Jane Allen: Right Guard Part 26
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"No, I can't. Neither can Dorothy Martin prove hers."
"I can obtain the signatures of at least thirty girls who were of the same mind as myself at the try-out."
It had come to a point where Dorothy refused longer to remain mute.
Incensed by Selina's bold attempt to malign her friends and herself, she now turned to Miss Rutledge and said:
"I wish you to know, Miss Rutledge, that the four soph.o.m.ores chosen, besides Miss Seaton, to make the team fully intended to resign from it because of their loyalty to Miss Stearns. She begged them not to do so.
She was very brave over the disappointment. I am positive that neither she nor her friends would be guilty of asking the girls of the freshman team to take up the matter. Certainly I would not."
"I know you would not," quietly rea.s.sured the dean. "We will drop this discussion where it now stands. It is unbecoming, to say the least. I am greatly annoyed that it should have arisen among members of the senior cla.s.s. It is ended. Let it be forgotten. The try-out to-morrow will decide the question. I would prefer you not to give up your position as referee, Miss Martin. Will you reconsider your resignation?"
"I will, since you desire it." Dorothy bowed acquiescence.
"Then the matter is settled," was the concluding announcement. "I shall expect all three of you to be present at the try-out to-morrow afternoon."
This was virtually a command. Had Selina dared, she would have coldly declined to obey it. As it was she said nothing. Miss Rutledge's tones indicating that the interview was concluded, she rose, bade the dean a chilly "Good afternoon," and departed, accompanied by Laura.
Dorothy also rose to go, but the dean detained her with a kindly:
"Just a moment, Dorothy. I wish a private word with you. I know you too well to believe you to be at fault in this matter."
"I am not at fault, Miss Rutledge," was the composed answer. "I thank you for believing in me."
"There seems to be a great deal more behind this affair than appears on the surface," the dean said significantly.
"That is true," Dorothy affirmed. "Since the beginning of last year a struggle has been going on here at Wellington between right and wrong.
The girl who represents right is too n.o.ble to complain. She will fight things out unaided, and she will win."
"You refer to Judith Stearns?" interrogated the dean.
"No; not Judith." Dorothy shook her head. "Judith has merely been used as a scapegoat. I would prefer not to say more. The girl who is in the right would not wish it. She has been advised to come to you, but refuses to do so. She is very determined on that point."
"And you approve of her stand?" The dean eyed Dorothy quizzically.
"Yes." Dorothy's affirmative came unhesitatingly. "I should feel the same under similar circ.u.mstances."
"Then you would advise me not to go too deeply into things?"
There was a decided twinkle in the dean's eyes as she said this. She had known Dorothy too long not to feel the utmost confidence in her.
"I can't imagine myself as advising Miss Rutledge," she said prettily, her sober face lighting into a smile.
The smile, instantly returned, indicated perfect understanding.
"I think you are right, Dorothy. I shall not interfere, except in the matter of a new try-out, unless I am approached by the girl of whom you speak. Frankly, I have no idea of whom she may be. These disagreements among the students at Wellington seldom reach my ears. When they do I always endeavor to see justice done the wronged party."
When Dorothy had presently left her, however, Miss Rutledge sat pondering over the intricacies of girl nature. Hailing from the far West she was inclined to view the world from a man's standpoint. She was, therefore, wholly in sympathy with a girl who could st.u.r.dily fight her own battles without asking help of anyone. She could almost wish that the ident.i.ty of such an one might some day be revealed to her.
CHAPTER XXI
REINSTATEMENT
Outside Wellington Hall, Laura and Selina stopped long enough to hold a hurried conversation. As a result they both set their faces toward Madison Hall to inform Marian Seaton of what was in store for her.
"It's simply outrageous!" she stormed, when Selina had gloomily finished relating the dire news. "I won't go to the gym to-morrow. Miss Rutledge has no right to interfere with the teams."
"She seems to think she has," shrugged Selina. "You'll have to do one of two things. Either resign now from the team, or go to the try-out to-morrow and take your chance of winning against Miss Stearns."
"I won't do either," flatly declared Marian. "I made the team and I won't be cheated of my position on it."
"Do you think you can outplay Miss Stearns?" asked Laura anxiously. "You didn't the other day, you know."
"You'd best resign," cut in Selina sharply, without giving Marian time to answer Laura's question. "If you go to the gym to-morrow it's going to create a lot of gossip about Laura and me. Dorothy Martin hasn't made a secret of her opinion of the other try-out. With Miss Rutledge there to-morrow as one of the judges and neither Laura nor I acting with her, it's going to look pretty bad for us."
"I tell you I sha'n't be there to-morrow," snapped Marian.
"Then you'll get yourself into trouble with Miss Rutledge and lose your position anyway," returned Selina with equal asperity. "I've already told you that I have received instructions to post a notice calling the soph.o.m.ore team to practice by her order. If you resign now, that will end the whole thing. Of course the Stearns girl will get your position on the team. Still you can save your own dignity and ours by pretending in your resignation that you are deeply hurt. You can say, too, that you would have been very willing to give up your position on the team to Miss Stearns if you'd understood that she wanted it so much."
"But I'm not willing to do any such thing," angrily contended Marian.
"I'll take my chance against Judith Stearns to-morrow before I'll tamely resign like that. Come to think of it, it would be much more dignified on my part to go to the gym. You, not I, have been accused of unfairness. You put me on the team, you know."
"Yes, and why did I?" flung back Selina hotly. "Because you asked me to do it. Now you think you can hang the unfairness on my shoulders and slip free of it yourself. Well, you can't. I know that Judith Stearns can outplay you. If I thought she couldn't, I'd say go ahead. But she can. As you won't resign of your own accord, I'm going to demand your resignation. If you don't give it to me in writing, I'll go straight back to Miss Rutledge and tell her the whole thing. I'd rather confess to her than have everybody down on Laura and me after to-morrow."
"You wouldn't do that. You can't scare me," sneered Marian.
"Oh, wouldn't I? Wait a little. You'll see."
"You'd be expelled from college. Just remember that. You'd find yourself worse off than if you kept still," triumphantly prophesied Marian.
"_We_ wouldn't be expelled. _You_ probably would be. We'd be severely reprimanded and Miss Rutledge would be down on us for the rest of the year. But you started the whole thing. You're the real offender. It would go hard with you."
"I'm sorry I asked you to help me, Selina Brown!" Marian exclaimed bitterly. "You're a treacherous snake! After all I've done for you, you turn against me like this."
For the next five minutes she continued to express her candid and very uncomplimentary opinion of Selina.
When she paused to take breath, Selina's only retaliation was, "Come on, Laura. We'll have to hurry if we expect to catch Miss Rutledge in her office. I suppose we'd best go to her house and wait for her. We'll be surer of seeing her then."
It had the desired effect. Marian crumpled, shed a few tears of pure rage, but finally wrote the resignation which Selina dictated.
"It worked!" was Selina's relieved exclamation, the moment they were out of Madison Hall. "She's a great coward, for all her boldness. She gave in more easily than I'd expected. You can imagine me confessing anything like that to Miss Rutledge, now can't you?"
Selina accompanied the query with a derisive laugh. It was echoed by Laura, though rather nervously.
"It was horrid to have to bully her." Laura made a gesture of distaste.
"I'm glad we're safely out of it. We'd best keep out of such tangles hereafter, and let the sophs alone."
Jane Allen: Right Guard Part 26
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Jane Allen: Right Guard Part 26 summary
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