There was no need to consult the calendar.
The subdued voices, and the worried frowns, to be
seen in any of the corridors or classrooms of Seddon
Hall proclaimed it the first of February, and examination
week. Every girl carried a book under her arm
and the phrase, “Do you think you passed?”
was on every one’s lips.
Outside the weather was clear and
cold, the pond was frozen smooth as glass. The
snow on the hill was packed solid and fit for coasting,
but no one ventured that far away from their books.
The first half of the year was over
and the girls knew from past experience that the rest
of the time would hurry by. In one short month
there would be a hint of spring in the air, and commencement
would be in sight.
On this particular afternoon the Senior
class were having their examination in Latin and,
to judge by their frowns, they were finding it difficult.
Betty ruffled her hair every little
while and scowled at Miss Hale, who was correcting
papers at her desk. She had answered all the questions
she could and done all the prose work. All that
was left was a translation of Virgil. Betty stared
at the unfamiliar text, and wondered where it had
come from. “I don’t believe it’s
Virgil,” she said to herself. “If
it is it’s a part we haven’t had.”
Then a few words from the confusing paragraphs caught
her eye, and she began to remember. Her brow
cleared a few words were all Betty ever
needed to start her on one of her famous translations.
She wrote hurriedly for ten minutes.
“That will do, I guess.
The Spartan’s sure to say, ’a little too
free, but correct on the whole,’ anyway,”
she thought, ruefully, as she folded up her paper
and put her pen and ink away.
Miss Hale raised her eyebrows in surprise
as she handed in the examination.
“You have finished very early,”
she said, coldly, and Betty’s heart sank.
“Don’t you want to look over your paper?”
“Jemima, no!” Betty exclaimed,
without thinking. “That is, I beg your
pardon, Miss Hale, but I don’t think I do.
You see I’d begin to wonder about all my answers
and that would only make things worse,” she said,
desperately.
“Very well; you may leave the
room,” Miss Hale replied, with a resigned sigh
that plunged Betty into the deepest gloom.
She wandered over to Senior Alley.
It was deserted. The rest of her classmates were
still in the study hall. She found Angela’s
history book on her bed and started to study, but
gave it up in despair. They had covered over
half of a thick book that year and there was no way
of knowing what part to re-study.
“I’d be sure to learn
all the dates that weren’t asked for,”
she said, aloud, and closed the book.
She thought of the possible Juniors
who might be free. She had passed Fanny on her
way out of the study hall she remembered
the big ink spot that she had on one cheek. Suddenly
she thought of Maud.
“I’ll bet she’s
finished her exam, if she had one,” she laughed
to herself, for Maud’s utter disregard of lessons
that did not interest her was a much-discussed topic.
She went upstairs to the Sophomore
corridor, expecting to find it almost as deserted
as her own, but, instead, she found five of the teachers
talking excitedly in the hall.
Mrs. Baird had her hand on the knob
of Maud’s door. Betty was a little confused
at such a strange gathering.
“Excuse me,” she said, hastily, and turned
to go.
There was no need to explain that
something was wrong the whole atmosphere
of the corridor was charged with mystery.
“Don’t go, Betty,”
Mrs. Baird said, peremptorily, “I have something
to tell you; perhaps you can help. Have you seen
Maud to-day?”
Betty shook her head. “No,”
she said, slowly, “I don’t think I have.”
Mrs. Baird hesitated for a minute
and then said, very distinctly:
“Maud is lost.”
It was a startling announcement, and
Betty couldn’t understand. Who ever heard
of any one being lost at Seddon Hall.
“But how?” she asked Mrs.
Baird. “Where could she be?” Miss
Crosby answered her:
“Nobody knows, Betty,”
she said. “Maud was at breakfast this morning,
but at luncheon time she did not appear. I sent
one of the girls up to look for her and she came back
and told me she couldn’t find her. I thought
perhaps she was in the Infirmary, but after luncheon
I asked Miss King, and she said she hadn’t seen
her.”
“She’s not in the building;
we’ve looked everywhere,” Mrs. Baird continued.
“Where could she have gone? None of the
teachers gave her permission to go out of bounds.”
At the word permission Betty looked
up. It struck her that Maud might not have considered
it necessary to ask for permission.
“May I go to her room?” she asked Mrs.
Baird.
“Certainly.”
