Study hour began at five o’clock
and lasted until six-thirty.
The girls found it impossible to get
to work. At exactly five-eleven, Angela threw
a note to Polly.
“Her train is due,” it
read. “Do you suppose we’ll have to
wait until dinner to see her?”
Polly shrugged her shoulders and shook
her head in reply, and tried to get interested in
her history.
A few minutes later, Lois left her
seat and went over to the dictionary by the window.
The sound of carriage wheels made her completely forget
the word she was hunting for. She peeked out of
the window. There was Connie on the driveway.
Lois watched her pay the driver and pick up her suitcase.
Then she went back to her seat.
“She’s here,” she
whispered to Angela and Polly in passing.
Angela almost shouted with joy, but
the Spartan’s frown of displeasure at the disturbance
at the back of the room made her bury her head in
her desk. Just as the clock struck the half hour,
Betty came in. She went up to the platform and
said, loud enough for everybody to hear:
“Miss Hale, Constance Wentworth
is here, and Mrs. Baird wants Angela in her office.”
There was a general murmur of “oh,
good!” through the room, and Angela was half
way to the door before Miss Hale had given her permission.
Everybody laughed as they heard her running down the
stairs, two steps at a time.
Connie was waiting for her. They
fell into each other’s arms and kissed heartily.
Mrs. Baird was sitting at her desk.
“Take Constance upstairs, will
you, Angela,” she said, smiling. “I’ll
excuse you from study hour, for I know you wouldn’t
be able to do any real studying. Constance will
room with you. Betty has arranged it. Isn’t
it nice to have her back?” she asked with a special
smile for Connie.
Tears, the sudden, grateful kind,
sprang to Constance’s eyes.
“Oh, if you knew how homesick
I get for all this,” she said falteringly.
“I was afraid to come back for fear I’d
feel out of it, but I don’t,” she added
happily.
Angela took her bag and hurried her up to their room.
“Now, tell me all about everything,”
she demanded when Connie had taken off her things.
“Don’t you like the Conservatory?”
“Of course, it’s wonderful,”
Connie answered, enthusiastically, “and I’m
working like mad. I get awfully lonesome when
I don’t. How’s everybody? I
saw Bet for a second; she hasn’t changed much.”
“Everybody’s fine.
Lo saw you coming, and nearly jumped out of the window
with excitement,” Angela told her. “I’ve
written you all the news. We’re going on
a straw-ride to-night just the old girls
that you know and like.”
“Oh, fine! I hoped we could
coast anyway.” Connie was delighted.
“Honestly, Ange,” she said, seriously.
“You don’t know how good it is to stop
being grown up. I have to be so dignified and
ancient all the time, especially when I give concerts.
Oh, by the way! I’ve got a surprise for
you.”
“What?” Angela demanded.
“I’m going abroad next
spring to study for a year I’ve won
a scholarship.”
“Connie! Not honestly?”
“Yes, it’s all decided;
mother is going to take me over and leave me; it’s
a secret, so don’t tell any one.”
Angela studied her friend’s
familiar face in silence for a minute. It was
just like Connie to win a scholarship and then not
tell anybody.
“I don’t believe it’s
a secret,” she said at last. “You
just don’t want anybody to know about it.
Well, I’m going to announce it to the whole
school,” she finished grandly.
“Don’t you dare, Ange.
I’d die of embarrassment,” Connie pleaded.
“Promise you won’t.”
“I’ll promise nothing,”
Angela insisted. “There’s the bell.
Come on and see Poll and Lo.”
It was almost a marvel the way Angela
followed out her threat. In the ten minutes before
dinner, while Connie was surrounded by her other friends,
she managed to convey to every girl in the school that
Constance Wentworth was the most wonderful pianist
in the world, and that she had, by her superior ability,
won a scholarship.
Poor Connie! She was always shy
where her music was concerned, and she blushed in
misery under the torrent of congratulations, and never
touched a bite of dinner.
At seven-fifteen the sleigh was waiting
at the door. It was filled with fresh straw,
and every available robe and blanket that could be
found in the stables had been brought.
Old McDonald, one of the chief characters
of Seddon Hall, sat on the front seat, muffled up
to his eyes. He had grown quite old and feeble
in the last two years, and many of his duties had
been given to younger men, but no one thought of even
offering to drive in his place to-night. He always
drove the young ladies on their straw-rides, and he
would never have even considered trusting them to
the care of another.
Polly and Lois came out first, to
be followed by Betty, and Angela and Connie.
They all got in and began sorting
the robes all but Polly she went
around to the horses’ heads.
“Good evening, McDonald,”
she called. “Why, aren’t these new?”
She looked surprised at the splendid gray team she
had expected to see the two old bays.
“Yes, Miss Polly; they were
bought last summer. The others were getting old
and we put them out to pasture. How do you like
this pair?”
“Why, they’re beauties.”
Polly stroked their velvety noses, affectionately.
“Are they frisky?”
“Well!” McDonald took
time to think, “they are a bit, but nothing to
be afraid of. I can manage them.”
