<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII<br/> <small>LAKEVIEW HALL APPEARS</small></h2>
<p>“Well! I would have boxed her ears, I don’t
care!” Bess gasped, when Nan succeeded in pulling
her down into her chair. “You ought to have heard
what she said about you——”</p>
<p>“I’m glad I didn’t,” Nan answered and sighed.
“And one good thing—it broke up that foolish
speech-making. I’m so ashamed——”</p>
<p>“Of me!” flared up Bess. “I was only standing
up for you.”</p>
<p>“Hereafter, dear, do your standing up, sitting
down,” laughed Nan, hugging her still overwrought
chum.</p>
<p>“Well,” pouted the tearful Bess, “I—I don’t
care!”</p>
<p>“I’ll fight my own battles.”</p>
<p>“But you never fight!” burst out Bess.</p>
<p>“Isn’t that just as well?” Nan observed, rather
gravely. “Suppose your mother heard of your
wanting to box a girl’s ears in a public place like
this car? And how Professor Krenner looked at
you!”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t care for him,” muttered Bess.<span class="pagenum">[50]</span></p>
<p>“Of course you do. He will be one of our teachers.”</p>
<p>“That Riggs girl says that none of the girls at the
Hall think much of Professor Krenner,” grumbled
Bess. “They say he’s cracked.”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t repeat what that Riggs girl says,”
admonished Nan, with some sharpness. It exasperated
her for Bess to show that she had been influenced
at all by the rude rich girl.</p>
<p>“Well, I’ve found out I don’t like her,” Bess
sighed.</p>
<p>“I discovered I didn’t, before,” Nan rejoined,
dryly.</p>
<p>“But she’ll tell awful stories about us at Lakeview
Hall,” Bess said with a worried air.</p>
<p>“Let her tell,” scoffed the more sensible Nan.</p>
<p>“We—ell! We don’t want to begin school with
all the girls against us.”</p>
<p>“They’ll not be. Do you suppose that girl has
much influence with the nice, sensible girls who attend
Lakeview Hall?”</p>
<p>“We—ell!” exclaimed Bess, again. “She’s rich.”</p>
<p>“Bess! I’m astonished at you,” declared Nan,
with some heat. “Any one to hear you would think
you a money-worshipper. How can you bear to
be friends with me when my folks are poor.”</p>
<p>Bess began to laugh at her. “Poor?” she repeated.
“And your dear mother just fallen heir to
fifty thousand dollars?”<span class="pagenum">[51]</span></p>
<p>“Oh—well—I forgot that,” returned Nan, meekly.
“But I know you loved me before we had any
prospect of having money, Bess. Don’t let’s toady
to rich girls when we get to this school. Let’s pick
our friends by some other standard.”</p>
<p>“I guess you’re right,” agreed her chum. “I’ve
had a lesson. That hateful thing! But if she does
tell stories about us to the other girls——”</p>
<p>“We can disprove them by Professor Krenner,”
added Nan. “Don’t worry.”</p>
<p>“I don’t like him,” repeated Bess, pouting.</p>
<p>But Nan did. She was quite sure the instructor
with the big, shell-rimmed spectacles, understood
girls very well indeed, and that he would be a good
friend and a jolly companion if one would allow
him to be.</p>
<p>There was that about Professor Krenner that
reminded her of her own dear father. They were
both given to little, dry jokes; they were both big
men, with large, strong hands; and they were both
very observant.</p>
<p>How she would get along with the other instructors
at Lakeview Hall, and with Dr. Beulah Prescott,
herself, Nan did not know; but she felt that
she and Professor Krenner would always be good
friends.</p>
<p>Nor was she afraid of what Linda might say
about her at the Hall. Nan Sherwood was deeply
hurt by the girl’s arrogance and unkindness; but<span class="pagenum">[52]</span>
she had too large a fund of good sense to be disturbed,
as Bess was, over Linda’s threatened scandal.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe a girl like her really has much
influence among other girls—not the right kind of
girls, at any rate,” Nan thought. “And Bess and I
don’t want to get in with any other kind.”</p>
<p>She was just as eager as she could be, however,
to get to Lakeview Hall, and find out what it and
the girls were like. Boarding school was an unknown
world to Nan. She felt more confidence
now in herself, as the train bore her toward the
wild Huron shore on which the school stood, than
she had when she journeyed up into the Michigan
woods with her Uncle Henry, back in mid-winter.</p>
<p>In that past time she was leaving her dear parents
and they were leaving her. Each revolution of
the car wheels were widening the space between
“Momsey” and “Papa Sherwood,” and herself. By
this time Nan had grown used to their absence. She
missed them keenly—she would do that up to the
very moment that they again rejoined her; but the
pain of their absence was like that of an old wound.</p>
