“Girls, girls, I’ve news
for you!” cried Winnifred Blake, entering the
school-room and surveying the faces of her school-mates
with great eagerness.
Luncheon hour was almost over, and
the pupils belonging to Mrs. Elder’s Select
Establishment for Young Ladies were gathered together
in the large school-room, some enjoying a merry chat,
others, more studiously inclined, conning over a forthcoming
lesson.
“Give us the benefit of your
news quickly, Winnie,” said Ada Irvine, looking
round from her snug seat on the broad window-ledge;
“surely we must be going to hear something wonderful
when you are so excited;” and the girl
eyed her animated school-fellow half scornfully.
“A new pupil is coming,”
announced Winnie with an air of great solemnity.
“Be patient, my friends, and I’ll tell
you how I know. Dinner being earlier to-day,
I managed to get back to school sooner than usual,
and was just crossing the hall to join you all in the
school-room, when the drawing-room door opened, and
Mrs. Elder appeared, accompanied by a lady in a long
loose cloak and huge bonnet regular coal-scuttle
affair, girls; so large, in fact, that it was quite
impossible to get a glimpse of her face. Mrs.
Elder was saying as I passed, ’I shall expect
your niece to-morrow morning, Miss Latimer, at nine
o’clock; and trust she will prosecute her studies
with all diligence, and prove a credit to the school.’”
Winnie mimicked the lady-principal’s soft,
plausible voice as she spoke.
“A new pupil!” remarked
Ada once more, her voice raised in supreme contempt;
“really, Winnie, I fail to understand your excitement
over such a trifle. Why, she may be a green-grocer’s
daughter for all you know to the contrary;”
and the speaker’s dainty nose was turned up with
a gesture of infinite scorn.
“Well, and what then, Miss Conceit?”
retorted Winnie, flushing angrily at her school-mate’s
contemptuous tone; “I presume a green-grocer’s
daughter is not exempted from possessing the same talented
abilities which characterize your charming self.”
“Certainly not,” replied
the other with the same quiet ring of scorn in her
voice; “but, pray, who would associate with a
green-grocer’s daughter? Most assuredly
not I. My mother is very particular with regard to
the circle in which I move.”
Winnie swept a graceful courtesy.
“Allow me to express my deep
sense of obligation,” she said mockingly, “at
the honour conferred on my unworthy self by your attempted
patronage and esteem.” Then, changing her
tone and raising her little head proudly “Ada
Irvine, I am ashamed of you your pride is
insufferable; and my heartiest wish is that some day
you may be looked down upon and viewed with the supreme
contempt you now bestow on those lower (most unfortunately)
in the social scale than yourself.”
“Thanks for your amiable wish,”
was the answer, given in that easy, tranquil voice
which the owner well knew irritated her adversary more
than the fiercest burst of passion would have done;
“but I am afraid there is little likelihood
of its ever being realized.”
Winnie elevated her eyebrows. Is that your opinion?
she said in affected surprise, while the other school-girls gathered round,
tittering at the caustic little tongue. I suppose you study the poets,
Miss Irvine; and if so, doubtless you will remember who it is that says:
’Oh wad some power the giftie gie
us
To see oursels as ithers see us!’”
The mischievous child stopped for
a second, and then continued: “I am afraid
you look at yourself and your various charms through
rose-coloured spectacles, certainly not with ’a
jaundiced eye;’ but I beg your pardon;
were you about to speak?” and Winnie looked innocently
into the fair face of her antagonist, which was now
white and set with passion.
The blue eyes were flashing with an
angry light, the pretty lips trembling, and the smooth
brow knit in a heavy frown; but only for a few moments.
By-and-by the features relaxed their fixed and stony
gaze; the countenance resumed its usual haughty expression;
and, lifting up the book which was lying on her lap,
Ada opened it at the required page, and ended the
discussion by saying, “I shall consider it my
duty to inform Mrs. Elder of your charming sentiments;
in the meantime, kindly excuse me from continuing
such highly edifying conversation.” With
that she bent her head over the French grammar, and
soon appeared thoroughly engrossed in the conjugation
of the verb avoir, to have, while her mischievous
school-mate turned away with a light shrug of her
pretty shoulders.
