<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X<br/> <small>A FAMOUS INTRODUCTION</small></h2>
<p>The girls crowded into the dining hall from all
directions. Nan and Bess were told that there were
many who had not yet arrived; but to the two
strangers from Tillbury it seemed as though there
was a great throng.</p>
<p>The curious glances flung at Nan and her chum
confused them, the buzz of conversation added to
their embarrassment, and had it not been for the
red-haired girl, Laura Polk, they would have been
tempted to turn and flee. They were quickly shown
to seats, however, at a table where every seat was
filled with laughing, chattering girls. As the school
was not yet fully organized for work, there was no
person in authority to take the head of the table.
Nan and Bess were glad to note that their acquaintance,
the red-haired girl, was with them. Bess
was under the embarrassing necessity of holding the
lunch box in her lap.</p>
<p>“Hullo, Laura!” whispered one mischievous girl
from across the table. “I thought you were going
to have your hair dyed this vacation?”</p>
<p>“So I did,” declared Miss Polk gravely.<span class="pagenum">[74]</span></p>
<p>“Well! I must say it didn’t seem to do it any
good,” was the next observation.</p>
<p>“That’s just it,” said the serious, red-haired
girl. “The dye didn’t take.”</p>
<p>“I really do wonder, Laura,” said another of her
schoolmates, “how your hair ever came to be such
a very reddish red.”</p>
<p>“I had scarlet fever when I was very young,”
said Miss Polk, promptly, “and it settled in my
hair.”</p>
<p>The smothered laughter over this had scarcely
subsided when another girl asked: “Say, Polk!
what’s your new chum, there, got in her lap?”</p>
<p>This pointed question was aimed at Bess, who
blushed furiously. Laura remained as grave as a
judge, and explained:</p>
<p>“Why, it’s her lunch. She seems to be afraid
she won’t get supper enough here and has brought
reinforcements.”</p>
<p>The laughter that went up at this sally drew the
attention of many sitting near to that table. Bess
Harley’s eyes filled with angry tears. She saw
that the red-haired girl had set a trap for her, and
she had walked right into it.</p>
<p>Bess really had feared she would not have supper
enough. Having refused to eat out of the lunch
box on the train, her appetite had now begun unmistakably
to manifest itself. If the usual supper
served the pupils of Lakeview Hall was as scanty<span class="pagenum">[75]</span>
as Laura Polk had intimated, the remains of the
lunch Bess’ mother had bought for the two chums
in Chicago would be very welcome indeed.</p>
<p>A glance around the table, however, soon assured
even unobservant Bess that the red-haired
girl was letting her tongue run idly when she
criticised the food served. There were heaps of
bread and biscuit, plenty of golden butter, and a
pitcher of milk that had <i>not</i> been twice skimmed,
beside each plate. Besides, there were apple sauce
and sliced peaches and cold meat in abundance.
The supper was plain, but plentiful enough, considering
that Dr. Prescott believed in giving her girls
their hearty meal at noon.</p>
<p>Nan had at once suspected that Laura Polk was
joking. But, even she had not appreciated the fact
that the red-haired girl was deliberately laying a
trap for them until the subject of the lunch box was
brought up. Nan whispered quickly to Bess:</p>
<p>“Laugh! laugh! Laugh with them, instead of
letting them laugh at you!”</p>
<p>But Bess could not do that. She was very angry.
And as soon as these fun-loving girls saw she had
lost her temper, they kept the joke up.</p>
<p>Bess angrily allowed the lunch box to fall to the
floor under the table. But, as the meal progressed,
gradually almost every dish on the table gravitated
toward Bess’ plate.</p>
<p>“Want any more of your apple sauce, Cora?” the<span class="pagenum">[76]</span>
question would be raised, quite gravely. “No?
Well do pass it this way, we’re hungry over here,”
and the half-eaten apple sauce would appear at
Bess Harley’s elbow.</p>
<p>Her plate was soon ringed about with pitchers of
milk, half-empty butter plates, broken biscuits, dabs
of peaches and apple sauce in lonely-looking saucers.
Nan was almost choked with a desire to laugh; and
yet she was sorry for her chum, too. If Bess had
only been able to take the joke in good part!</p>
<p>“Don’t show that you are so disturbed by their
fun,” begged Nan of her friend.</p>
<p>“Fun! I’ll write my mother and have her take
me away from here,” muttered Bess, in a rage.
“Why, these girls are all <i>beasts!”</i></p>
<p>“Hush, honey! don’t make it worse than it already
is,” advised sensible Nan. “The madder you
get the more they will enjoy teasing you.”</p>
<p>A rather severe and plainly dressed woman,
wearing spectacles, who had been walking about
among the tables, now came to the one where Nan
and Bess were seated. She looked somewhat suspiciously
at the dishes pushed so close to Bess Harley’s
plate; but all the girls at the table were as
sober as they could be.</p>
<p>“Dr. Prescott tells me you are the two girls
from Tillbury,” she said to Nan.</p>
<p>“Yes,” was the reply. “My friend is Bess Harley
and I am Nan Sherwood.”<span class="pagenum">[77]</span></p>
<p>“We are glad to have you with us, and you have
been assigned to Number Seven, Corridor Four.
