Grace was not disappointed. Miss
Duncan graciously agreed to let the culprit off with
a severe reprimand. Grace ran joyfully down the
campus to Holland House. She wished to tell Mabel
Ashe the good news.
“Horrid little copy-cat!
She doesn’t deserve it,” was Mabel’s
unsympathetic comment as Grace related what had passed
between Miss Duncan and herself. “You know
who she is, don’t you, Grace?”
Grace shook her head. “I
haven’t the slightest idea,” she said soberly.
“I can’t believe it was any one at Wayne
Hall. You don’t suspect any one, do you?”
“No,” returned Mabel.
“I haven’t become very well acquainted
with the freshmen this year, so far. I suppose
you did right in not exposing this girl. I don’t
know whether I should be quite as charitable as you.
If you hadn’t had a witness who saw you write
the theme, you would now be under a cloud. What
I can’t forget is the fact that she went so far
as to try to make Miss Duncan believe that you really
copied it. Miss Duncan said she insisted that
the theme had disappeared from her room. Think
how foolish she must have felt when Miss Duncan confronted
her with the truth yesterday afternoon and made her
confess!”
“Oh, Mabel!” Grace’s
distressed tone caused the pretty senior to rise and
stand in front of Grace’s chair.
“What’s the matter, Gracie,”
she said, taking Grace’s hands in hers.
Grace raised her gray eyes to meet
the inquiring brown ones bent on her. “I’m
so sorry,” she said sadly, “but the girl
who took my theme does live in Wayne Hall.”
“How do you know?” asked Mabel quickly.
“From what you said,”
returned Grace. “If she accused me of taking
her theme from her room, isn’t it highly probable
that her room is in Wayne Hall? I wouldn’t
be likely to go into one of the campus houses to steal
a theme, would I? I must have dropped it in the
hall or on the stairs that night, and she must have
come into the house directly after I did and picked
it up. I don’t like to believe that one
of our girls did it,” Grace concluded sorrowfully,
“but I am afraid it’s true.”
“Some day you’ll stumble
upon the guilty girl when you least expect to find
her,” prophesied Mabel. “Now forget
her, and tell me what you and your chums are going
to do over Thanksgiving. I am going to a dance
on Thanksgiving night with a Willston man. His
fraternity is giving it.”
“I don’t know any college
men in this part of the world,” sighed Grace
regretfully, “therefore I never have any invitations
to man dances.”
“Wait until my cousin comes
up here. He is a Columbia man and you will like
him immensely. I know a number of the Willston
men, too. Why don’t you go with me to the
football game Thanksgiving Day? You are not going
away, are you? It is only a four days’ vacation,
you know.”
“No, we haven’t any particular
place to go. Last year we spent our Thanksgiving
vacation with the Southards in New York. You knew
about that.”
“You lucky things,” laughed
Mabel. “I envy you your friendship with
Everett Southard and his sister.”
“Some day you must meet them,”
planned Grace. “They are delightful people.
Mr. Southard is appearing in Shakespearian roles in
the large cities this season, and Miss Southard is
in Florida visiting friends. If they were in
New York they would insist on our going to them for
the holidays. I must run away now. It is
almost dinner time and I promised to hook up Elfreda’s
new gown. Miriam went over to Morton House with
Gertrude Wells, and won’t return until late,
and Elfreda is going to dine with the Anarchist.”
“Really!” exclaimed Mabel.
“Elfreda seems to be coming to the front this
year, doesn’t she!”
“She is turning out splendidly,”
said Grace warmly. “She stands high in
every one of her classes, and she is so ridiculously
funny that we would feel lost without her. She
says things in the same droll way that a young man
we know in Oakdale does. But I mustn’t stay
another minute. Good-bye, Mabel, I’ll see
you in a day or two.”
Grace darted across the campus and
ran rapidly in the direction of Wayne Hall. She
loved to run and her fleetness of foot had served her
well on more than one occasion. Only that day
she had complained to Miriam that it had been years
since she had indulged in a good run. Miriam had
laughingly accused her of still being a tomboy, and
had proposed that they take a long tramp on Saturday.
“You can run up and down the road to your heart’s
content when we get far enough away from Overton so
that no one will see you and think you have suddenly
gone crazy,” Miriam had declared good-naturedly.
Bounding up the steps two at a time,
Grace reached the front door of Wayne Hall without
drawing a laboring breath. “I’m certainly
in good condition,” she laughed to herself,
inhaling deeply and inflating her chest. “I
hope I’ll be chosen to play on the team this
year.” She rang a third time before the
door was opened by Emma Dean, who grumbled at her
repeated ringing and then announced that she had rung
six times that afternoon before any one had condescended
to let her in. “Have you seen Elfreda?”
flung back Grace on her way upstairs.
