<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIII<br/> <small>A STRANGE ADVENTURE</small></h2>
<p>It really seemed awfully funny.</p>
<p>Nan went about with sealed lips save when she
had to ask a question of a neighbor in study hour
or in class. Even in Room Seven, Corridor Four,
there was silence. Bess was at first amused, then
disgusted, then indignant.</p>
<p>“Why! whoever heard the like?” she cried. “Not
to speak? Goodness! Why, I never had so many
things to say to you in my life before, and you sit
as dumb as one of those Japanese monkeys,” and
she pointed to the tiny “Hear No Evil, See No
Evil, Speak No Evil” group on Nan’s bookshelf.</p>
<p>At first Nan only smiled at her chum’s impatience.
But soon she found it necessary to steal off by herself
during recreation time. The temptation to
speak was too great.</p>
<p>Nor did Bess try to make it easier for Nan to
keep strictly to the line of punishment that had
been inflicted upon her by Dr. Beulah Prescott.
Bess began to take a wicked delight in catching her
off her guard and getting a word past Nan’s lips
before she thought.</p>
<p>“Oh bah!” cried the careless Bess. “What does<span class="pagenum">[172]</span>
it matter? We’re in our own room. Dr. Beulah
knows very well you won’t stick to the very letter
of her command.”</p>
<p>Nan felt differently about it. The principal had
trusted her to keep her lips sealed during recreation
hours; and she tried as much as possible to keep
by herself. “Solitary recreation hours for a week.”
That was Dr. Prescott’s command and Nan did
her best to keep away from her fellow-pupils. One
afternoon, between her last recitation for the day
and suppertime, she went down to Mrs. Cupp with
her arms full of summer clothing, for permission to
put the frocks away in her trunk.</p>
<p>“Here’s your key and the key to the trunk-room.
I trust the latter to you, Nancy, because I see you
are a girl of honor,” Mrs. Cupp said, rather kindly
for her. “I see you are trying to obey the doctor’s
instructions regarding your recreation time. You
may stay down there till the supper bell rings, if
you like. But remember, if you wish to bring anything
up with you from your trunk, you must show
it to me.”</p>
<p>“Yes Mrs. Cupp,” replied Nan, soberly.</p>
<p>This was not the first time she had asked permission
to go to her trunk. And she had always chosen
a time when no other girls were around, and she
could be alone in the trunk-room. She went down
stairs rather thoughtfully now. Mrs. Cupp believed
she was a girl of honor. Nan was wondering<span class="pagenum">[173]</span>
if, after all, she came up to the requirements
for such a person?</p>
<p>“I am not being entirely truthful right now,” she
thought. “I don’t need to go down cellar with these
things. I have plenty of room for them in my
clothes closet. I am going to my trunk for an
entirely different reason.</p>
<p>“I wonder,” pursued Nan Sherwood, reflectively,
“if all girls are like that? Are we naturally untruthful
about little things? Do I know a perfectly
frank girl in all this school? Goodness! nobody
but poor Amelia Boggs, and she is half-cracked,
the other girls say.</p>
<p>“That’s why I like Walter,” declared Nan, to
herself. “I guess that is why I like Cousin Tom—and
even Rafe. It’s sometimes ugly to speak the
brutal truth, I know. But it is never dishonorable.
Now am I deliberately acting deceitfully because I
did not tell Mrs. Cupp <i>all</i> my reason for coming
down here?”</p>
<p>Such abstract questions as this often troubled
Nan Sherwood. She never discussed them with her
chum, or with anybody else, now. But she often
wished she could talk them over with her mother,
as she used to do. “Momsey” always saw everything
so clearly, and always knew just the right
and wrong of things.</p>
<p>“And it’s so hard sometimes,” Nan murmured,
“to tell what is right and what is wrong!”<span class="pagenum">[174]</span></p>
<p>She snapped on the electric light nearest to her
trunk. The receptacles were in rows, each with a
card on which the owner’s name was clearly written.
