Hester's Counterpart Part 7
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"I'll never know one girl from another. They all look alike to me," she said to Sara one day.
"Not when you know them. You'll know Renee--" She stopped in time. She was not naturally critical. To express her opinion to Hester concerning the girls, was not fair.
"We are all different," she continued slowly. "All with different virtues and faults. To be perfectly candid, I'm the only really fine one in the set."
They had been walking arm in arm up and down the corridor. As they came to the rear door of the dormitory, Sara paused. "More notices, I see.
Come, Hester, we must know the worst at once. Here is where our dear Miss Burkham makes known her by-laws."
For the first time, Hester observed the white cards stuck along the edge of the door. Pausing before them, she read aloud.
"The young ladies will not make use of this entrance except to gain admittance to the gymnasium. On all other occasions, the front dormitory door must be used."
Then Sara explained. "Miss Burkham does not approve of visits at rear doors. When the girls have on the gym suits, they are not permitted to go to the front of the building. If you go out this door, you can enter the gymnasium without attracting undue attention."
Sara smiled. Undue attention was Miss Burkham's bugbear. She was always endeavoring to instill into the minds of her charges, that a lady never attracts undue attention. The word had been in use so frequently that it had become a by-word among the students.
"The next card is what makes my mouth water," continued Sara who had been reading silently.
"Beginning with the first week of the fall term, the ice-cream man will keep to the front side of the east wing. Plates will be put in their usual place for Belva to take care of."
"Basket-ball team Number one--known as the Invincibles will hold a business meeting at 10:30 Sat.u.r.day morning in the gymnasium."
This last notice was signed, "Helen Loraine, Captain."
"She never told me," cried Hester. "I never suspected that she was interested."
"Helen never tells anything about herself," said Sara. "Sometimes I grow quite exasperated about her reticence. She has been on the team ever since she was a student here. She played well before she came. Her cousin, Rob Vail, was a captain when he was in school and he taught her all the tricks of the game."
Hester had no words to express herself. Basket-ball! It was enough to send the color to her cheeks. She had seen the boys in the high-school play. At home, girls did not indulge in such games. It might be that she herself, Hester Alden, could learn to play and be put on one of those teams. The thought brightened her cheeks and sent the blood through her veins with excitement.
"Who teaches you? How many teams have you, and how can you get on one?
Does it take long to learn to play?"
Sara looked at her. Sara was deliberate. Her expression now was one of sad surprise.
"Do you often talk as fast as that?" she asked. "And do you expect your friends to answer with the same velocity? If you do, Hester Alden, never come to me with your questions."
Hester laughed. "I always talk fast when I get excited. The words pop from my mouth like pop-corn over a hot fire."
"Give me time and I'll answer your questions. Our crack team is the Invincibles. They are the only one we allow to play the tournament games with outside teams. They play with the girls from the high school, the Normal Training School and, with some of the seminary teams. I really do not remember how many games were scheduled last year. They have never allowed me to play. I'm too--. Helen Loraine is good enough to say '_deliberate_.' The other girls call it '_slow_.'
"Then of course there must be a scrub team for the Invincibles to battle against. You must play scrub before you can hope to become an Invincible. Then the fres.h.i.+es and juniors have subst.i.tute teams. They practice with each other and fill up on the other teams as they are needed."
"I think I could learn to play," said Hester. "I am not--not very deliberate."
"I should say not, if you fly at a ball in the same way you talk. You might get on a subst.i.tute team. Miss Watson, the physical-culture teacher, will hold a meeting soon. The first week of school is generally so busy that the gymnasium work is not begun.
"But next week, she will meet the girls and make arrangements for the work on the teams and in the gym. If I were you and really wished to play, I'd speak to Helen Loraine. She'll get you on if anyone can. You need a friend at court, for there are always more applications than there are places or times for practice.
"We must turn back. Miss Burkham would campus us, if we were to go out at this door." Sara turned and arm in arm, the girls moved toward the front entrance. "Listen, do you hear that melodious bell? That is Sykes's cow-bell. Come, and I'll treat you."
Hester followed as Sara lead the way from the front dormitory door out on to the campus. As they pa.s.sed the end room, the sound of voices in conversation came to them.
"Can you let me have some perfume, Erma, and a fine handkerchief? I neglected to put mine in the laundry."
"Help yourself," was the reply.
Sara smiled. "Erma Thomas is easily worked. If she does not take a firm stand, she'll keep Renee in perfume and other extras for the entire year."
Just then the door opened and Renee Loveland came out. She was a tall, handsome girl, with the bearing of a princess. She bore in her hands a bottle of perfume and two dainty handkerchiefs.
The campus sloped naturally toward the public road; yet it was several feet higher. The boundary had been made definite by a low cement coping.
On this, sat several girls, among which was Berenice Smith. Across the road was an ice-cream wagon, surrounded by a score of girls with their purses in their hands. The ice-cream man was measuring cream into small wooden b.u.t.ter-plates.
"Here's the way we do," said Sara as Hester looked dubiously about in search of means with which she might dispose of her cream.
"This is the way." Sara deftly broke off a bit of the dish where it curved upward. "These make the best spoons in the world, and one never need bother keeping them in order."
Soon walking by two's and three's, across the campus, moved the girls, each bearing in her hand her wooden dish with ice-cream.
Berenice sat alone on the coping. Hester Alden was not a reader of faces and could give no reasons for her pet likes and dislikes. She instinctively did not like Berenice, although the acquaintance had gone no further than a pa.s.sing word. Berenice was dark, with coloring which inclined to swarthiness; her brow was low, and her eyes small and deeply set. She made an effort to be pleasant and invariably made flattering remarks to those with whom she conversed. As the girls approached, she held out her purse toward Sara.
"Be good and bring me a chocolate and peach cream," she said. "I am as far as I am allowed to go."
Taking the purse, Sara performed the commission and returned.
"For how long?" she asked.
"Two weeks. One week is almost over."
This was all Greek to Hester. She looked from one to the other; but they, taking it for granted that all the school world understood, offered neither explanation nor information.
As they crossed the tan-bark, Mame Cross met them. She looked like a fas.h.i.+on-plate in a tailored gown and handsome hat.
"I've had permission to go down town," she said. "Do you want me to get anything for you?" The question was put to Sara.
"We're out of alcohol. You'd better order some."
"Did you know that Berenice is campused for two weeks? She made fudge Monday evening after the study bell rang. Miss Burkham discovered it at once. Anyone pa.s.sing through the hall could smell fudge cooking."
"It seems strange that Miss Burkham should campus her for that. We made fudge. It was the first night and no one is expected to observe study hours during the first evening."
"But Berenice lied. You know Miss Burkham will not tolerate deception.
It was not making fudge but the deception that caused the punishment."
Mame moved away. She would have been a beautiful girl, had she not looked bored and unhappy.
"You're new suit is beautiful, Mame," said Sara over her shoulder.
Hester's Counterpart Part 7
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Hester's Counterpart Part 7 summary
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