<h2>II</h2>
<h3>The Romantic History of Cuthbert St. John</h3>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/t.png" width-obs="100" height-obs="100" alt="T" title="T" /></div>
<div class='p2'>HE DOWAGER" had a very sensible theory that boarding-school girls
should be kept little girls, until their school life was over, and they
stepped out, fresh and eager and spontaneous, to greet the grown-up
world. Saint Ursula's was a cloister, in fact, as in name. The masculine
half of the human species was not supposed to count.</div>
<p>Sometimes a new girl was inclined to turn up her nose at the youthful
pastimes that contented her companions. But in the end she would be
drawn irresistibly into the current. She would learn to jump rope and
roll hoops; to participate in paper chases 'cross country; to skate and
coast and play hockey on winter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN></span> afternoons, to enjoy molasses-candy
pulls and popcorn around the big open fire on Saturday nights, or
impromptu masquerades, when the school raided the trunks in the attic
for costumes. After a few weeks' time, the most spoiled little worldling
lost her consciousness of calls outside of "bounds," and surrendered to
the spirit of the youthful sisterhood.</p>
<p>But the girls in their teens answer readily to the call of <span class="smcap">romance</span>. And
occasionally, in the twilight hour between afternoon study and the
dressing bell, as they gathered in the window-seat with faces to the
western sky, the talk would turn to the future—particularly when
Rosalie Patton was of the group. Pretty, dainty, inconsequential little
Rosalie was preëminently fashioned for romance; it clung to her golden
hair and looked from her eyes. She might be extremely hazy as to the
difference between participles and supines, she might hesitate on her
definition of a parallelopiped, but when the subject under discussion
was one of sentiment, she spoke with conviction. For hers was no mere
theoretical<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN></span> knowledge; it was gained by personal experience. Rosalie
had been proposed to!</p>
<p>She confided the details to her most intimate friends, and they confided
them to their most intimate friends, until finally, the whole school
knew the entire romantic history.</p>
<p>Rosalie's preëminence in the field of sentiment was held entirely
fitting. Priscilla might excel in basket-ball, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Cony'">Conny</ins> Wilder in
dramatics, Keren Hersey in geometry and Patty Wyatt in—well, in
impudence and audacity—but Rosalie was the recognized authority in
matters of the heart; and until Mae Mertelle Van Arsdale came, nobody
thought of questioning her position.</p>
<p>Mae Mertelle spent an uncomfortable month shaking into place in the
school life. The point in which she was accustomed to excel was
<i>clothes</i>, but when she and her four trunks arrived, she found to her
disgust that clothes were not useful at St. Ursula's. The school uniform
reduced all to a dead level in the matter of fashion. There was another
field, however, in which she might<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN></span> hope for supremacy. Her own
sentimental history was vivid, compared to the colorless lives of most,
and she proceeded to assert her claims.</p>
<p>One Saturday evening in October, half-a-dozen girls were gathered in
Rosalie's room, on piled-up sofa cushions, with the gas turned low and
the light of the hunter's moon streaming through the window. They had
been singing softly in a minor key, but gradually the singing turned to
talk. The talk, in accordance with the moonlight and flying clouds, was
in a sentimental vein; and it ended, naturally, with Rosalie's Great
Experience. Between maidenly hesitations and many promptings she retold
the story—the new girls had never heard it, and to the old girls it was
always new.</p>
<p>The stage setting had been perfect—a moonlit beach, and lapping waves
and rustling pine trees. When <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Rosaile'">Rosalie</ins> chanced to omit any detail, her
hearers, already familiar with the story, eagerly supplied it.</p>
<p>"And he held your hand all the time he was talking," Priscilla
prompted.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, Rosalie! Did he?" in a shocked chorus from the newcomers.</p>
<p>"Y—yes. He just sort of took hold of it and forgot to let go, and I
didn't like to remind him."</p>
<p>"What did he say?"</p>
<p>"He said he couldn't live without me."</p>
<p>"And what did you say?"</p>
<p>"I said I was awfully sorry, but he'd have to."</p>
<p>"And then what happened?"</p>
<p>"Nothing happened," she was obliged to confess. "I s'pose something
might have happened if I'd accepted him, but you see, I didn't."</p>
<p>"But you were very young at the time," suggested Evalina Smith. "Are you
