“When we get to the top we will
surely be able to see our way down,” declared
Tavia. “So let us keep right on, even though
this is not the path we came up.”
“But the others will not find
us this way,” sighed Dorothy, “and isn’t
it getting dark!”
“Never mind. There must
be some way of getting out of the woods. No
mountains for mine. Good flat terra firma
is good enough for Chrissy.”
Dorothy tried to be cheerful there
were no bears surely on these peaks, and perhaps no
tramps what would they be doing up there?
“Now!” cried Tavia, “I
see a way down! Keep right close to me and you
will be all right! Yes, and I see a light!
There’s a hut at this end of the mountain.”
To say that the lost Glenwood girls
slid down the steep hill would hardly express the
kind of speed that they indulged in they
went over the ground like human kangaroos, and made
such good time that the light, seen by Tavia, actually
stood before them now, in a little house against the
hill.
Two ferocious dogs greeted their coming but
Tavia managed to coax them into submission, and presently
a woman peered out of a dingy window and demanded
to know what was wanted. She seemed a coarse
creature and the place was such a hovel that the girls
were sorry they had come.
“Don’t answer her,”
cautioned Dorothy quickly. “Let’s
make our way to the road.”
Tavia saw that this would be safest,
although she was not sure the woman would allow them
to pass unquestioned past her stone fence. But
with a dash they did reach the highway and had made
tracks along through the muddy narrow wagon road before
the woman, who was now calling after them, could do
anything more disagreeable. The dogs followed
them up for a few paces, and then turned back while
the woman continued to shout in tones that struck
terror into the hearts of the miserable girls.
“We may be running away from
Glenwood!” ventured Tavia, spattering along,
“but this road surely goes to some place if
we can only get there.”
“Oh, I’m so out of breath,”
panted Dorothy. “We can walk now.
The woman has ceased shouting.”
“Wasn’t it dreadful!”
exclaimed Tavia. “I was just scared stiff!”
“We do get into such awful predicaments,”
mused Dorothy. “But I suppose the others
are almost as frightened as we are now, I
was dreadfully afraid when the woman shouted to us.”
“Wasn’t she a scarecrow?
Just like an old witch in a story book. Listen!
I thought I heard the girls!”
“Hark!” echoed Dorothy.
“I am sure that was Edna’s yoddle.
Answer it!”
At the top of her voice Tavia shouted
the familiar call. Then she listened again.
“Yes,” declared Dorothy,
“that’s surely Ned. Oh, do let’s
run! They might turn off on another road!
This place seems to be all turns.”
When the welcome sounds of that call
were heard by both parties little time was lost in
reaching the lost ones. What had seemed to be
nightfall was really only the blackness of the storm,
and now, on the turnpike, a golden light shot through
the trees, and wrapt its glory about the happy girls,
who tried all at once to embrace the two who had gone
through such a reign of terror.
“Hurry! Hurry!”
called Miss Crane, skipping along like a schoolgirl
herself.
To tell the story of their adventures,
the Dalton girls marched in the center of the middle
row everyone wanted to hear, and everyone
wanted to be just as near as possible to Tavia and
Dorothy.
Taking refuge under the cliff seemed
exciting enough, but when Dorothy told how they had
lost the trail to the mountain top, and how all the
footing slipped down as they tried to make the ascent,
the girls were spell-bound. Then to hear Tavia
describe, in her own inimitable way, the call of “the
witch” made some shout, ad the entire
party ran along as if the same “witch”
was at their heels.
When the report was made to Mrs. Pangborn,
that dignified lady looked very seriously at Dorothy
and Tavia. Miss Crane had explained the entire
affair, making it clear that the girls became separated
from the others by the merest accident, and that the
storm did the rest.
“But you must remember, my dears,”
said Mrs. Pangborn kindly, “that, as boarding
school girls, you should always keep near to the teacher
in charge even when taking walks across the country.
It is not at all safe to wander about as you would
at home. Nor can a girl depend upon her own
judgment in asking strangers to direct her. Sometimes
thoughtless boys delight in sending the girls out of
their way. I am glad the affair has ended without
further trouble. You must have suffered when
you found you really could not reach your companions.
Let it be a lesson to all of you.”
“Oh, if Miss Higley had been
in charge,” whispered Edna, when the girls rehearsed
their interview with Mrs. Pangborn. “You
would not have gotten off so easily. She would
have said you ran away from us.”
So the days at Glenwood gently lapped
over the quiet nights, until week after week marked
events of more or less importance in the lives of
those who had given themselves to what learning may
be obtained from books; what influence may be gained
from close companionship with those who might serve
as models; and what fun might be smuggled in between
the lines, always against the rules, but never in actual
defiance of a single principle of the old New England
institution.
“Just the by-laws,” the
girls would declare. “We can always suspend
them, as long as we do not touch the constitution.”
This meant, of course, that innocent,
harmless fun was always permissible when no one suffered
by the pranks, and no damage was done to property
or character.
Rose-Mary Markin had become Dorothy’s
intimate friend. She was what is termed an all-round
girl, both cultured and broad minded, a rare combination
of character to find in a girl still in a preparatory
school. She was as quick as a flash to detect
deceit and yet gentle as one of the Babes in settling
all matters where there was a question of actual intention.