Betty opened the door and looked up
at the wall over the bed. As she had expected
Maud’s snow shoes were gone from their accustomed
place. She explained to the teachers.
“She’s probably miles
away by now,” she finished. “Did she
have any examination this afternoon?”
“Yes, in literature,”
Miss Porter told her, “and I can’t believe
she’d cut
“She wouldn’t not
literature anyway,” Betty said, confidently,
and turned to Mrs. Baird.
“I’m sure I can find her
by tracing her snow shoes,” she said.
“But you mustn’t go alone;
something may have happened. Take one of the
stable boys with you,” Mrs. Baird answered.
“I’d rather have Polly
and Lois,” Betty said, “if there’s
anything wrong.”
“Very well, where are they?” Mrs. Baird
asked.
“Taking their Latin exams,” Betty told
her.
“Go and get them. I’ll
explain to Miss Hale, and, Betty, dear, do make haste;
I’m really worried; the child may have hurt herself
somewhere.”
Betty hurried to the study hall.
She knew it was useless to try to explain to Miss
Hale; so she said: “Mrs. Baird wanted Polly
and Lois at once.” They handed in their
papers and joined her in the corridor. She hurried
them to their room, and explained on the way.
Fifteen minutes later they had found
the track of Maud’s snow shoes and started out
to follow it.
Seddon Hall owned over five hundred
acres of land and for the most part it was dense woodland.
Trailing through it in winter without snow shoes was
hard work, for the snow drifted even with the high
boulders in places and you were apt to suddenly wade
in up to your waist. Maud had taken the path
that went out towards flat rock. This made following
her tracks comparatively easy for the girls.
“What under the sun do you suppose
has happened to her?” Polly demanded.
“I don’t know,”
Betty replied; “I wish I knew when she’d
started. As far as I can find out no one has
seen her since breakfast.”
“Did she have an exam this morning?” Lois
inquired.
“No; her class had Latin and
she doesn’t take it. I’m not awfully
worried,” Polly said, suddenly. “I
would be if it were any one but Maud. She’s
used to much wilder country than this and I can’t
help feeling that she’s all right somewhere.”
“But, where?” Lois demanded.
“If she were all right and hadn’t hurt
herself she’d have been home by now.”
“If she’s kept up on top
of the hill she can’t have come to very great
grief,” Betty declared, “but if she’s
headed down to the river then, anything
could have happened.”
“What do you mean?” Lois asked.
“Why, she might have fallen
and broken her leg,” Betty explained. “You
know how dangerous those rocks are in winter; she may
have stepped between two of them and gotten caught.”
“Don’t,” Lois protested, with a
shudder.
They trudged on for a quarter of a
mile in silence, then the trail turned suddenly to
the right.
“She’s gone toward the
apple orchard, thank goodness!” Betty exclaimed.
“Do you suppose she’s
gone round by way of the bridge and home?” Lois
asked, stopping. “If she has, we’ll
have our hunt in vain.”
Polly and Betty considered a minute. Then Polly
said:
“Of course not; if she had, she’d have
been home hours ago.”
When they reached the apple orchard
they noticed that the print of the snow shoes was
less regular.
“She’s stopped to rest
here,” Betty said, pointing to the ground.
“Look how irregular these prints are.”
“Come on!” Polly said,
quickening her steps, “we may be near her.”
“Hold on!” Betty cried,
“look, something happened here; it looks as if
she’d fallen down!” A big dent in the snow,
as if a body had been lying on the ground, showed
up in the prints of Maud’s snow shoes.
“Here’s a queer thing,”
Lois pointed out, “one shoe’s going in
one direction and one in another.”
Polly walked on a little way, and
then called to the others, excitedly:
“Here are the prints and look,
side of them there’s a mark as if she were dragging
something along with her.”
“What’s that black spot farther on?”
Lois demanded.
They looked in the direction in which
she pointed and saw, a couple of hundred yards farther
on, something that showed black against the snow.
“It’s a man’s hat!
Oh, Poll, I’m scared to death,” Lois said,
trembling, when they came up to it. Murder and
every possible form of highway robbery passed through
her mind.
Betty turned white, and Polly bit her lip.
“Come on!” she said, bravely, “we’ve
got to find her.”
“Jemima!” Betty groaned;
“it’s beginning to snow, too.”