sure you knew your own mind?"</p>
<p>Rosalie nodded with an air of melancholy regret.</p>
<p>"Yes. I knew I couldn't ever love him, because, he—well, he had an
awfully funny nose. It started to point in one direction, and then
changed its mind and pointed in the other."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Her hearers would have preferred that she had omitted this detail; but
Rosalie was literal-minded and lacked the story-teller's instinct for
suppression.</p>
<p>"He asked if there wasn't any hope that I would change," she added
pensively. "I told him that I could never love him enough to marry him,
but that I would always respect him."</p>
<p>"And then what did he say?"</p>
<p>"He said he wouldn't commit suicide."</p>
<p>A profound hush followed, while Rosalie gazed at the moon and the others
gazed at Rosalie. With her gleaming hair and violet eyes, she was
entirely their ideal of a storybook heroine. They did not think of
envying her; they merely wondered and admired. She was crowned by
natural right, Queen of Romance.</p>
<p>Mae Van Arsdale, who had listened in silence to the recital, was the
first to break the spell. She rose, fluffed up her hair, straightened
her blouse, and politely suppressed a yawn.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Nonsense, Rosalie! You're a silly little goose to make such a fuss over
nothing.—Good-night, children. I'm going to bed now."</p>
<p>She sauntered toward the door, but paused on the threshold to drop the
casual statement. "<i>I've</i> been proposed to three times."</p>
<p>A shocked gasp arose from the circle at this <i>lèse-majesté</i>. The
disdainful condescension of a new girl was more than they could brook.</p>
<p>"She's a horrid old thing, and I don't believe a word she says!"
Priscilla declared stoutly, as she kissed poor crushed little Rosalie
goodnight.</p>
<p>This slight <i>contretemps</i> marked the beginning of strained relations.
Mae Mertelle gathered her own adherents, and Rosalie's special coterie
of friends rallied to the standard of their queen. They intimated to
Mae's followers that the quality of the romance was quite different in
the two cases. Mae might be the heroine of any number of commonplace
flirtations, but Rosalie was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></SPAN></span> the victim of a <i>grande passion</i>. She was
marked with an indelible scar that she would carry to the grave. In the
heat of their allegiance, they overlooked the crookedness of the hero's
nose and the avowed fact that Rosalie's own affections had not been
engaged.</p>
<p>But Mae's trump card had been withheld. Whispers presently spread about
under the seal of confidence. She was hopelessly in love. It was not a
matter of the past vacation, but of the burning present. Her room-mate
wakened in the night to hear her sobbing to herself. She had no
appetite—her whole table could testify to that. In the middle of
dessert, even on ice-cream nights, she would forget to eat, and with her
spoon half-raised, would sit staring into space. When reminded that she
was at the table, she would start guiltily and hastily bolt the rest of
the meal. Her enemies unkindly commented upon the fact that she always
came to before the end, so she got as much as anybody else.</p>
<p>The English classes at St. Ursula's were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></SPAN></span> weekly drilled in the
old-fashioned art of letter writing. The girls wrote letters home,
minutely descriptive of school life. They addressed imaginary girl
friends, and grandmothers and college brothers and baby sisters. They
were learning the great secret of literary forcefulness—to suit their
style to their audience. Ultimately, they arrived at the point of
thanking imaginary young men for imaginary flowers. Mae listened to the
somewhat stilted phraseology of these polite and proper notes with a
supercilious smile. The class, covertly regarding her, thrilled anew.</p>
<p>Gradually, the details of the romance spread abroad. The man was
English—Mae had met him on the steamer—and some day when his elder
brother died (the brother was suffering from an incurable malady that
would carry him off in a few years) he would come into the title; though
just what the title was, Mae had not specifically stated. But in any
case, her father was a staunch American; he hated the English and he
hated titles. No daughter of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></SPAN></span> his should ever marry a foreigner. If she
did, she would never receive a dollar from him. However, neither Mae nor
Cuthbert cared about the money. Cuthbert had plenty of his own. His name
was Cuthbert St. John. (Pronounced Sinjun.) He had four names in all,
but those were the two he used the most. He was in England now, having
been summoned by cable, owing to the critical condition of his brother's
health, but the crisis was past, and Cuthbert would soon be returning.