Your trunks will be unpacked in the trunk room in
the basement to-morrow.” Then she flashed another
glance at the array of dishes before Bess.</p>
<p>“What is the meaning of this?” she demanded.</p>
<p>“I—I——,” Bess stammered, and some of the
girls gave suppressed giggles.</p>
<p>Laura Polk soberly came to her rescue—or appeared
to.</p>
<p>“This is her birthday, and all the girls have been
giving her presents. At least, that is the way I
understand it.”</p>
<p>Irrepressible laughter broke out around the
table. Even Mrs. Cupp smiled grimly.</p>
<p>“I fancy you started the birthday presentation,
Laura,” she said. “Let us have no more of it.”</p>
<p>When she had passed along Laura Polk leaned
forward to whisper shrilly across Nan to Bess:</p>
<p>“Have a care, Bess! I think Mrs. Cupp suspects
you. Don’t try to smuggle any of that apple sauce
up to Room Seven, Corridor Four, in your stocking!”</p>
<p>Of course this was all very ridiculous, and, taken
in the right spirit, the introduction of Nan Sherwood’s
chum to Lakeview Hall, would not have
been so bad. This was really a mild initiation to the
fraternal companionship of a lot of gay, fun-loving
girls.<span class="pagenum">[78]</span></p>
<p>But Bess had a high sense of her own dignity.
At home, in Tillbury, because her father was an
influential man, and her family of some local importance,
nobody had ever treated her in this way.
To be an object of the ridicule of strangers is a hard
trial at best. Just then, to Bess’ mind, it seemed
as though her whole school life at Lakeview Hall
must be spoiled by this opening incident.</p>
<p>Nan felt for her friend, for she well knew how
sensitive Bess was. But she knew this was all in
fun. She could not help but be amused by the
red-haired girl’s jokes. There wasn’t a scrap of
harm in anything the exuberant one did or said.
There was no meanness in Laura Polk. She was
not like Linda Riggs.</p>
<p>Had it not been for Nan, Bess would never
have found her way to Room Seven, Corridor Four,
she was so blinded with angry tears. The room
they were to occupy together was up two flights of
broad stairs, and had a wide window overlooking
the lake. Nan knew this to be the fact at once, for
she went to the open window, heard the soughing
of the uneasy waves on the pebbly beach far below,
and saw the red, winking eye of the lighthouse at
the mouth of Freeling Inlet.</p>
<p>“This is a lovely room, Bess,” she declared, as she
snapped on the electric light.</p>
<p>Bess banged the door viciously. “I don’t care
how nice it is! I sha’n’t stay here!” she cried.<span class="pagenum">[79]</span></p>
<p>“Oh, pshaw, Bess! you don’t mean that,” returned
Nan.</p>
<p>“Yes, I do—so now! I won’t remain to be insulted
by these girls! My mother won’t want me to.
I shall write her——”</p>
<p>“You <i>wouldn’t?”</i> cried Nan, in horror.</p>
<p>“Why wouldn’t I?”</p>
<p>“You don’t mean to say you would trouble and
worry your mother about such a thing, just as soon
as you get here?”</p>
<p>“We—ell!”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t do that for anything,” Nan urged.
“And, besides, I don’t think the girls meant any
real harm.”</p>
<p>“That homely, red-headed Polk girl is just as
mean as she can be!”</p>
<p>“But she has to take jokes herself about her
red hair.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care!” grumbled Bess. “She has no
right to play such mean tricks on <i>me</i>. Why did she
tell me to take that horrid old lunch box in to supper?”</p>
<p>“Because she foresaw just what would happen,”
chuckled Nan.</p>
<p>“Oh! you can laugh!” cried Bess.</p>
<p>“We should not have been so gullible,” Nan declared.
“That was a perfectly ridiculous story
Laura told us about the food being so poor and
scanty, and we should not have believed it.”<span class="pagenum">[80]</span></p>
<p>Bess was staring at her with angry sparks in her
eyes. She suddenly burst out with:</p>
<p>“That old lunch box! If it hadn’t been for you,
Nan Sherwood, we would not have brought it here
with us.”</p>
<p>“Why——Is that quite right, Bess?” gently
suggested Nan.</p>
<p>“Yes, it is!” snapped her chum. “If you had
taken my advice you would have flung it out of the
window and eaten in the dining car in a proper
manner.”</p>
<p>There were a good many retorts Nan might have
made. She wanted to laugh, too. It did seem so
ridiculous for Bess to carry on so over a silly
joke. She was making a mountain out of a molehill.</p>
<p>But it would be worse than useless to argue the
point, and to laugh would surely make her chum
more bitter—perhaps open a real breach between
them that not even time could heal.</p>
<p>So Nan, in her own inimitable, loving way, put
both arms suddenly about Bess and kissed her. “I’m
awfully sorry, dear; forgive me,” she said, just as
though the fault was all hers.</p>
<p>Bess broke down and wet Nan’s shoulder with
her angry tears. But they were a relief. She
sobbed out at last:</p>
<p>“I hope I’ll never, <i>never</i> see a shoe-box lunch
again! I just do——”<span class="pagenum">[81]</span></p>
<p>To interrupt her came a solemn summons on the
door of Number Seven—<i>rap, rap, rap!</i> The two
newcomers to Lakeview Hall looked at each other,
startled.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[82]</span></p>
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