Following Elfreda, the girls ran upstairs
as fast as their weight of bags and suit cases would
permit. Miriam pushed open her door, which stood
slightly ajar, with the end of her suit case.
“Any one at home?” she inquired saucily
as she stepped inside.
“Looks like the same old room,”
remarked Elfreda. “No, it isn’t, either.
We have a new chair. We needed it, too. You
may sit in it occasionally, if you’re good,
Miriam.”
“Thank you,” replied Miriam.
“For that gracious permission you shall have
one piece of candy out of a five-pound box I have in
my trunk.”
“Not even that,” declared
Elfreda positively. “I said good-bye to
candy last July. I’ve lost ten pounds since
I went home from school, and I’m going to haunt
the gymnasium every spare moment that I have.
I hope I shall lose ten more; then I’ll be down
to one hundred and forty pounds and ”
Elfreda stopped.
“And what?” queried Miriam.
“I can make the basketball team,”
finished Elfreda. “What is going on in
the hall, I wonder?” Stepping to the door she
called, “What’s the matter, Grace?
Can’t you get into your room?”
“Evidently not,” laughed
Grace. “It is locked. I suppose Mrs.
Elwood locked it to prevent the new girls from straying
in and taking possession.”
“H-m-m!” ejaculated Elfreda,
walking over to the door and examining the keyhole.
“Your supposition is all wrong, Grace. The
door is locked from the inside. The key is in
it.”
“Then what ” began Grace.
“Yes, what?” quizzed Elfreda dryly.
“‘There was a door to
which I had no key,’” quoted Miriam, as
she joined the group.
“Don’t tease, Miriam,”
returned Grace, “even through the medium of Omar
Khayyam. The key is a reality, but there is some
one on the other side of that door who doesn’t
belong there. Whether she is not aware that she
is a trespasser I do not know. However, we shall
soon learn.” Grace rapped determinedly
on one of the upper panels of the door.
“I’ll help you,” volunteered Elfreda.
“And I,” agreed Anne.
“My services are needed, too,” said Miriam
Nesbit.
Four fists pounded energetically on
the door. There was an exclamation, the sound
of hasty steps, the turning of a key in the lock, and
the door was flung open. Facing them stood a
young woman no taller than Anne, whose heavy eyebrows
met in a straight line, and who looked ready for battle
at the first word.
“Will you kindly explain the
reason for this tumult?” she asked in a freezing
voice.
“We were rather noisy,”
admitted Grace, “but we did not understand why
the door should be locked from the inside.”
“Is it necessary that you should
know?” asked the black-browed girl severely.
Grace’s clear-cut face flushed.
“I think we are talking at cross purposes,”
she said quietly. “The room you are using
belongs to my friend Anne Pierson and to me.
During our freshman year it was ours, and when we
left here last June it was with the understanding that
we should have it again on our return to Overton.”
“I know nothing of any such
arrangement,” returned the other girl crossly.
“The room pleases me, consequently I shall retain
it. Kindly refrain from disturbing me further.”
With this significant remark the door was slammed
in the faces of the astonished girls. A second
later the click of the key in the lock told them that
force alone could effect an entrance to the room.
“Open that door at once,”
stormed Elfreda, beating an angry tattoo on the panel
with her clenched fist.
From the other side of the door came no sound.
“Never mind, Elfreda,”
said Grace, fighting down her anger. “Mrs.
Elwood will be here soon. There is some misunderstanding
about the rooms. I am sure of it.”
“See here, Grace Harlowe, you
are not going to give up your room to that beetle-browed
anarchist, are you?” demanded Elfreda wrathfully.
A peal of laughter went up from three young throats.
“You are the funniest girl I
ever knew, J. Elfreda Briggs,” remarked Miriam
Nesbit between laughs. “That new girl looks
exactly like an anarchist that is, like
pictures of them I’ve seen in the newspapers.”
“That’s why I thought
of it, too,” grinned Elfreda. “I once
saw a picture of an anarchist who blew up a public
building and he might have been this young person’s
brother. She looks exactly like him.”