Then—Mae closed her lips in a straight line and stared defiantly into
space. Her father should see!</p>
<p>Before the throbbing reality of this romance, Rosalie's poor little
history paled into nothing.</p>
<p>Then the plot began to thicken. Studying the lists of incoming steamers,
Mae announced to her room-mate that he had landed. He had given his word
to her father not to write; but she knew that in some way she should
hear. And sure enough! The following morning brought a nameless bunch of
violets. There had been doubters<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></SPAN></span> before—but at this tangible proof of
devotion, skepticism crumbled.</p>
<p>Mae wore her violets to church on Sunday. The school mixed its responses
in a shocking fashion—nobody pretended to follow the service; all eyes
were fixed on Mae's upturned face and far-off smile. Patty Wyatt pointed
out that Mae had taken special pains to seat herself in the light of a
stained-glass window, and that occasionally the rapt eyes scanned the
faces of her companions, to make sure that the effect was reaching
across the footlights. But Patty's insinuation was indignantly
repudiated by the school.</p>
<p>Mae was at last triumphantly secure in the rôle of leading lady. Poor
insipid Rosalie no longer had a speaking part.</p>
<p>The affair ran on for several weeks, gathering momentum as it moved. In
the European Travel Class that met on Monday nights, "English Country
Seats" was the subject of one of the talks, illustrated by the
stereopticon. As a stately, terraced mansion, with deer cropping grass
in the fore<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></SPAN></span>ground, was thrown upon the screen, Mae Mertelle suddenly
grew faint. She vouchsafed no reason to the housekeeper who came with
hot-water bottles and cologne; but later, she whispered to her room-mate
that that was the house where he was born.</p>
<p>Violets continued to arrive each Saturday, and Mae became more and more
<i>distrait</i>. The annual basket-ball game with Highland Hall, a near-by
school for girls, was imminent. St. Ursula's had been beaten the year
before; it would mean everlasting disgrace if defeat met them a second
time, for Highland Hall was a third their size. The captain harangued
and scolded an apathetic team.</p>
<p>"It's Mae Mertelle and her beastly violets!" she disgustedly grumbled to
Patty. "She's taken all the fight out of them."</p>
<p>The teachers, meanwhile, were uneasily aware that the atmosphere was
overcharged. The girls stood about in groups, thrilling visibly when Mae
Mertelle passed by. There was a moonlight atmosphere about the school
that was not conducive to high<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></SPAN></span> marks in Latin prose composition. The
matter finally became the subject of an anxious faculty meeting. There
was no actual data at hand; it was all surmise, but the source of the
trouble was evident. The school had been swept before by a wave of
sentiment; it was as catching as the measles. The Dowager was inclined
to think that the simplest method of clearing the atmosphere would be to
pack Mae Mertelle and her four trunks back to the paternal fireside, and
let her foolish mother deal with the case. Miss Lord was
characteristically bent upon fighting it out. She would stop the
nonsense by force. Mademoiselle, who was inclined to sentiment, feared
that the poor child was really suffering. She thought sympathy and
tact—But Miss Sallie's bluff common-sense won the day. If the sanity of
Saint Ursula's demanded it, Mae Mertelle must go; but she thought, by
the use of a little diplomacy, both St. Ursula's sanity and Mae Mertelle
might be preserved. Leave the matter to her. She would use her own
methods.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Miss Sallie was the Dowager's daughter. She managed the practical end of
the establishment—provided for the table, ruled the servants, and ran
off, with the utmost ease, the two hundred acres of the school farm.
Between the details of horseshoeing and haying and butter-making, she
lent her abilities wherever they were needed. She never taught; but she
disciplined. The school was noted for unusual punishments, and most of
them originated in Miss Sallie's brain. Her title of "Dragonette" was
bestowed in respectful admiration of her mental qualities.</p>
<p>The next day was Tuesday, Miss Sallie's regular time for inspecting the
farm. As she came downstairs after luncheon drawing on her driving
gloves, she just escaped stepping on Conny Wilder and Patty Wyatt who,
flat on their stomachs, were trying to poke out a golf ball from under
the hat-rack.</p>
<p>"Hello, girls!" was her cheerful greeting. "Wouldn't you like a little
drive to the farm? Run and tell Miss Wadsworth that you are excused from
afternoon study.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span> You may stay away from Current Events this evening,
and make it up."</p>
<p>The two scrambled into hats and coats in excited delight. A visit to
Round Hill Farm with Miss Sallie, was the greatest good that St.
