<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXV<br/> <small>RUMOR BLOWS ABOUT</small></h2>
<p>Bess Harley was not at all a heartless girl; and
she really loved Nan devotedly. But she could not
understand just why her chum was so particular in
her honorable observance of the sentence of silence.
Nor did she know anything about the very upsetting
letter Nan had received from Scotland. Finding
Nan far from gay on this particular evening, and
being fond of bustle and excitement herself, Bess
deserted Number Seven, Corridor Four, and found
amusement in the companionship of other girls who
could talk.</p>
<p>Nan was unhappy; yet she was glad to be left to
herself. She faithfully prepared her tasks for the
next day, and then put out the light and sat by the
window, looking out into the starlit night.</p>
<p>From her window she had an unobstructed view
of the top of the flight of steps leading to the
shore, as well as the blinking light on the point
and the many windows of a lake steamer going
past.</p>
<p>Of late the water had grown too cold for swimming,
and boating was not so popular as it had<span class="pagenum">[185]</span>
been. The keen winds sometimes blew over the
lake and into the school cove, foretelling the winter
which was steadily approaching from the Canadian
side.</p>
<p>Besides, as the term progressed, the school tasks
for the girls became more arduous. Dr. Prescott
began the year cautiously; but when she once had
her girls “into their stride,” as she called it, she
pushed them hard. There was less and less time
for sport and recreation for those girls who desired
to stand well in the monthly reports sent home
to parents or guardians.</p>
<p>Girls like Linda Riggs and most of her friends,
did not seem to care what their reports were. But
Nan felt differently; and even careless Bess had
ambition to please the folks at home.</p>
<p>As Nan sat at the window on this evening, however,
she wondered if it greatly mattered, after all,
what she did—whether she studied, or not. For
the letter from Scotland had made the girl very
hopeless, indeed. She could not, for this once, at
least, feel the uplift of “Momsey’s” hopeful nature.
She feared that the fortune which, like a
will-o’-the-wisp, had danced before their eyes for
so many months, was now about to disappear in a
Morass of Despair. The little “dwelling in amity”
mortgaged! That seemed to Nan a most terrible
thing.</p>
<p>And “Papa Sherwood” and “Momsey” would<span class="pagenum">[186]</span>
have to come home, and “Papa Sherwood” would
have to take up the search for work again which
had so clouded their lives during the first weeks of
this very year.</p>
<p>With the outlook on life of a much older person,
Nan saw all these approaching difficulties, and they
loomed up mountain high in her imagination. After
the joy of believing poverty was banished forever
from their lives, it seemed to be marching upon
them with a more horrid mien than ever.</p>
<p>All the money that could possibly be raised upon
the cottage on Amity Street would barely bring her
parents home and pay the remainder of her year’s
tuition at Lakeview Hall. Nan knew how much
the latter would be, and there rose in her heart a
determination. It would be impossible to get any
of the half year’s tuition money back—that which
had been already paid; but her father would not
have to pay the remainder of the fee if she left
school at the mid-winter holidays.</p>
<p>And this would she do. “Papa Sherwood”
should not be troubled by that expense! If she only
had not recklessly expended that whole five-pound
note for the spread in the haunted boathouse!</p>
<p>Over spilled milk, however, there was little use to
cry. Extravagances must stop right here and now.</p>
<p>By and by Nan slipped out of her clothes, braided
her hair in the dark, and got into bed long before
the retiring bell rang. When Bess came in, her<span class="pagenum">[187]</span>
chum made a pretense of being asleep, and in her
heart thought: “More deceit!”</p>
<p>But Nan felt she could not listen to Bess’ chatter
on this night.</p>
<p>She arose early in the morning, after an uneasy
night, and while the steam was knocking its usual
morning tattoo in the radiators (the girls said Mrs.