“Stop talking about anarchists
and talk about rooms,” said Anne. “I
must find some place to put my luggage. Besides,
time is flying. Remember, we are to be at Vinton’s
at half-past six.”
“I should say time was
flying!” exclaimed Grace, casting a hurried
glance at her watch. “It’s ten minutes
to six now. It will take us fifteen minutes to
walk to Vinton’s. That leaves twenty-five
minutes in which to get ready.”
“There is no hope that the trunks
will arrive in time for us to dress,” said Miriam
positively. “Come into our room and we’ll
wash the dust from our hands and faces and do our
hair over again.”
“All right,” agreed Grace,
casting a longing glance at the closed door.
“We’ll have to put our bags in your room,
too. I don’t wish to leave them in the
hall for unwary students to stumble over.”
“Bring them along,” returned
Miriam. “No one shall accuse us of inhospitality.”
“I wish Mrs. Elwood were here.”
Grace looked worried. “We mustn’t
stay at Vinton’s later than half-past seven
o’clock. There are so many little things
to be attended to, as well as the important question
of our room.”
Arriving at Vinton’s at exactly
half-past six o’clock, they found Arline Thayer
and Ruth Denton waiting for them at a table on which
were covers laid for six.
“We’ve been waiting for ages!” exclaimed
Arline.
“But you said half-past six,
and it is only one minute past that now,” reminded
Grace, showing Arline her watch.
“Of course, you are on time,”
laughed the little girl. “I should have
explained that I’m hungry. That is why I
speak in ages instead of minutes.”
“Your explanation is accepted,”
proclaimed Elfreda, screwing her face into a startling
resemblance to a fussy instructor in freshman trigonometry
and using his exact words.
The ready laughter proclaimed instant
recognition of the unfortunate professor.
“You can look like any one you
choose, can’t you, Elfreda?” said Arline
admiringly. “I think your imitations of
people are wonderful.”
“Nothing very startling about
them,” remarked the stout girl lightly.
“I’d give all my ability to make faces
to be able to sing even ‘America’ through
once and keep on the key. I can’t sing and
never could. When I was a little girl in school
the teachers never would let me sing with the rest
of the children, because I led them all off the key.
It was very nice at the beginning of the term, and
I sang with the other children anywhere from once
to half a dozen times, never longer than that.
I had the strongest voice in the room and whatever
note I sang the rest of the children sang. It
was dreadful,” finished Elfreda reminiscently.
“It must have been,” agreed
Miriam Nesbit. “Can you remember how you
looked when you were little, Elfreda?”
“I don’t have to tax my
brain to remember,” answered Elfreda. “Ma
has photographs of me at every age from six months
up to date. To satisfy your curiosity, however,”
her face hardened until it took on the stony expression
of the new student who had locked Grace out of her
room, “I will state that ”
“The Anarchist! the Anarchist!”
exclaimed Ruth and Miriam together.
“What are you two talking about?” asked
Ruth Denton.
“About the Anarchist,” teased Miriam.
“Wait until you see her.”
“You have seen her,” laughed
Grace. “Elfreda just imitated her to perfection.”
Thereupon Grace related their recent unpleasant experience
to Arline and Ruth.
“What are you going to do about it?” asked
Arline.
“We will see Mrs. Elwood as
soon as we return to Wayne Hall, and ask her to gently,
but firmly, request the Anarchist to move elsewhere.”
“Why do you call her the Anarchist?” asked
Arline.
“Elfreda, please repeat your
imitation,” requested Miriam, her black eyes
sparkling with fun.
Elfreda complied obediently.
“You understand now, don’t you?”
laughed Grace.
“I should be very stupid if I didn’t,”
declared Arline.
“Of course she’s dark,
with eyebrows an inch wide. You can’t expect
me to give an imitation of anything like that,”
apologized Elfreda.
“I think I should recognize her on sight,”
smiled Ruth Denton.