Winnifred Blake, the youngest daughter
of a wealthy, influential gentleman, was a bright,
happy girl of about fourteen years, with a kind, generous
heart, and warm, impulsive nature. Being small
and slight in stature, she seemed to all appearance
a mere child; and the quaint, gipsy face peeping from
beneath a mass of shaggy, tangled curls showed a pair
of large laughter-loving eyes and a mischievous little
mouth.
Was she clever?
Well, that still remained to be seen.
Certainly, the bright, intelligent countenance gave
no indication of a slow understanding and feeble brain;
but Winnie hated study, and consequently was usually
to be found adorning the foot of the class.
“It is deliciously comfortable here, girls,”
she would say to her school-mates when even they protested
against such continual indolence; “you see I
am near the fire, and that is a consideration in the
cold, wintry days, I assure you. Don’t
annoy yourselves over my shortcomings. Lazy,
selfish people always get on in the world;”
and speaking thus, the incorrigible child would nestle
back in her lowly seat with an air of the utmost satisfaction.
Ada Irvine smiled in supreme contempt
over what she termed Winnie’s stupidity, and
would repeat her own perfectly-learned lesson with
additional triumph in her tone; but the faultless repetition
by no means disconcerted her lazy school-mate, who
was often heard to say, with seeming simplicity, “I
could do just as well if I chose; but then I don’t
choose, and that, you see, makes all the difference.”
Ada Irvine was an only child, and
her parents having gone abroad in the (alas, how often
vain!) search after health, had left her with Mrs.
Elder, to whose care she was intrusted with every charge
for her comfort and advantage a charge
which that young lady took great care should be amply
fulfilled. She was only six months older than
Winnie, but very tall, and already giving the promise
of great beauty in after years. Talented and
brilliant also, she held a powerful sway over the
minds and actions of her schoolmates, and queened in
the school right royally; but the cold, haughty pride
which marred her nature failed to make her such a
general favourite as her fiery, little adversary.
In the afternoon, when the school
was being dismissed for the day, Ada sought the presence
of the lady-principal; and consequently, just as Winnie
was strapping up her books preparatory to going home,
a servant appeared in the dressing-room summoning
Miss Blake to Mrs. Elder’s sanctum.
“Now you’re in for it,
Winnie,” said the girls pityingly; “Ada
has kept to her word and told. How mean!”
But the child only tossed her curly head, and with
slightly heightened colour followed the maid to the
comfortable parlour where the lady-principal was usually
to be found.
Mrs. Elder, seated by a small fire
which burned brightly in the shining grate, turned
a face expressive of the most severe displeasure on
the defiant little culprit as she entered; while Ada,
standing slightly in the shadow of the window-curtain,
looked at the victim haughtily, and shaped her lips
in a malicious smile at the lady-principal’s
opening words.
“I presume you are aware of
my reason for requesting your presence here, Miss
Blake,” she began in icy tones; “and I
trust you have come before me sincerely penitent for
your fault. I cannot express in sufficiently
strong terms the displeasure I feel at your shameful
conduct this afternoon. I never thought a pupil
of this establishment could be guilty of such unlady-like
language as fell from your lips, and it grieves me
to know that I have in my school a young girl capable
of cherishing the evil spirit of animosity against
a fellow-creature. What have you to say in defence
of your conduct? Can you vindicate it in any
way, or shall I take your silence as full confession
of your guilt?”
Winnie pressed her lips tightly together,
but did not speak. “I need not attempt
to clear myself,” she mentally decided.
“Ada will have coloured our quarrel to suit
herself, and being Mrs. Elder’s favourite, her
word will be relied on before mine; that has been the
case before, and will be so again.”
The lady-principal, however, mistook
the continued silence for conscious guilt.
“Then I demand that an ample
apology be made to Miss Irvine now, in my presence,”
she said once more in frigid tones. “Come,
Miss Blake; my time is too precious to be trifled
with.”
Winnie’s eyes sparkled, and
raising her small head defiantly, she replied, “I
decline to apologize, Mrs. Elder. I only spoke
as I thought, and am quite prepared to say the same
again if occasion offers. Miss Irvine knows
my words, if distasteful, were but too true.”
The lady-principal gasped. “Miss
Blake,” she cried at length, horrified at the
bold assertion, and endeavouring to quail her audacious
pupil with one stern, withering glance, “this
is dreadful!” But the angry child only pouted,
and repeated doggedly, “It is quite true.”
