The next morning Grace felt singularly
dispirited as she went down to breakfast. It
had been raining, and the dreary outlook caused the
gloomy lines, “The melancholy days are come,
the saddest of the year,” to run through her
head with maddening persistency.
“What’s the matter, Grace?”
inquired Emma Dean. “That chief-mourner
expression of yours is doubly depressing on a day like
this. Did you eat too much fudge last night,
or have you been conditioned in math?”
“You are a wild guesser, Emma,”
returned Grace, smiling faintly. “My troubles
are of an entirely different nature. But how did
you know we made fudge last night, and why didn’t
you come in and have some?”
“I never go where I am not invited,”
was the significant retort.
“Nonsense!” declared Grace.
“You are always welcome, and you know it.
The spread was in Miriam’s room, but you know
who your friends are, don’t you?”
“Don’t worry, I’m
not offended,” Emma assured Grace good-humoredly.
“I came in just before the ten-thirty bell last
night and heard sounds of revelry as I passed by.”
“There’s plenty of fudge
on our table,” put in Miriam Nesbit. “Help
yourself to it whenever the spirit moves you.”
“Where is Mildred Taylor this
morning?” asked Irene Evans, glancing toward
Mildred’s vacant place.
“Miss Taylor is ill this morning,”
answered a prim voice from the end of the table.
With one accord all eyes were turned
in the direction of the voice. The Anarchist
had actually spoken at the table! It was unbelievable.
What followed was even more surprising. The Anarchist
swept the table with a defiant look, then said, with
startling distinctness, “If she has not fully
recovered by to-night I shall send for a physician.
In the meantime I shall remain with her to care for
her.”
“That is very kind in you, I
am sure,” ventured Emma Dean. Surprise had
tied the tongues of the others.
“Not in the least,” contradicted
the Anarchist coldly. “As her roommate,
common humanity demands that I assume a certain amount
of responsibility for her welfare.”
“Oh, yes, of course,”
agreed Emma hastily. “Please let us know
when we may run in to see her. Excuse me, everybody.
I must run upstairs and study a little before going
to chapel.”
Several freshmen followed her lead
and filed decorously out the door with preternaturally
solemn faces that broke into smiles the moment the
door closed behind them.
The Anarchist, however, went on eating
her breakfast, quite unaware that she had created
the slightest ripple of amusement. When Elfreda
rose to leave the dining room the strange young woman
rose, too, and walked sedately out of the room in
the stout girl’s wake.
“Elfreda has evidently made
a conquest,” remarked Miriam to Grace. “See
how tamely the haughty Anarchist follows at her heels.”
“It’s astonishing, but
splendid, I think,” said Grace decidedly.
“Isn’t it strange how much influence for
good one girl can have over another? For some
reason or other Elfreda knows just how to bring the
best in Miss Atkins to the surface. Shall we
run up and see Miss Taylor for a moment?”
“You go this morning, Grace,”
urged Miriam. “I’ll stop and see her
at noon. I haven’t the time just now.”
“I’ll go with you,” volunteered
Anne.
Grace knocked gently on the slightly
opened door, then, receiving no answer, opened it
softly. She paused irresolutely on the threshold,
Anne peering over her shoulder. Laura Atkins
had left the room, but Mildred Taylor, fully dressed,
sat at the window looking listlessly out. If she
heard Grace’s light knock she paid no attention
to it. It was not until Grace said rather diffidently,
“We heard you were ill and thought we’d
come in to see you,” that the girl at the window
turned toward Grace. Her piquant little face
was drawn and pale, and her eyes looked suspiciously
red. She eyed Grace almost sulkily, then said
slowly, “It was kind of you to come, but I shall
be all right to-morrow.” Under Grace’s
serious glance her eyes fell, then, to her visitors’
amazement, she burst into tears. Grace crossed
the room. Her arm slid across the sobbing freshman’s
shoulders in silent sympathy. “Can’t
you tell me what troubles you?” she asked softly.
Mildred shook off the comforting arm
with a muttered: “Let me alone. I
can’t tell you, of all persons. Go away.”
“Why can’t you tell me?” persisted
Grace gently.
“Because I can’t.
Won’t you please go. I don’t wish
to talk to any one,” wailed Mildred.
Grace walked toward the door, her
eyes on the weeping girl. Anne, who had kept
strictly in the background during the little scene,
stepped out into the hall, Grace following.
“That was hardly my idea of
a cordial reception,” was Anne’s dry comment
as they entered their own room.
“That young woman has something
on her mind,” declared Grace. “Her
illness is not physical. It is mental. Either
some one has torn her feelings to shreds or else she
has done something she is ashamed of and remorse has
overtaken her.”
“Unless she has had bad news
from home or has been conditioned,” suggested
Anne.
“I don’t believe it’s
either,” said Grace, shaking her head. “I
believe this is something different. Of late
she has been acting strangely. Ever since the
reception she has avoided me. Anne Pierson, do
you see the time? We’ll be late for chapel!”
gasped Grace in consternation.
With one accord the two friends gathered
up their wraps, putting them on as they ran.
After chapel Grace left Anne at the
door of Science Hall and went on to Overton Hall.
She wished to see Miss Duncan before her first class
recited, and learn the latest developments of her case.
Until chapel exercises were over, Grace had refused
to allow her mind to dwell on her trouble, but now,
as she climbed slowly up the broad stairway to Miss
Duncan’s class room, the whole unhappy affair
rose before her.
Miss Duncan was sitting at her desk
as Grace entered. She looked at her watch, smiled
frankly at Grace and said in her usual businesslike
way, “I can give you only ten minutes, Miss
Harlowe.”
The teacher’s friendly tone
made Grace’s heart leap. She recognized
the fact that Miss Duncan no longer looked upon her
with suspicion.
“Your innocence was clearly
proven by Miss Ashe,” said Miss Duncan in her
blunt fashion, coming at once to the point. “I
recognize your claim to the authorship of the theme.
The other young woman was the real plagiarist.
It was a contemptible trick and not in keeping with
Overton standards.”
“What will happen to this other
girl, Miss Duncan?” asked Grace apprehensively,
her eyes fixed on Miss Duncan.
“What do you think she deserves?”
inquired Miss Duncan quizzically.
“A chance to redeem herself,”
was the prompt reply. “No one except you
knows who she is. I don’t wish to know her
identity, and I am sure Miss Ashe doesn’t.
Couldn’t you send for the girl and tell her that
it would be a secret between just you two. That
you were willing to forget it had happened if she
were willing to start all over again and build her
college foundation fairly and squarely. It wouldn’t
be of any benefit to her to place her fault before
the dean. No doubt she would be dismissed, and
that dismissal might spoil her whole life.”
“You are an eloquent pleader,
Miss Harlowe,” returned Miss Duncan. “As
this is strictly an affair of one of my classes, I
consider that I am at liberty to do as I think best
about placing this matter before the dean. If
I did see fit to do so I hardly think it would mean
dismissal, particularly if I took you with me to plead
the cause of the offender. Come to me this afternoon
after my last class and I will give you my answer.”
Grace left the class room far more
cheerfully than she had entered. Her own vindication
had not impressed her half so deeply as Miss Duncan’s
apparently lenient attitude toward the girl who had
been false to herself and to Overton.