Grace Harlowe's Second Year at Overton College Part 10
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"I'm going over there now," said Anne. "I'll be back in a minute." It was precisely four minutes later when Anne poked her head in Grace's door. "Come on into Miriam's room, Grace," she called. "She has just made chocolate. She has some lovely little cakes and sandwiches, too.
And Elfreda has something to tell us."
Grace rose from her chair, lay down the notebook she had been running through, and hastily followed Anne.
"Have a cus.h.i.+on," laughed Miriam hospitably, throwing a fat sofa pillow at Grace, who caught it dextrously, patted it into shape and, placing it on the floor, sat down on it Turk fas.h.i.+on. Elfreda poured another cup of chocolate, then seated herself on the floor beside Grace. "Pa.s.s Grace the sandwiches, Anne," she ordered. "We made these ourselves. We bought the stuff at that new delicatessen place on High Street."
"They are delicious," commented Grace, between bites. "I'm hungry to-night. I didn't like the dinner very well."
"Neither did we," responded Miriam. "After dinner we went out for a walk to see what we could find, and we brought back what you see spread before you."
"I shall pay a visit to the delicatessen shop," announced Grace.
"To-morrow night you must come to my room for a spread."
"I'll come to your room with pleasure," retorted Elfreda, "but not to eat. One spread a week is my limit. Now for my news. The Anarchist has accepted my invitation to the reception."
"Really!" exclaimed Grace. "Do tell us about it, Elfreda."
"I delivered my invitation after dinner to-night," began Elfreda. "I waited and waited, thinking some one else might invite her. I am not yearning for the honor, you know. I went to her door and knocked. Her roommate, Miss Taylor, opened it. The Anarchist sat over in one corner of the room, studying like mad. By the way, I understand she is a dig and stands high in her cla.s.ses."
"Is she?" asked Anne, opening her eyes. "Then that is one thing she has in her favor. Perhaps we shall discover other good qualities in her that we've overlooked."
"Perhaps," echoed Miriam dryly.
"Mustn't interrupt me," drawled Elfreda. "I may become peevish and refuse to talk."
"All right," smiled Grace. "We accept the warning. Continue, my dear Miss Briggs."
Elfreda grinned cheerfully. "I inquired with deferential politeness if Miss Atkins were busy. Then the Anarchist looked up from her book, glared like a lion, straightened her eyebrows and said in that awful voice she owns, 'Did you wish to speak to me?'"
Elfreda unconsciously imitated the belligerent freshman. Her audience giggled appreciatively.
"I replied in my most impressive English that I did wish to do that very thing," continued Elfreda. "Then I inquired tactfully if I was too late with my invitation to the soph.o.m.ore dance. Without giving her time to answer I put in my application for the position of escort.
Then"--Elfreda paused, a slight flush rose to her round face, "then she looked me in the eye and told me a deliberate untruth. She said she had refused one invitation because she had not been interested in the reception, but that she had changed her mind. She thanked me and said she would be pleased to go. I bowed myself out without further ado, but Miss Taylor gave me the queerest look as I went. Her face was as red as fire. It was she who told me that the Anarchist had not been invited.
She was afraid I might think she hadn't told the truth, but I knew better. Now, don't ever tell any one what I have said."
"I'm sorry she didn't tell the truth," said Grace disapprovingly. "Why couldn't she say that she had not been invited?"
"False pride," commented Miriam. "She evidently isn't so indifferent to the opinion of others as she would have us believe."
"She is a strange girl," mused Anne. "Perhaps she is not altogether to blame for her odd ways."
"'Odd' is a good name for them," jeered Elfreda. "I wouldn't call it 'odd,' I'd use a stronger word than that. It's contemptible. I'm sorry I asked her to go to the reception."
"Then recall your invitation and tell her your reason for doing so,"
advised Miriam Nesbit bluntly. "Don't take her to the reception in that spirit. You will make yourself and her equally unhappy."
"Hear the sage lay down the law," retorted Elfreda impudently. "She's right, though, only I won't withdraw my invitation at this late date.
I'll try to give the Anarchist the most exciting time of her young life, but if she balks please don't blame me. You can lead an Anarchist to a reception, you know, but you can't make her dance unless she happens to feel like dancing. Still, I am going to do my best, and no soph.o.m.ore can do more."
"That sounds like the Elfreda Briggs I heard talking last night," said Grace, smiling her approval of the stout girl's words.