Cupp never reported that annoyance to the engineer,
for it served to make even the “lazybones” of the
school rise promptly) Nan sat by the window,
through which the cold light stole, and began a
reply to her mother’s letter. She had written a
page and a half when the gong sounded and Bess
sleepily crept out of bed.</p>
<p>“Hul-lo!” Bess yawned.</p>
<p>Nan could merely nod to her.</p>
<p>“Oh, gracious goodness me!” cried Bess. “This
is the last day you’ve got to keep your mouth
closed, I should hope! I never did see such a stubborn
girl in my life before! If I had been as dumb
as you have been this week, I know I should never
be able to speak again.”</p>
<p>Nan smiled at this; though to tell the truth, even
that was hard work. To leave beautiful Lakeview
Hall, and all the girls whom she loved, and the
teachers, including Dr. Beulah and Professor Krenner!</p>
<p>Tears blinded her eyes. She could no longer
see to write. She did not want to stain the pages<span class="pagenum">[188]</span>
with tears, for then “Momsey” would know just
how bad she really felt. She jumped up, bathed
her eyes with cold water, and finished her own
toilet.</p>
<p>“You look just as though you had hay-fever,
Nan,” Bess grumbled. “But as you can’t have that
at this time of year, I believe you have been crying.”</p>
<p>Her chum did not admit this by either word or
look. She put on her cap and coat and ran out
for some exercise before breakfast. Bess never
indulged in such a thing. She always dressed so
slowly that she did not have time for a walk or a
run before the breakfast bell sounded.</p>
<p>She did, on this morning, however, think to open
the window before she left Room Seven, and left
the corridor door open, too. Immediately a draft
of air sucked through the room and blew Nan’s uncompleted
letter to her mother out of doors. The
result of this mischance was more important than
one would have thought.</p>
<p>In the first place, Cora Courtney chanced to be
walking briskly in the snowy garden. The thin
white coverlet that had shrouded the walks and
lawn overnight, crisped under her footsteps as she
tramped along. Down fluttered Nan’s unfinished
letter right in Cora’s path. Of course, Cora picked
it up and it was only natural that she should look
at it to see what it was.</p>
<p>“Goodness! Can this be <i>so?”</i> murmured Cora,<span class="pagenum">[189]</span>
after a glance down the written lines on the first
page. “Oh! Dear me!”</p>
<p>She was not a hard-hearted girl at all. And Nan
Sherwood had never done any wrong to Cora, or
said anything to her that was not kindly. Cora
had no reason whatsoever for wishing the girl from
Tillbury ill. So, naturally, she was sorry to learn
that such serious trouble had come upon her schoolmate.</p>
<p>Under other influences than those that had shaped
her course ever since she had come to Lakeview
Hall, Cora would have been a very different girl.
Her people were really very poor. Her father was
addicted to drink and his family suffered thereby.
Her mother had come of a well-to-do family; but
her relatives had almost all turned against her when
she married Mr. Courtney.</p>
<p>One aunt, however, remembered the oldest of
the Courtney children, and offered to educate Cora.
Instead of sending the girl to a school where she
would have been quickly and efficiently trained to
earn her own living, the foolish aunt sent her to
this exclusive finishing school for young ladies.</p>
<p>Every one about her had more money than poor
Cora Courtney. Her clothing was barely sufficient.
Dr. Prescott, out of her own pocket, delicately supplied
the poor girl with some absolute necessities.</p>
<p>Thus feeling the nip of poverty all the time, Cora
was easily tempted to join the clique of parasites<span class="pagenum">[190]</span>
who gathered around the free-handed, but unpleasant,
Linda Riggs. They all toadied to Linda, ran
errands for her, and as Laura Polk tartly said,
“performed all the duties of the Roman populace as
Linda, as a female Cæsar, demanded.”</p>
<p>Now Cora was immediately moved to pity by
what she had discovered in Nan Sherwood’s unfinished
letter. She could appreciate the sting of
poverty, and knew how she should feel herself if
her great aunt abruptly cut off the tuition fees. And
in this case Nan seemed to be giving up all from
a sense of duty.</p>
<p>Her heart told Cora to run to Nan with the
letter and tell her how sorry she was; but her
head advised her to take an entirely different course.
And Cora had learned to let her head guide her,
and not her heart.</p>
<p>There was still time before breakfast, and Cora
hurried up to the room which she shared with Linda.