“Oh, of course you can!”
Polly said, with so much conviction that the old man
beamed with pride.
“All in!” Betty called,
“and all aboard! Move your foot, Lo.
I want one side of Connie.”
“Where are we going?” somebody asked.
“Out towards Eagle’s Nest,”
Polly answered. “The roads are not used
out there and it ought to be good for sleighing.”
“We’re off.”
“Cheer once for Seddon Hall,”
Betty commanded and was promptly obeyed. “Now
for Connie. We’ve time for one song before
we reach the village,” she said, after Connie
had been lustily cheered. “Everybody sing.”
They reached the foot of the hill,
and the horses broke into a quick trot the
bells on their harness jingled merrily in the crisp,
cold air. It was a wonderful night. The
moon was almost full, and its brilliant rays, falling
on the white snow, made it sparkle like millions of
stars.
“Are you quite comfy, Miss Crosby?”
Lois asked. “There’s a rug around
here, somewhere, if you’re cold.”
“Thanks! I don’t
need it; I’m as warm as toast. My feet are
lost somewhere in the straw. I feel as if I were
back in Alaska again,” Miss Crosby said, “only
the horses should be dogs.”
“Were you ever in Alaska?”
half a dozen voices asked at once. The song was
over and they were just entering the village.
“Tell us about it,” Lois said.
“No, no, go on and sing some more!”
“We can’t, not for a mile that’s
a rule,” Betty told her. “Mrs. Baird
doesn’t think the village people would appreciate
our music,” she explained. “They’re
not very nice people, but we can’t annoy them.
Please tell us about ‘straw-rides in Alaska.’”
Miss Crosby laughed, and began.
She was a charming woman and a gifted story-teller.
She had traveled all over the world, and because she
was interested in all the little things, her adventures
had been many. She told them to-night about one
ride she had taken for miles inland and held every
one of them spellbound by her account of it.
They were far beyond the village before
she stopped. “We finally did get to camp,
and, of course, after it was over, it didn’t
seem so terrible,” she finished. “Now
do sing some more; you’ve made me talk quite
long enough.”
“And did the dog’s foot
get well?” Polly inquired, still miles away in
fancy.
“No; he died,” Miss Crosby
whispered. “Plucky little fellow! Do
sing.”
There was a whispered consultation, and then:
“There’s a teacher on
our faculty, her name it is Miss Crosby,” Betty
sang, and the rest joined in the refrain: “Oh,
we’d like to know any one with more go, and
we will stand by her to the end-o.” From
one song they went to another, until they reached
Eagle Nest.
“Everybody out!” Polly
ordered, “and stretch. Where’s that
chocolate you were talking about, Ange? I’m
hungry.”
For five minutes they walked around,
stamped their feet to warm up, munching crackers and
chocolate in between.
Then McDonald called: “You’ve
all got to come back, young ladies. I’m
sorry, but these horses do hate to stand even a minute.”
He was very apologetic, but the grays were showing
signs of restlessness, and pawing the ground.
The girls scrambled back into the
sleigh and almost before they were seated the horses
broke into a run.
About a mile farther on, as McDonald
slowed down at a cross-road, they heard the jingling
of other sleigh bells.
“Who do you suppose that is?”
Connie asked. “Listen, they’re singing!”
A minute later a sleigh like their own swung round
the corner it was full of boys. Their
driver slowed down to give McDonald the right of way.
“Why, it must be the Seddon
Hall girls,” they heard one of the boys shout.
“Let’s give them a cheer, fellows!”
“What school is it?” Miss
Crosby asked. “Do you know, Lois!”
“Perhaps it’s the Military Academy,”
Angela suggested.
Betty stood up in the middle of the
sleigh and balanced herself by holding on to Connie
and Lois.
“No!” she said. “They
haven’t any uniform on. I can see
I wish McDonald would let them get ahead.”
By this time the yell was in full
swing. When it ended the boys waited in vain
for a reply.
“Maybe they didn’t hear
us,” one of them shouted. “Let’s
give them a regular cheer with horns.”
Polly, who had been edging up slowly
toward the front seat of the sleigh, ever since they
had started, gave a sudden spring and climbed up beside
McDonald. She knew exactly what was going to happen.
At the first sound of the horn, the
horses already frightened out of their
senses by all the singing and yelling reared
up on their hind legs for one terrifying second, and
then bolted. Poor McDonald tried to bring them
back under his control, but as he realized their condition,
his nerve failed him.
“They’re gone, Miss,”
he said in an agonized whisper to Polly, and his hands
relaxed on the reins.
The girls, now thoroughly conscious
of their danger, hung on for dear life, and some of
them cried out.
The deafening shouts and the blowing
of the horns kept up in the sleigh behind. The
boys thought they were being raced.