Nan’s was in a corner at the end of the main
building nearest the unfinished part. She had come
down a passage from the stairway to get to the
trunk-room. This part of the cellar was a long way
from the kitchen and scullery.</p>
<p>Some of the girls were afraid to come to the
trunk-room alone, although their imagination had
not yet peopled this part of the Hall with ghosts.
Nan thought of nothing, when she had raised the lid
of her trunk, but one thing. She carefully put
aside the empty trays and the layers of clothing
hiding the long box at the bottom of the trunk.</p>
<p>It was locked with a little brass padlock. Tom
Sherwood had made the box very neatly and
nobody could possibly open the receptacle without
the key, unless the box were broken. Nan wore the
tiny key in a little leather bag, on a chain of fine
gold links which had been her mother’s when she
was a little girl in Memphis.</p>
<p>Nan quickly unlocked the box and raised the
cover. A rush of sweet smelling herb-odors burst
forth. It was the combined odor of the tamarack
swamp of upper Michigan (or so it seemed), where
Nan had spent the past summer. She lifted aside
the covering of tissue paper, and revealed a great,
pink-cheeked, blue-eyed, beautiful doll!<span class="pagenum">[175]</span></p>
<p>It was as large as a real baby, and it was dressed
elegantly. Nan’s mother, with her own frail hands,
had made all the garments “Beautiful Beulah” wore.</p>
<p>“Beulah, <i>dear!”</i> murmured Nan, hugging the doll
up tight to her bosom and rocking herself to and
fro as she sat upon the floor. “It’s just like going
home again, to see you. Wouldn’t you like to see
our dear little room in the ‘dwelling in amity’? If
only we could fly back there, really! Only for just
an hour! And have Momsey and Papa Sherwood
at home, too, and all be together again!”</p>
<p>Nan choked up at this and the tears began to
flow. But she crowded them back in a moment.
“Oh! this will never do—this will never do,” she
cried, under her breath. “I’ll only make you feel
bad, too, my dear, darling Beautiful Beulah. And,
goodness me!” added Nan Sherwood, suddenly becoming
practical, “what would Dr. Beulah think
if she heard me? She would perhaps think I had
named you after her. I’m not sure that a principal
of a great school like this would want to be godmother
to a doll.</p>
<p>“I don’t care! I guess that’s why I love her so
much—because she bears the same name as you, my
dear. And you’d love her, too, if you could know
her. Oh, dear! I wonder if I did wrong in hiding
you down here in the bottom of my trunk? Mrs.
Cupp certainly wouldn’t have taken you away from
me. The girls might have made fun, and Bess, I<span class="pagenum">[176]</span>
s’pose, would have been difficult. But I’d have felt
better to have you up stairs in Number Seven, Corridor
Four——”</p>
<p>A step in the passage outside the open trunk-room
door! Nan rose up in a panic, clutching
Beulah to her breast. Somebody was coming.</p>
<p>There was not time to put the doll back into
her nest and successfully hide her. The wall at the
end of the cellar was of heavy planking. A pile of
empty dry-goods cases stood at hand, a narrow
alley having been left between the tiers of boxes
and the plank wall.</p>
<p>Nan darted behind this screen of boxes, the doll
in her arms. She slipped on something in the dark
passage and was flung with considerable force
against the plank partition. To her amazement and
alarm, a narrow section of the partition moved out,
dropping downward and outward from the top, as
though it were hinged at the bottom.</p>
<p>This narrow door was weighted, so it could not
fall abruptly. Nan was flung sprawling upon it,
and lay there with her doll, as the shutter dropped
quietly to a horizontal position.</p>
<p>She knew she lay over some deep cistern, or the
like, and that the plank door bridged it. It was
pitch-dark behind the partition and a sour, damp
smell, like the odor of an old brewing cellar, rose
to her nostrils. Nan Sherwood, startled as she was,
uttered no outcry.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[177]</span></p>
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