It was in an entirely different part of the building
from that where Nan and Bess lodged, and was
a larger and much better-furnished apartment, with
a private bath attached, put in at Mr. Riggs’ cost
for his daughter. Cora Courtney was considered
very lucky by their special clique to be Linda’s
roommate, and she did not mind playing maid to
the haughty Linda for the privilege of sharing in
the luxuries of the apartment.</p>
<p>“Oh, Linda! Look what I’ve found!”<span class="pagenum">[191]</span></p>
<p>“I don’t care what it is!” snarled the purse-proud
girl, as she stood before the mirror. “I can’t make
my hair come right. It’s all in a tangle.”</p>
<p>She was sleepy and cross, and her scanty brown
hair was in a snarl. “You’ll have to help me, Cora,”
she added.</p>
<p>“You ought to get up when the gong strikes;
then you wouldn’t have to be helped,” said Cora,
who wanted to shirk an unpleasant service if she
could.</p>
<p>“If I got up at five o’clock it wouldn’t be any
better,” whined Linda. “It’s always in a snarl!”</p>
<p>“Then why don’t you braid it nicely when you
go to bed? You fall right into bed with your hair
in a regular rat’s nest!”</p>
<p>“I’m so-o tired then,” yawned Linda. “Come! be
a friend and help me. I should think you would.”</p>
<p>“Goodness! I don’t like to fix hair any better
than you do,” snapped Cora, coming unwillingly
to the task.</p>
<p>“Go on and be a good child,” said Linda, more
cajoling than usual. “I’m going to give you that
coral necklace of mine to wear to the Grand Guard
Ball tomorrow night.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Linda! are you truly?” gasped Cora, seizing
the hairbrush with avidity at this promise.</p>
<p>“Yes. I know you like it.”</p>
<p>“But you won’t have any necklace to wear yourself!”<span class="pagenum">[192]</span></p>
<p>“Oh, yes, I will. Don’t fear,” said Linda, looking
very shrewd and nodding emphatically.</p>
<p>Cora stood aside and looked at her closely.</p>
<p>“You don’t mean——?” she gasped.</p>
<p>“Never mind what I mean, Miss,” replied Linda,
shortly. “You go on with your work.”</p>
<p>“You never mean to wear that beautiful necklace
of your grandmother’s?” Cora amazedly inquired.</p>
<p>“Don’t I just?” returned Linda, tossing her head.
“Ouch!”</p>
<p>“Don’t pull, then,” said Cora calmly.</p>
<p>“Oh! you’re awfully mean!” cried Linda, tears
in her eyes.</p>
<p>“You’re just fooling. You couldn’t get the necklace
without Mrs. Cupp’s knowing it, and you know
very well she declared last term that no girl should
wear such an expensive thing at Lakeview Hall.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you bother, Miss. Mrs. Cupp isn’t omnipotent,”
said Linda, more placidly. “And the
Grand Guard Ball is not held at the Hall, thank
goodness! You shall wear the coral necklace. It
looks pretty next to the black lace in the neck of
your gown. And it shall be yours to keep if you’re
a good girl. Now! what’s all this you tried to tell
me when you came in? I’m awake now,” said
Linda, luxuriating under Cora’s deft hands.</p>
<p>Cora thrust the unfinished letter which she had
found before Linda’s eyes.<span class="pagenum">[193]</span></p>
<p>“Nan Sherwood’s writing!” gasped Linda, pouncing
on it at once. She read aloud:</p>
<p class="tb">“Dearest Momsey:—</p>
<p>“I love you! love you! And I wish I were where
you are, or you were where I am. I’d love to let
down your beautiful hair and brush it and make it
all pretty again, as I used. I am so, <i>so</i> lonely for
you and Papa Sherwood that I don’t so much mind
if you don’t ever get any of that money and have to
come home, and we are poor again in ‘the little
dwelling in amity.’ I so very much want to see you
both that I hope you will come back from Scotland
right away and we shall meet in dear old Tillbury
and not have to be separated any more.</p>
<p>“I am thankful to you and Papa Sherwood for
sending me to this nice school; and I enjoy it, and
if everything were all right, I’d dearly love to stay.
But I am so <i>hungry</i> for a sight of you that I’ll
gladly give up school.</p>
<p>“And that is just what I must do, dear Momsey,
and you must make Papa Sherwood agree. I won’t
let him spend any of that money he will have to
raise on mortgage to pay the other half year’s fees
here. No, indeed!”</p>
<p class="tb">The letter ended there. Had Cora not been so
much under Linda’s influence she would have cried
a bit over the tender lines Nan had written.<span class="pagenum">[194]</span></p>
<p>But Linda fairly exulted over the information
which the letter gave.</p>
<p>“Isn’t that great,” she demanded excitedly.
“Now we’ll fix that Nan Sherwood! Got to leave,
and her folks aren’t going to be rich, after all! I
don’t suppose there was ever any chance of it, anyway.
It was just talk. Ha! the nasty little thing.
This will just fix her!”</p>
<p>And Nan, all that last day of silence, went about
wondering why many of the girls looked so oddly
at her, and especially Linda Riggs’ group. They
laughed, and made supposedly funny speeches
which were evidently aimed at Nan, but which she
did not understand.</p>
<p>Rumor was blowing about, and before Bess Harley
had any of the particulars from her chum of the
calamity that had befallen, the whole school practically
knew that Nan Sherwood’s folks “were poor
as church mice.”</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[195]</span></p>
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