“We are miles off our original
subject,” remarked Grace. “Elfreda
hasn’t told us how she looked as a child.”
“All right. I’ll
tell you now,” volunteered J. Elfreda graciously.
“I had round, staring blue eyes and a fat face.
I wore my hair down my back in curls that
is, when it was done up on curlers the night before and
it was almost tow color. I had red cheeks and
was ashamed of them, and my stocky, square-shouldered
figure was anything but sylphlike. I was not
beautiful, but I was very well satisfied with myself,
and to call me ‘Fatty’ was to offer me
deadly insult. That is about as much as I can
remember,” finished the stout girl.
“Really, Elfreda, while you
were describing yourself I could fairly see you,”
smiled Arline.
“Now it’s your turn,”
reminded Elfreda. “I imagine you were a
cunning little girl.”
Arline flushed at the implied compliment.
“Father used to call me ‘Daffydowndilly,’”
she began. “My hair was much lighter than
it is now, but it has always been curly. I am
afraid I used to be very vain, for I loved to stand
and smile at myself in the mirror simply because I
liked my yellow curls and was fascinated with my own
smile. No one told me I was vain, for Mother
died when I was a baby, and even my governess laughed
to see me worship my own reflection. When I was
twelve years old, Father engaged a governess who was
different from the others. She was a widow and
had to support herself. She was highly educated
and one of the sweetest women I have ever known.
When she took charge of me I was a vain, stupid little
tyrant, but she soon made me over. She remained
with me until I entered a prep school, then an uncle
whom she had never seen died and left her some money.
She’s coming to Overton to see me some day.
Overton is her Alma Mater, too.”
“You are next, Grace,” nodded Ruth.
“There isn’t much to tell
about me,” began Grace. “I was the
tomboy of Oakdale. I loved to climb trees and
play baseball and marbles. I was thin as a lath
and like live wire. My face was rather thin, too,
and I remember I cried a whole afternoon because a
little girl at school called me ‘saucer-eyes.’
There wasn’t a suspicion of curl in my hair,
and I wore it in two braids. I never thought much
about myself, because I was always too busy.
I was forever falling in with suspicious looking characters
and bringing them home to be fed. Mother used
to throw up her hands in despair at the acquaintances
I made. Then, too, I had a propensity for bestowing
my personal possessions on those who, in my opinion,
needed them. Mother and I were not always of the
same opinion. I wore my everyday coat to church
for a whole winter as a punishment for having given
away my best one without consulting her. With
me it was a case of act first and think afterward.
I don’t believe I was particularly mischievous,
but I had a habit of diving into things that kept
Mother in a state of constant apprehension. Father
used to laugh at my pranks and tell Mother not to
worry about me. He used to declare that no matter
into what I plunged I would land right side up with
care. I was never at the head of my classes in
school, but I was never at the foot of them.
I was what one might call a happy medium. My little-girl
life was a very happy one, and full to the brim with
all sorts of pleasant happenings.”
“I never heard you say so much
about yourself before, Grace,” observed Elfreda.
“I’m usually too much
interested in other people’s affairs to think
of my own,” laughed Grace. “I have
never heard Anne say much about her childhood, either.
She must have had all sorts of interesting experiences.”
“Mine was more exciting than
pleasant,” returned Anne. “Practically
speaking, I was brought up in the theatre and knew
a great deal more about things theatrical than I did
about dolls and childish games. I was a solemn
looking little thing and wore my hair bobbed and tied
up with a ribbon. I never cried about the things
that most children cry over, but I would stand in
the wings and weep by the hour over the pathetic parts
of the different plays we put on. Father was a
character man in a stock company. We lived in
New York City and I used to frequently go to the theatre
with him. My father wished me to become a professional,
but my mother was opposed to it. When I was sixteen
I played in a company for a short time. Then
mother and sister and I went to Oakdale to live, and
the nicest part of my life began. There I met
Grace and Miriam and two other girls who are among
my dearest friends. Nothing very exciting has
ever happened to me, and even though I have appeared
before the public I haven’t as much to tell
as the rest of you have.”