"So it does," agreed Elfreda. "Hereafter I'll try to be more consistent.
As for the Anarchist, she shall reap the benefit of my vow. I hope she knows how to dance. If she doesn't I shall have to const.i.tute myself a committee of one to furnish amus.e.m.e.nt for her. If on the fatal night you see me, my arm firmly linked in that of her majesty, parading solemnly about the gymnasium with a fixed smile, and an air of gayety that I am a long way from feeling, don't you dare to laugh at me."
"We won't laugh at you, then, even though we can't help laughing at you now," said Grace. "We shall be only too glad to do anything we can to help you entertain her."
"I know that. Maybe you can help and maybe you can't. But if she doesn't enjoy herself it won't be my fault."
CHAPTER IX
ANTIc.i.p.aTIONS
The day of the soph.o.m.ore reception was a busy one for the members of the soph.o.m.ore cla.s.s. To them, it was the event of the year, and the desire to make this dance outs.h.i.+ne all its predecessors was paramount in almost every soph.o.m.ore breast. Of course, there were the digs, who never thought of festivities, but spent all their time in study. No one counted on their help. The greater part of the cla.s.s, however, was properly enthusiastic over the music, decorations, gowns and dance cards. Grace and Miriam, who were on the decorating committee, had spent the greater part of their day in the gymnasium. Under the skilful direction of the committee the big room blossomed out in strange and gorgeous array. There were the ma.s.ses of evergreen so convenient for hiding unsightly gymnasium apparatus, which made the gymnasium a veritable forest green. Strings of j.a.panese lanterns added to the effect, while the freshmen and soph.o.m.ore colors impartially wound the gallery railing and were draped and festooned wherever there was the slightest chance for display.
The soph.o.m.ores had put forth their best efforts in behalf of their freshman sisters. When it came to sofa cus.h.i.+ons and draperies they had surrendered their most highly treasured possessions for the good of the cause.
"I think we may congratulate ourselves," commented Gertrude Wells as she stood beside Miriam Nesbit, surveying their almost completed task. "Look at my hands! I have scratched and bruised them handling those evergreens. My dress is a sight, too," she added, pointing first to the green stains that decorated her white linen gown, then significantly to a three-cornered tear near the bottom of the skirt. "I don't care. It will be out of style by next summer, at any rate."
"I'm not much better off," declared Miriam. "You can't be a working woman and keep up a bandbox appearance, you know."
"I should say not," laughed Arline Thayer, who had come up in time to hear Miriam's last remark.
"Does any one know the time?" asked Grace, standing back a little to view the effect of the bunting she had been winding about a post. "I can't see the gym. clock from here. It is so swathed in green boughs and decorations that its poor round face is almost hidden, and I'm really too tired to go close enough to find out."
"It's five minutes past four o'clock," informed Gertrude, glancing at the tiny watch pinned to her waist.
"Good gracious!" exclaimed Arline Thayer, "I can't stay here another minute. I have a hundred things to do before to-night."
"Where's Ruth?" asked Grace. "I haven't seen either of you lately except at an aggravating distance."
Arline's baby face hardened. "I haven't seen Ruth for over two weeks,"
she said stiffly.
"You haven't!" exclaimed Grace, who, stooping to tie her shoe, had not noticed Arline's changed expression. As she straightened up her surprised gray eyes met Arline's defiant blue ones. Like a flash she remembered. "Then you don't know who she has invited to the reception?"
"No," responded Arline shortly. "I don't know anything about it."
Grace was about to say something further when, overtaken by sudden thought, she turned her face away to hide the smile that hovered about her lips. Meanwhile, Gertrude Wells had engaged Arline in conversation, and Ruth's name was not mentioned again.
"This is positively my last appearance this afternoon as a decorator,"
declared Emma Dean. "I'm going home to beautify myself for the great moment when I shall stand in line with my soph.o.m.ore sisters to greet the infant freshmen."
"I'm going home, too, but without bursting into language," drawled J.
Elfreda Briggs. "I pounded my thumb with a hammer, scratched my nose on an obstinate hemlock bough, and lost a bran span new pair of scissors. I think it is high time to leave this place. I'm not on the reception committee, 'tis true, but I have weighty matters to consider and am on the verge of a perilous undertaking." She uttered the last words in an all too familiar undertone, shooting a mischievous glance at her friends which caused Grace, Anne and Miriam to laugh outright.
Grace Harlowe's Second Year at Overton College Part 10
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