The benefit of the doubt was her maxim, and, as president
of the Glenwood Club, the membership of which included
girls from all the ranks, there was plenty of opportunity
for Rose-Mary to exercise her benificence.
Viola Green had, as promised, resigned
from office in the Nicks, and what was more she had
organized a society in direct opposition to its principles.
All the girls who had not done well in the old club
readily fell in with the promises of the new order,
and soon Viola had a distinct following the
girls with grievances against Rose-Mary, imagined
or otherwise. Molly Richards kept her “eye
pealed for bombs,” she told Dorothy, and declared
the “rebs” would be heard from sooner or
later in the midst of smokeless powder.
“It’s a conspiracy against
someone,” announced Molly to Rose-Mary one evening.
“I heard them hatching the plot and well
I wouldn’t like to be unfair, but that Viola
does hate Dorothy.”
“She can never hurt Dorothy
Dale,” answered the upright president of the
Glenwood Club. “She is beyond all that
sort of thing.”
But little did she know how Viola
Green could hurt Dorothy Dale. Less did she
think how serious could be the “hurt” inflicted.
The mid-year examinations had passed
off, and the Dalton girls held their own through the
auspicious event. Dorothy showed a splendid
fundamental education; that which fits a girl for clear
study in subsequent undertakings, and that which is
so often the result of the good solid training given
in country schools where methods are not continually
changing. Tavia surprised herself with getting
through better than she had hoped, and credited her
good luck to some plain facts picked up in the dear
old Dalton schoolroom.
But a letter from home disturbed Tavia’s
pleasant Glenwood life her father wrote
of the illness of Mrs. Travers and said it was necessary
that their daughter should come home. For a few
weeks only, the missive read, just while the mother
had time to rest up and recover her strength the
illness was nothing of a serious nature.
It did not seem possible that Tavia
was packed and gone and that Dorothy was left in the
school. A sense of this loneliness almost overpowered
Dorothy when she realized that her sister-friend was
gone and the little bed across her room
all smooth and unruffled by the careless, jolly girl
who tried to make life a joke and did her best to
make others share the same opinion.
It was Rose-Mary who came to cheer
Dorothy in the loss of Tavia. She sat with her
evenings until the very last minute, and more than
once was caught in the dark halls, the lights having
been turned out before the girl could reach her own
quarters.
Rose-Mary and Dorothy had similar
fancies. Both naturally refined, they found
many things to interest them things that
most of the girls would not have bothered their pretty
heads about. So their friendship grew stronger
and their hearts became attuned, each to the other’s
rhythm, until Dorothy and Rose-Mary were the closest
kind of friends.
Mrs. Pangborn had decided upon a play
for mid-year. It would be a sort of trial for
the big event which always marked the term’s
close at Glenwood and the characters would embrace
students from all departments. The play was
called Lalia, and was the story of a pilgrim on her
way, intercepted by a Queen of Virtue and again sought
out by the Queen of Pleasure. The pilgrim is
lost in the woods of doubt, and finally brought to
the haven of happiness by the Virtuous Queen Celesta.
This Pilgrim’s Progress required many characters
for the queen’s retinues, besides the stars,
of course, and the lesser parts.
Dorothy was chosen for Lalia the best character.
The part had been assigned by vote,
and Dorothy’s splendid golden hair, coupled
with that “angelic face,” according to
her admirers, won the part for her. Rose-Mary
Markin was made Celesta, the Queen of Virtue:
and Viola Green, because of her dark complexion, being
opposite that of Celesta, was elected to be Frivolita,
the Queen of Pleasure.
Each queen was allowed to select her
own retinue a delicious task, said the
ones most interested.
Mrs. Pangborn made a neat little speech
at the Glenwood meeting where these details were decided
upon, and in it referred to the lesson of the story,
incidentally hinting that some of the pupils had lately
taken it upon themselves to do things not in strict
accord with the history of her school the
forming of a society, for instance, without the consent
or knowledge of any of the faculty. This secret
doing, she said, could not continue. Either
the girls should come to her and make known the object
of their club, or this club could no longer hold meetings.
This came like a thunderbolt from
a clear sky and by some Dorothy was promptly
accused of tale bearing.
But in spite of it all another secret
meeting was held and at it the “Rebs,”
as they actually called themselves, declared open rebellion.
They would not submit to such tyranny, and, further,
they would not take part in any play in which Dorothy
Dale held an important part.
It was then the bomb was thrown by
Viola, the bomb that she carried all the way from
Dalton, and had kept waiting for a chance to set it
off until now the hour of seeming
triumph for Dorothy.
“I’ll tell you the positive
truth, girls,” Viola began, first being sure
that no one but those in the “club” were
within reach of her voice, “I saw, with my own
eyes, that girl, who pretends to be so good and who
goes around with a text on her simpering smile I
saw her get out of a police patrol wagon!”
“Oh!” gasped the girls. “You
really didn’t.”
“I most positively did.
Indeed!” sneered the informer, “every
one in Dalton knows it. Tavia Travers was in
the same scrape, and in the same wagon. It was
after that affair that they made up their minds, in
a hurry, to get out of their home town and come to
Glenwood!”