She picked up the hat; it was almost buried by the
snow, and looked green with age. They were tired
by this time walking in snow shoes is very
much easier than trudging in rubber boots and
they realized with a shudder that Maud and her unknown
companion had a long start of them.
They followed the track as fast as
they could. It went on through the orchard and
down the hill, and then over the bridge. It stopped
there and zigzagged in every direction. The girls
looked and exchanged frightened glances. Betty’s
heart was beating furiously and Lois’ knees
trembled. They forged on, the prints were clear
again, and went straight up the hill, always accompanied
by the queer, uneven path beside them.
“She must be dragging something,”
Polly said. “That’s all that that
track can mean.”
“Or some one is dragging her,”
Lois spoke the thought that was uppermost in Betty’s
mind.
“Nonsense!” Polly ejaculated.
“I don’t believe it. I tell you Maud
is all right, wherever she is. I know it.”
The road they were taking was a short
cut to school. There was a steep hill a
level stretch, and then it joined the road from the
school farm. The snow was falling heavily, and
it was getting dark when they reached the top of the
hill, and the prints were fast disappearing. By
the time they got to the road they lost all track.
“Whatever happened, Maud’s
home,” Betty exclaimed in a relieved voice,
and broke into a run. The others followed her.
Mrs. Baird was walking up and down
the Senior porch as they came up.
“Oh, girls! I’m so
glad you’re back; come in and take off those
wet clothes right away; Maud’s here.”
“Is she all right?” they asked in chorus.
“Yes,” Mrs. Baird assured
them. “She must have been in the building
when you started out.”
“Where?” Betty demanded.
“In the bath-tub,” Mrs.
Baird said, hurriedly. “I’ll explain
it to you later. Now do go and change; you must
be very wet. I’ll have some hot soup for
you in my sitting-room. Come as soon as you can.
I’ll excuse you from study hour.”
The girls hurried upstairs without
a word. In Senior Alley they met Fanny.
“Do you know where Maud Banks is?” Betty
asked her.
“Yes; she’s in her room,” Fanny
said; “where have you all
“Go up and tell her to come
down here this minute,” Betty interrupted her;
“please, Fanny, like a dear,” she added
as an afterthought.
Fanny went up to the corridor and returned with Maud.
Polly and Lois and Betty were all
changing their clothes in their separate rooms.
Maud stood in the hall between, with the astonished
Fanny.
“Did you get lost?” Betty asked the first
question.
“No, rather not,” Maud
answered; “got out as far as an apple orchard,
and it was awfully late. I’d no idea where
the time went. I knew there must be a short cut,
so I
“Never mind, we know that,”
Polly interrupted. “Did you sit down in
the orchard?”
“As a matter of fact, I did;
my snow shoe was loose. How did you know?”
“Were you dragging anything
when you left the orchard?” Lois demanded.
“Yes, a branch of a tree; I
say, I’m awfully sorry you had all that trouble
of
“Did you see a man’s hat
by any chance, on your way to the bridge?” Betty
asked.
“Yes.” Maud was becoming more and
more bewildered.
“What did you do when you got home?”
“Why, I hustled down to Roman
Alley and took a tub. You see I was awfully late,
and I knew that Miss what’s her name Spartan
would be no end cross if I didn’t show up for
the exam. I didn’t want to miss it either;
it was literature, you know.”
“Where did you leave your snow shoes?”
“Up against the gym porch; they
were awfully wet and I didn’t want to take the
time to go to my room. I say it was a bit of a
joke; you’re thinking I was lost, wasn’t
it?” she asked, calmly.
Polly finished buttoning her dress.
“Maud,” she said sternly
“go back upstairs. To-morrow we may be able
to see the joke, but not now.”
Maud left with Fanny. “I’m most awfully
sorry,” were her last words.
A few minutes later, the girls sought
the comfort of Mrs. Baird’s charming sitting-room,
and the promised hot soup.
Between sips they told her the story
of their hunt and the fears that beset them.
She listened delightedly, but with ready sympathy.
“You poor, dear children!
What an experience! I talked to Maud very severely.”
Betty thought she said: “I will talk.”
“Don’t tell her what we’ve
told you,” she begged, “I wouldn’t
have her know for anything.”
“She’d say it was no end of a joke,”
Polly laughed.
Mrs. Baird nodded in understanding.
“Of course I won’t tell
her,” she said merrily. “It’s
a secret just between us,” she added with a
smile.