Ursula's had to offer. For Miss Sallie—out of bounds—was the funniest,
most companionable person in the world. After an exhilarating five-mile
drive through a brown and yellow October landscape, they spent a couple
of hours romping over the farm, had milk and ginger cookies in Mrs.
Spence's kitchen; and started back, wedged in between cabbages and eggs
and butter. They chatted gaily on a dozen different themes—the
Thanksgiving masquerade, a possible play, the coming game with Highland
Hall, and the lamentable new rule that made them read the editorials in
the daily papers. Finally, when conversation flagged for a moment, Miss
Sallie dropped the casual inquiry:</p>
<p>"By the way, girls, what <i>has</i> got into Mae Van Arsdale? She droops
about in corners and looks as dismal as a molting chicken."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Patty and Conny exchanged a glance.</p>
<p>"Of course," Miss Sallie continued cheerfully, "it's perfectly evident
what the trouble is. I haven't been connected with a boarding-school for
ten years for nothing. The little idiot is posing as the object of an
unhappy affection. You know that I never favor talebearing, but, just as
a matter of curiosity, is it the young man who passes the plate in
church, or the one who sells ribbon in Marsh and Elkins's?"</p>
<p>"Neither." Patty grinned. "It's an English nobleman."</p>
<p>"What?" Miss Sallie stared.</p>
<p>"And Mae's father hates English noblemen," Conny explained, "and has
forbidden him ever to see her again."</p>
<p>"Her heart is broken," said Patty sadly. "She's going into a decline."</p>
<p>"And the violets?" inquired Miss Sallie.</p>
<p>"He promised not to send her any letters, but violets weren't
mentioned."</p>
<p>"H'm, I see!" said Miss Sallie; and, after a moment of thought, "Girls,
I am<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span> going to leave this matter in your hands. I want it stopped."</p>
<p>"In our hands?"</p>
<p>"The school can't be stirred up any longer; but the matter's too silly
to warrant the teachers taking any notice of it. This is a thing that
ought to be regulated by public opinion. Suppose you see what you can
do—I will appoint you a committee to bring the school back to a solid
basis of common sense. I know that I can trust you not to talk."</p>
<p>"I don't exactly see what we can do," said Patty, dubiously.</p>
<p>"You are usually not without resourcefulness," Miss Sallie returned with
a flickering smile. "You may have a <i>carte blanche</i> to choose your own
methods."</p>
<p>"And may we tell Priscilla?" Conny asked. "We must tell her because we
three—"</p>
<p>"Hunt together?" Miss Sallie nodded. "Tell Priscilla, and let it stop at
that."</p>
<p>The next afternoon, when Martin drove<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span> into the village to accomplish
the daily errands, he dropped Patty and Priscilla at the florists,
empowered by the school to purchase flowers for the rector's wife and
new baby. They turned inside, their minds entirely occupied with the
rival merits of red and white roses. They ordered their flowers,
inscribed the card, and then waited aimlessly till Martin should return
to pick them up. Passing down the counter, they came upon a
bill-sticker, the topmost item being, "Violets every Saturday to Miss
Mae Van Arsdale, St. Ursula's School."</p>
<p>They stopped and stared for a thoughtful moment. The florist followed
their gaze.</p>
<p>"Do you happen to know the young lady who ordered them vi'lets?" he
inquired. "She didn't leave any name, and I'd like to know if she wants
me to keep on sending 'em. She only paid up to the first, and the price
is going up."</p>
<p>"No, I don't know who it was," said Patty, with well-assumed
indifference. "What did she look like?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"She—she had on a blue coat," he suggested. As all sixty-four of the
St. Ursula girls wore blue coats, his description was not helpful.</p>
<p>"Oh," Patty prompted, "was she quite tall with a lot of yellow hair
and—"</p>
<p>"That's her!"</p>