Polly thought hard for just the fraction
of a minute. Then she took the reins from McDonald’s
unresisting hands and pulled. She knew that her
strength was not equal to stopping those wild runaways,
but she felt she could keep them headed straight,
and avoid tipping the sleigh. Just as she was
trying to remember where she was and to place the hill
that she knew was on the right at a cross-road, poor
old McDonald fainted and fell backwards into the sleigh.
She didn’t dare turn her head, but she heard
Lois say:
“I’ve got him; help me, Bet,” and
Miss Crosby cry out:
“The reins! The reins!”
“I’ve got them; don’t
worry!” Polly’s voice sounded miles away.
Her head was throbbing. “Can I make it?
Can I make it?” she kept saying over and over
under her breath.
She saw the cross-road ahead; on the
right a steep hill led up to an old, deserted hotel.
For a minute she hesitated. The horses were good
for miles more at top speed. She knew if they
had level ground, that meant entering the village.
She decided quickly. It must be the hill.
If she could only make the turn. She tightened
her grip on the reins and felt the horses slack just
the least little bit. She pulled hard on the
left rein, and then as they came to the turn on
the right one so as to describe a wide
half circle and save the sleigh from tipping.
The sudden turn frightened the girls.
“Where are we going?”
“Oh, stop them!”
Polly heard their cries as in a dream.
She took time to smile and toss her head to get a
lock of hair out of her eye. She had felt the
slight, but certain relaxing on the lines, and she
knew the worst was over.
The hill was about a mile long, and
by the time the horses reached the top, Polly had
them completely under her control. She stopped
them, finally, under the old tumbled down porte-cochère
of the hotel. They were trembling all over and
they were sweating.
“Get out!” Polly ordered,
“and don’t make any noise. We’ll
have to wait a minute before we go back give
me some blankets for the horses, and look after McDonald.”
Miss Crosby was already doing it.
The old man had collapsed and lost consciousness,
but now he was coming around. With Betty to help,
she had rolled him up in a robe in the middle of the
sleigh, and tried to soothe him; his grief was pathetic.
“I’m done for; I’m done for!”
he kept repeating.
Lois helped Polly with the horses.
“Sit down, Poll,” she
said, authoritatively. “You need rest, too.
You’ll have to drive us home.”
Polly looked at her gratefully her knees
were trembling.
“I better keep going,”
she answered. “Just don’t let the
girls talk to me and I’ll be all right.”
She was stroking one of the horse’s necks.
Lois went round to the back of the
sleigh. The girls were standing in a huddled
group.
“Lo, will we ever get home?” Angela asked,
tearfully.
“Of course, silly,” Lois
replied, calmly. “Polly stopped the horses
running away; I guess she can drive us back all right;
she’s nervous, of course, so don’t talk
to her.”
“We won’t,” Mildred
said. “Mercy, but she’s a wonder!
I’m, oh! I’m going to cry.”
Lois left the others to deal with
her and returned to Polly.
“When do we start?” she
asked, abruptly. Don’t think for a minute
she was acting under her natural impulse. If
she had been, she would have thrown her arms around
Polly and been very foolish; but she was trying to
act the way she knew Bob would have without
fuss. She knew how Polly hated a fuss.
“Now, the horses mustn’t
catch cold and McDonald ought to see a doctor,”
Polly said. “Tell them to get in, will you?
and, Lo,” she added with a grin, “pray
hard going down hill. I have my doubts about the
brake.”
When they were all in, Miss Crosby said:
“I think we better take McDonald to the hospital.”
Polly nodded: “All right, I know where
it is.”
The horses, sure of themselves by
now, and confident in their driver, behaved very well.
At the outskirts of the village, they
drew up before the little white hospital, and Betty
jumped out and rang the bell. A nurse answered
it. In a few minutes they were carrying McDonald
in on a stretcher.
As they started up the steps with
him, he called: “Miss Polly!” in a
shaky voice.
Polly jumped down from her seat, and went to him.
“I’m done for,”
he said, slowly, “and you’re a very wonderful
girl. You stopped those horses, you did, and
I I couldn’t ” He
broke down.
“Nonsense, McDonald! Your
hands were cold,” Polly said. “You’ll
be fine in the morning and able to drive anything.
Cheer up!” But McDonald only repeated:
“I’m done for.”
A lump rose in Polly’s throat
at his distress, and she leaned down and kissed his
wrinkled old face.
She cried quite shamelessly all the
way back to school secure in the fact that
no one could see her.
In the sleigh the girls were beginning to recover.
“Jemima!” Betty said,
breaking a long silence. “Poll saved all
our lives; do you know it!”
Connie shivered. “I’m
just beginning to realize it,” she said, solemnly.
“All the time everything was happening I was
trying to remember the last duet I learned.”
Everybody laughed.
“Polly is ”
Miss Crosby began. “Well, she’s so
splendid that But I guess we’d better
not talk about it. We’re all on the verge
of tears.”
“Let’s cheer for her,”
some one suggested. “Maybe we’ll get
our courage back.”
They gave it a long, long
one that had in it all their admiration
and gratitude. And every poor tired muscle in
Polly’s valiant little body throbbed with joy
at the sound.