<p>Meanwhile she was determined, was Nan, to render
such a report of her school-life to her parents as
would make them proud of her.</p>
<p>Nan was not a particularly brilliant girl in her
books. She always stood well in her classes because
she was a conscientious and a faithful student.<span class="pagenum">[53]</span>
Bess, really, was the quicker and cleverer of the two
in their studies.</p>
<p>Nan was very vigorous, and loved play much
more heartily than she did her books. Demerits
had not often come her way, however, either in
grammar school or high school. Mr. Mangel, the
Tillbury principal, had felt no hesitancy in viséing
Nan’s application blank for entrance to the same
grade as Bess Harley at Lakeview Hall. Nan, he
knew, would not disappoint Dr. Beulah Prescott.</p>
<p>This school that she was going to, Nan knew,
would be very different from the public school she
had attended heretofore. In the first place, it was
a girls’ world; there would be neither association
with, nor competition with, pupils of the other sex.</p>
<p>Nan was not wholly sure that she would like this
phase of her new school life. She liked boys and
had always associated with them.</p>
<p>Nan could climb, row, skate, swim, and cut her
initials in the bark of a tree without cutting her
fingers.</p>
<p>Her vigorous life in the woods during the past
six months had stored up within her a greater supply
of energy than she had ever before possessed.
She had, too, seen men and boys doing really big
things in the woods; she had seen courage displayed;
she had partaken of adventures herself that called
upon her reserves of character, as well as muscle.</p>
<p>Indeed, Nan was quite a different girl in some<span class="pagenum">[54]</span>
respects from the timid, wondering child who had
gone away from Tillbury clinging to Uncle Henry’s
hand. More than ever she felt the protecting instinct
stir within her when she saw her chum going
wrong. She knew she must assume the burden of
looking after Bess Harley in this new world they
were entering.</p>
<p>Two hundred girls to compete with! It looked to
be such a lot! Lakeview Hall was a very popular
institution, and although the building was not originally
intended for a school, it answered amply for
that purpose—as Professor Krenner told her. One
end of the great structure had never been completed;
for its builder’s ideas had been greater than
his resources.</p>
<p>She knew that the castle-like structure standing
upon the bluff overlooking Freeling and the troubled
waters of Lake Huron, was much too vast for a
private dwelling, and that as a summer hotel it had
years before signally failed.</p>
<p>Under the executive care of Dr. Beulah Prescott
the place had expanded into a large and well-governed
school. Nan looked forward with both hope
and fear to meeting so many other girls all at the
same time.</p>
<p>The cost of tuition at Lakeview precluded the
presence of many pupils whose parents were not at
least moderately wealthy. In fact, it was a very
exclusive school, or “select” as Linda Riggs had<span class="pagenum">[55]</span>
called it during her brief hour of friendship with
Bess Harley. Nan devoutly hoped that not many
of the other girls would be as “select” as Linda
Riggs.</p>
<p>Among the two hundred girls, surely not many
could be so purse-proud and arrogant as the railroad
magnate’s daughter. Nan had not been long enough
removed from poverty to feel that she really was
rich, nor was it, after all, an enormous fortune.
Her mother’s money was altogether too new an
acquisition to have made much of an impression
upon Nan’s mind, save to stir her imagination.</p>
<p>She could, and did, imagine a sublimated “dwelling
in amity” on the little by-street in Tillbury.
She looked forward to the time when she and her
parents would be together in their old home; but
she could not imagine their style of living changed
to any degree.</p>
<p>The life before Nan in the boarding school, however,
she realized would be different from anything
she had ever experienced. Later, as dusk began to
shut down and the switch targets twinkled along
the right of way, she peered ahead eagerly for the
first sight of the school.</p>
<p>It appeared. Like an old, gray castle on the
Rhine, such as she and Bess had read about, the
sprawling, huge building was outlined against the
sky on which the glories of the sunset were reflected.
The little town in the valley was scarcely discernible<span class="pagenum">[56]</span>
save for its twinkling evening lamps; but the Hall
stood out boldly on the headland—a silhouette cut
out of black cardboard, for not a single lamp shone
there.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[57]</span></p>
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