<p>He recognized the type with some assurance.</p>
<p>"It's Mae herself!" Priscilla whispered excitedly.</p>
<p>Patty nodded and commanded silence.</p>
<p>"We'll tell her," she promised. "And by the way," she added to
Priscilla, "I think it would be nice for us to send some flowers to Mae,
from our—er—secret society. But I'm afraid the treasury is pretty low
just now. They'll have to be cheaper than violets. What are your
cheapest flowers?" she inquired of the man.</p>
<p>"There's a kind of small sunflower that some people likes for
decoration. 'Cut-and-come-again' they're called. I can give you a
good-sized bunch for fifty cents. They make quite a show."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Just the thing! Send a bunch of sunflowers to Miss Van Arsdale with
this card." Patty drew a blank card toward her, and in an upright back
hand traced the inscription, "Your disconsolate C. St. J."</p>
<p>She sealed it in an envelope, then regarded the florist sternly.</p>
<p>"Are you a Mason?" she asked, her eye on the crescent in his buttonhole.</p>
<p>"Y—yes," he acknowledged.</p>
<p>"Then you understand the nature of an oath of secrecy? You are not to
divulge to anyone the sender of these flowers. The tall young lady with
the yellow hair will come in here and try to make you tell who sent
them. You are not to remember. It may even have been a man. You don't
know anything about it. This secret society at Saint Ursula's is so very
much more secret than the Masonic Society, that it is even a secret that
it exists. Do you understand?"</p>
<p>"I—yes, ma'am," he grinned.</p>
<p>"If it becomes known," she added darkly, "I shall not be responsible for
your life."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She and Priscilla each contributed a quarter for the flowers.</p>
<p>"It's going to be expensive," Patty sighed. "I think we'll have to ask
Miss Sallie for an extra allowance while this committee is in session."</p>
<p>Mae was in her room, surrounded by an assemblage of her special
followers, when the flowers arrived. She received the box in some
bewilderment.</p>
<p>"He's sending flowers on Wednesdays as well as Saturdays!" her room-mate
cried. "He must be getting desperate."</p>
<p>Mae opened the box amid an excited hush.</p>
<p>"How perfectly lovely!" they cried in chorus, though with a slightly
perfunctory undertone. They would have preferred crimson roses.</p>
<p>Mae regarded the offering for a moment of stupefied amazement. She had
been pretending so long, that by now she almost believed in Cuthbert
herself. The circle was waiting, and she rallied her powers to meet this
unexpected crisis.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I wonder what sunflowers mean?" she asked softly. "They must convey
some message. Does anybody know the language of flowers?"</p>
<p>Nobody did know the language of flowers; but they were relieved at the
suggestion.</p>
<p>"Here's a card!" Evalina Smith plucked it from among the bristling
leaves.</p>
<p>Mae made a motion to examine it in private, but she had been so generous
with her confidences heretofore, that she was not allowed to withdraw
them at this interesting point. They leaned over her shoulder and read
it aloud.</p>
<p>"'Your disconsolate C. St. J.'—Oh, Mae, think how he must be
suffering!"</p>
<p>"Poor man!"</p>
<p>"He simply couldn't remain silent any longer."</p>
<p>"He's the soul of honor," said Mae. "He wouldn't write a real letter
because he promised not to, but I suppose—a little message like this—"</p>
<p>Patty Wyatt passing the door, sauntered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span> in. The card was exhibited in
spite of a feeble protest from Mae.</p>
<p>"That handwriting shows a lot of character," Patty commented.</p>
<p>This was considered a concession; for Patty, from the first, had held
aloof from the cult of Cuthbert St. John. She was Rosalie's friend.</p>
<p>The days that followed, were filled with bewildering experiences for Mae
Mertelle. Having accepted the first installment of sunflowers, she could
not well refuse the second. Once having committed herself, she was lost.