Then Mrs. Elder rose, and laying her
hand firmly on Winnie’s shoulder, said quietly,
but with an awful meaning underlying her words, “Apologize
at once, Miss Blake, or I shall resort to stronger
measures, and also complain to your parents” a
threat which terrified the unwilling girl into submission.
Going forward with flushed cheeks
and mutinous mouth, she stood before the triumphant
Ada, and said sullenly, “Please accept my apology
for unlady-like language, Miss Irvine. I am
sorry I should have degraded myself and spoken as
I did, but” (and here a mischievous light swept
the gloomy cloud from the piquant face and lit it up
with an elfish smile) “you provoked me, and
I am very outspoken.”
Ada coloured with anger and vexation;
and in spite of her displeasure, Mrs. Elder found
it difficult to repress a smile.
“That will do,” she pronounced
coldly; “such an apology is only adding insult
to injury. You will kindly write out twenty times
four pages of French vocabulary, and also remain at
the foot of all your classes during the next fortnight.
Go! I am greatly displeased with you, Miss
Blake;” and as the lady-principal waved her hand
in token of dismissal, she frowned angrily, and looked
both mortified and indignant.
Winnie required no second bidding.
She drew her slight figure up to its full height,
made her exit with all the dignity of an offended
queen, entered the now deserted dressing-room, and
seizing her books, hurried from the school, and was
soon running rapidly down the busy street.
“Hallo, Win! what’s the
row? One would think you had stolen the giant’s
seven-league boots,” cried a voice from behind.
“Did ever I see a girl dashing along at such
a rate!” And turning round, Winnie saw before
her a tall, strapping boy, whose honest, freckled face,
illumined by a broad, friendly grin, shone brightly
on her from under a shock of fiery red hair.
“I’ll bet I know without
your telling me,” he continued, coming to her
side and removing his heavy load of books from one
shoulder to the other. “Been quarrelling
with the lovely Ada, eh?” and he glanced kindly
at the little figure by his side.
Winnie laughed slightly. “You’re
about right, Dick,” she replied. “There
has been a cat-and-dog fight; only this time the cat’s
velvety paws scratched the poor little dog and wounded
it sorely.”
“Ah! you went at it tooth and
nail, I suppose,” Dick said philosophically;
“pity you girls can’t indulge in a regular
stand-up fight.” And the wild boy began
to brandish his arms about as if he would thoroughly
enjoy commencing there and then.
The quick flush of temper was over
now, and the girl’s eyes gleamed mischievously
as she replied, “I’ve a weapon of my own,
Dick, fully as powerful as yours. I’ll
use my tongue;” and the audacious little minx
smiled saucily into her brother’s honest face.
A hearty roar greeted her words, and
Dick almost choked before he managed to say, “Go
it, Win; I’ll back you up. Commend me to
a woman’s tongue!” And the boy, unable
to control his risible faculties, burst into a hearty
laugh, which died away in a chuckle of genuine merriment.
Richard Blake, or Dick (the name by
which he was generally called) was Winnie’s
favourite brother, and she almost idolized the big,
kindly fellow, on whom the other members of the family
showered ridicule and contempt. He was a bluff,
outspoken lad, with a brave, true heart as tender
and pitiful as a woman’s; but, lacking both the
capacity for and inclination to study, he by no means
proved a brilliant scholar, and thus brought down
on himself the censure of his masters and the heavy
displeasure of his father. “Hard words
break no bones. I daresay I shall manage through
the world somehow,” he would say after having
received some cutting remark from an elder brother
or sister; and Winnie, always his stanch friend and
advocate, would nod her sunny head and prophesy confidently,
“We shall be proud of you yet, Dick.”
In the meantime they sauntered along,
swinging their books and chatting gaily, till a turn
in the road brought them to a quiet square where handsome
dwelling-houses faced each other in sombre grandeur.
“N Victoria Square this
way, miss,” said Dick, mounting the steps and
ringing the bell violently.
“What a boy you are!”
laughed Winnie, following, and giving her brother’s
rough coat a mischievous pull. “Whenever
will you learn sense, Dick?” Then the door opened,
and with glad young hearts brother and sister entered
their comfortable home.