home in New England, where they lived in Polly’s
own house left to her by her Aunt Hannah Pendleton.
It was a big, rambling place and quite a distance
from the village. The only other house on the
hill was the mysterious Kent place said
by the natives for miles around to be haunted.
It was with the greatest surprise
that Polly, on her arrival, learned that this summer
it was tenanted by a Mrs. Banks and her daughter, Maud.
But instead of the occupants completely dispelling
the mystery of the house, the Banks added to it.
It was soon evident, that there was
something queer about them. Maud was very shy,
and more like a frightened, wild animal, than a healthy,
normal child. It was Dr. Farwell, who, towards
the end of the summer, discovered that she was suffering
from a severe nervous shock, caused by the tragic
death of her father in India.
He had sent her away for treatment
and when she returned, Polly and Lois had tried to
complete the cure. Polly had almost succeeded
in persuading her to return with them to Seddon Hall,
but Maud’s timidity had barred the way.
She could not make up her mind to face the one hundred
girls.
Mrs. Banks had taken her daughter
to Canada to visit friends that winter, and apart
from an occasional postal, Polly and Lois had heard
no further news of them.
Mrs. Farwell’s letter was a
great surprise. When she entered the girl’s
room they both sat up. They had finished breakfast
and were just being happily lazy.
“Jemima! What time is it?”
Lois demanded, at sight of her mother. “Are
you and Daddy here for dinner already?”
Mrs. Farwell laughed. “No,
you lazy bones, it’s not quite as late as that.
I came before Daddy, because I have news for you such
news!”
“Tell us,” Polly demanded,
quite thoroughly awake. “News of what?”
Mrs. Farwell sat down on the edge of the bed and began:
“I’ve had a letter from Mrs. Banks, she
and Maud are in New York and
But the girls interrupted her with a flood of questions.
“Mrs. Banks in New York!
How’s Maud? Did she say where she was going
to school?”
“Is she still so awfully nervous?”
“I wonder what she’s like now.”
“Do listen,” Mrs. Farwell
begged, “and I’ll tell you. Mrs. Banks
wrote that she was considering sending Maud to Seddon
Hall. She is fifteen now, you know, and apparently,
from what her mother writes eager to go.”
Polly said: “Well, I never!
It’s taken her two years to make up her mind.”
Lois groaned, and fell back on her
pillows. You will remember, she was never as
interested in Maud, as Polly was.
“Another younger girl to look
after,” she said dolefully. “I wonder
if there’ll be room for her. When are you
going to answer Mrs. Banks’ letter, mother?”
Mrs. Farwell thought for a minute.
“Why I think I’ll ’phone
her. You see the letter was sent to Albany, so
it was delayed in reaching me. I have their address
here.”
“Look!” Polly bounded
out of bed. “Call her up now Aunt Kate,
and ask her to bring Maud to tea this afternoon.
Then we can talk about school and see Maud. Get
up, Lo, and do show a little interested enthusiasm,”
she admonished, as Mrs. Farwell went back to the library
to tell Uncle Roddy the rest of the story, and to
’phone to Mrs. Banks. “Aren’t
you excited?”
“No!” Lois got
up slowly and struggled to find her slipper. “I
am not,” she said slowly but distinctly.
Mrs. Banks was delighted to accept
Mrs. Farwell’s invitation, and at four o’clock
they arrived, she and Maud.
The girls could hardly restrain a
gasp of surprise at the sight of Maud. It is
hard to realize that other girls grow up as well as
yourself, and Polly and Lois still remembered the
shy little girl in a pinafore, with straight flaxen
hair and blue eyes that Maud had been two summers
before. They were totally unprepared to meet the
new Maud.
In the first place, instead of looking
down at her they had to look up, for she had grown
until she was a half head taller than either Polly
or Lois. Her arms and legs were lanky and her
hair was now brushed severely back from her forehead
and hung in a heavy braid down her back. She
wore a very plain black velvet dress with a broad white
collar and cuffs, and with her clear blue eyes and
straight features she made a strikingly handsome picture,
and although she spoke in her same soft melodious
voice all trace of shyness was gone.
After the greetings were over, and everybody was comfortably
settled, the talk turned to school.
“Where have you been the past
two years?” Polly asked. “I’m
so tickled to think you’ve really decided to
go to Seddon Hall at last.”
“I’ve had governesses, most of the time,”
Maud answered.
“But you went to a small private
school too, dear,” Mrs. Banks reminded her.
Maud glanced at her mother and then back to Polly.
“Not for long, though; you see
I was expelled,” she said, with such unexpected
bluntness, that they all laughed.
“Expelled! What for?”
Lois asked, without intending to be rude.
“For drawing a picture of the
music professor. It wasn’t a very flattering
picture, so!”
“You weren’t really expelled,
dear,” Mrs. Banks said apologetically.
“The Principal just thought you might be happier
somewhere else. You didn’t fit in; you
see it was a very small school, and
“All the girls were little gentlewomen,”
Maud interrupted, without appearing rude, “and
I was too noisy.” She chuckled to herself probably
at the memory of past pranks. “I didn’t
mean to be, but the Principal ” She
stopped abruptly. She was a little embarrassed
at so much undivided attention for though
she was noisy, and rather unmanageable, she had no
desire to show off. For the rest of the visit,
the older people did the talking.
An hour later, as the girls were packing
their bags, in Polly’s room they
discussed Maud. It was decided that she was to
go to Seddon Hall as soon as Mrs. Banks could arrange
with Mrs. Baird, and the girls were wondering just
what difference her coming would make.
“She’ll be some
one anyway,” Polly said thoughtfully, “Whether
she’s popular or not, she’s sure to make
herself felt.”
“I think she’ll make a
hit,” Lois replied, slowly. “She’s
awfully different. I wonder if she’ll start
drawing pictures of the faculty.”
“It doesn’t matter if
she does, no one will pay any attention to it,”
Polly said, with a grin. “Maybe she’ll
put some ginger into things.”
“Bet will be pleased if she
does,” Lois laughed, as she packed her football
score card. The sight of it made her exclaim:
“Poll, I meant to write Frank
to-day! I haven’t congratulated him yet.
We’ve been so busy.” She hurried to
the desk. “I’ll have time to tear
off just a line before we start.”
Polly was suddenly reminded of an
unanswered letter at the same time. In a second
their pens scratched in unison, and Maud was completely
forgotten.