“You’d better hurry,”
called Emma after her. “I heard her growling
to herself as I passed her door.”
“I began to think you were never
coming,” greeted Elfreda, as Grace burst into
the room, her eyes bright and her cheeks becomingly
flushed from her recent run across the campus.
“Why didn’t you ask some
one else to hook you up?” retorted Grace mischievously,
throwing down her gloves and beginning on the top hook.
“Because I wanted you to see
how nice I looked in this new frock,” replied
the stout girl. “If I had not stipulated
that you were to perform this extremely important
service for me, you would have in all probability
absented yourself from my immediate vicinity, unmindful
of the rare exhibition of youth and beauty that was
being prepared for you in my room.”
“If I had closed my eyes I could
have sworn it was Miss Atkins,” laughed Grace.
“Even she herself couldn’t fail to recognize
that impersonation. It’s ridiculously funny,
Elfreda, but I wish you wouldn’t do it.”
As Grace and Elfreda were standing with their backs
directly away from the door neither girl saw the tense
little figure that stood rigid, one hand on the door
casing, listening with eyebrows drawn fiercely together.
An instant later it had vanished. Grace, after
triumphantly placing the last hook in its eye, began
helping Elfreda find her handkerchief and gloves.
“Now you have everything you need,” she
declared, holding up the stout girl’s coat.
“Do you wait here for your dinner partner or
does she call for you?”
“She is coming in here for me,”
answered Elfreda. “I wish she would hurry
along. I haven’t had even a cracker to eat
since luncheon and I’m famished.”
“I think I’ll go if you
don’t mind. I’m hungry, too.
I must see if Anne has come in yet. Miss Atkins
will be here in a moment. Good-bye. I hope
you will have a nice time. I am so glad she invited
you.”
Grace crossed the hall to her own
room. Anne was rearranging her hair preparatory
to going down to dinner.
“I think I’ll do my hair
over again,” decided Grace. “That
run across the campus shook most of my hairpins loose.
It will be at least ten minutes before the bell rings,
so I shall have plenty of time.” But her
hair proved refractory and the clang of the dinner
bell found her tucking in a last unruly lock.
“I’m going on downstairs, Grace,”
called Anne from the doorway.
“All right,” answered
Grace. As she passed Elfreda’s room she
heard her name uttered in a sibilant whisper.
Wheeling at the sound, Grace stepped to the stout
girl’s door. Elfreda drew her in and, closing
the door, said nervously: “What do you
suppose has happened? I waited and waited for
the An Miss Atkins and she didn’t
appear, so I went down to her room and found the door
closed. I knocked at least a dozen times, until
my knuckles ached, but not a sound came from within.
Then I came back to my room and waited. She hasn’t
materialized yet. I went down to her door just
now and knocked again, but, nothing doing.”
In her agitation Elfreda dropped into slang.
“That is strange,” agreed
Grace. “Do you suppose she has been taken
suddenly ill?”
“Search me,” declared
Elfreda wearily. “She ought to be called
the Riddle. She is past solution, isn’t
she? I’m hungry, and if she doesn’t
appear within the next five minutes I’m going
to put on my old brown serge dress and go down to
dinner. I’m not used to being invited out
to dine and then deserted before I’ve even had
a chance to look at the bill of fare.”
“Never mind,” comforted
Grace. “I’ll ask you to dinner at
Martell’s next week and won’t desert you
either. Wait a minute. I will go down to
the dining room and see if by any chance she could
be there. Then I’ll come upstairs and let
you know. If she isn’t there you had better
change your gown and go downstairs with me.”
“She isn’t there,”
reported Grace, five minutes later. “Miss
Taylor is, but her roommate is missing.”
“‘Parted at the altar,’”
quoted Elfreda dramatically. “Will you please
unhook me?”
For the second time that night Grace
busied herself with the troublesome hooks and eyes.
Elfreda jerked off the new gown. Her temper was
rising. “This is what comes of cultivating
freaks,” she muttered, lapsing into her old
rudeness. “I might have known she’d
do something. Catch me on any more reform committees!”
“The way of the reformer is
hard,” soothed Grace, as she picked up the gown
Elfreda had thrown in a heap on the floor, and folding
it, laid it across the foot of the stout girl’s
couch.
Elfreda, who was reaching into the
closet for her brown serge dress, wheeled about, regarding
Grace solemnly. “Too hard for me,”
she declared. “Hereafter, the Anarchist
can attend to her own reformation. The Briggs
Helping Hand Society has disbanded.”