“But countless things must have
happened to you in the theatre,” persisted Arline,
looking curiously at Anne.
“Not so many as you might imagine,”
replied Anne. Then she said quickly, “Miriam
must have been an interesting little girl.”
“I was a very haughty young
person,” answered Miriam. “In the
Oakdale Grammar School I was known as the Princess.
Do you remember that, Grace?”
Grace nodded. “Miriam used
to order the girls in her room about as though they
were her subjects,” she declared. “She
had two long black braids of hair and her cheeks were
always pink. She was the tallest girl in her
room and the teachers used to say she was the prettiest.”
“I was a regular tyrant,”
went on Miriam. “I had a frightful temper.
I was a snob, too, and looked upon girls whose parents
were poor with the utmost contempt.”
“Miriam Nesbit, you can’t
be describing yourself!” exclaimed Arline incredulously.
“Ask Grace if I am not giving
an accurate description of the Miriam Nesbit of those
days,” challenged Miriam.
“It isn’t fair to ask
me,” fenced Grace. “You always invited
me to your parties.”
“There, you can draw your own
conclusions,” retorted Miriam triumphantly.
“I don’t object to telling about my past
shortcomings as I have at last outgrown a few of my
disagreeable traits.”
“Were you and Grace friends then?” asked
Arline.
“We played together and went
to each other’s houses, but we were never very
chummy,” explained Grace. “We were
both too headstrong and too fond of our own way to
be close friends. It was after we entered high
school that we began to find out that we liked each
other, wasn’t it, Miriam?”
“Yes,” returned Miriam,
looking affectionately at her friend. In two
sentences Grace had effectually bridged a yawning gap
in Miriam’s early high school days of which
the latter was heartily ashamed.
“Every one has told a tale but
Ruth,” declared Elfreda. “Now, Ruth,
what have you to say for yourself?”
“Not much,” said Ruth,
shaking her head. “So far, my life has been
too gray to warrant recording. That is, up to
the time I came to Overton,” she added, smiling
gratefully on the little circle. “My freshman
year was a very happy one, thanks to you girls.”
“But when you were a child you
must have had a few good times that stand out in your
memory,” persisted Elfreda.
Ruth’s face took on a hunted
expression. Her mouth set in hard lines.
“No,” she said shortly. “There
was nothing worth remembering. Perhaps I’ll
tell you some day, but not now. Please don’t
think me hateful and disobliging, but I don’t
wish to talk of myself.”
Arline Thayer eyed Ruth with displeasure.
“I don’t see why you should say that,
Ruth. We have all talked of ourselves,”
she said coldly.
Ruth flushed deeply. She felt
the note of censure in Arline’s voice.
“I think we had better go,”
announced Grace, consulting her watch. “It
is now half-past seven. We ought to be at Wayne
Hall by eight o’clock. You know the Herculean
labor I have before me.”
“Herculean labor is a good name
for our coming task,” chuckled Anne. “The
Anarchist will make Wayne Hall resound with her vengeful
cries when she is thrust out of the room with all
her possessions.”
Jesting light-heartedly over the coming
encounter, the diners strolled out of Vinton’s
and down College Street in the direction of the campus.
Arline was the first to leave them. Her good night
to the four girls from Wayne Hall was cordial in the
extreme, but to Ruth she was almost distant.
A little later on they said good night to Ruth, who
looked ready to cry.
“Cheer up,” comforted
Grace, who was walking with Ruth. “Arline
will be all right to-morrow.”
“I hope so,” responded
Ruth mournfully. “I did not mean to make
her angry, only there are some things of which I cannot
speak to any one.”
“I understand,” rejoined
Grace, wondering what Ruth’s secret cross was.
“Good night, Ruth.”
Elfreda, Miriam and Anne bade Ruth goodnight in turn.
“Now, for the tug of war,”
declared Elfreda as they hurried up the steps of Wayne
Hall. “On to the battlefield and down with
the Anarchist!”