Candy and books followed the flowers in horrifying profusion. The candy
was of an inexpensive variety—Patty had discovered the ten-cent
store—but the boxes that contained it made up in decorativeness what
the candy lacked; they were sprinkled with Cupids and roses in vivid
profusion. A message in the same back hand accompanied each gift, signed
sometimes with initials, and sometimes with a simple "Bertie." Parcels
had never before been delivered with such unsuspicious promptitude. Miss
Sallie was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span> the one through whose hands they went. She glanced at the
outside, scrawled a "deliver," and the maid would choose the most
embarrassing moments to comply—always when Mae Mertelle was surrounded
by an audience.</p>
<p>Mae's Englishman, from an object of sentiment, in a few days' time
became the joke of the school. His taste in literature was as impossible
as his taste in candy. He ran to titles which are supposed to be the
special prerogative of the kitchen. "Loved and Lost," "A Born Coquette,"
"Thorns among the Orange Blossoms." Poor Mae repudiated them, but to no
avail; the school had accepted Cuthbert—and was bent upon eliciting all
the entertainment possible from his British vagaries. Mae's life became
one long dread of seeing the maid appear with a parcel. The last straw
was the arrival of a complete edition—in paper—of Marie Corelli.</p>
<p>"He—he never sent them!" she sobbed. "Somebody's just trying to be
funny."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You mustn't mind, Mae, because they aren't just the sort that an
American man would choose," Patty offered comfort. "You know that
Englishmen have queer tastes, particularly in books. <i>Everybody</i> reads
Marie Corelli over there."</p>
<p>The next Saturday, a party of girls was taken to the city for shopping
and the matinée. Among other errands, the art class visited a photograph
dealer's, to purchase some early Italian masters. Patty's interest in
Giotto and his kind was not very keen, and she sauntered off on a tour
of inspection. She happened upon a pile of actors and actresses, and her
eye brightened as she singled out a large photograph of an unfamiliar
leading man, with curling mustache and dimpled chin and large appealing
eyes. He was dressed in hunting costume and conspicuously displayed a
crop. The picture was the last word in Twentieth Century Romance. And,
most perfect touch of all, it bore a London mark!</p>
<p>Patty unobtrusively deflected the rest of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span> the committee from a
consideration of Fra Angelico, and the three heads bent delightedly over
the find.</p>
<p>"It's perfect!" Conny sighed. "But it costs a dollar and fifty cents."</p>
<p>"We'll have to go without soda water <i>forever!</i>" said Priscilla.</p>
<p>"It is expensive," Patty agreed, "but—" as she restudied the liquid,
appealing eyes—"I really think it's worth it."</p>
<p>They each contributed fifty cents, and the picture was theirs.</p>
<p>Patty wrote across the front, in the bold back hand that Mae had come to
hate, a tender message in French, and signed the full name, "Cuthbert
St. John." She had it wrapped in a plain envelope and requested the
somewhat wondering clerk to mail it the following Wednesday morning, as
it was an anniversary present and must not arrive before the day.</p>
<p>The picture came on the five-o'clock delivery, and was handed to Mae as
the girls trooped out from afternoon study. She re<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span>ceived it in sulky
silence and retired to her room. Half a dozen of her dearest friends
followed at her heels; Mae had worked hard to gain a following, and now
it couldn't be shaken off.</p>
<p>"Open it, Mae quick!"</p>
<p>"What do you s'pose it is?"</p>
<p>"It can't be flowers or candy. He must be starting something new."</p>
<p>"I don't care what it is!" Mae viciously tossed the parcel into the
wastebasket.</p>
<p>Irene McCullough fished it out and cut the string.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mae, it's his photograph!" she squealed. "And he's per-fect-ly
beau-ti-ful!"</p>
<p>"Did you ever see such eyes!"</p>
<p>"Does he curl his mustache, or it is natural?"</p>
<p>"Why didn't you tell us he had a dimple in his chin?"</p>
<p>"Does he always wear those clothes?"</p>
<p>Mae was divided between curiosity and anger. She snatched the photograph
away,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN></span> cast one glance at the languishing brown eyes, and tumbled it,
face downward, into a bureau drawer.</p>
<p>"Don't ever mention his name to me again!" she commanded, as, with
compressed lips, she commenced brushing her hair for dinner.</p>
<p>On the next Friday afternoon—shopping day in the village—Patty and
Conny and Priscilla dropped in at the florist's to pay a bill.</p>
<p>"Two bunches of sunflowers, one dollar," the man had just announced in
ringing tones from the rear of the store, when a step sounded behind
them, and they faced about to find Mae Mertelle Van Arsdale, bent on a
similar errand.</p>
<p>"Oh!" said Mae, fiercely, "I might have known it was you three."</p>
<p>She stared for a moment in silence, then she dropped into a rustic seat
and buried her head on the counter. She had shed so many tears of late
that they flowed automatically.</p>
<p>"I suppose," she sobbed, "you'll tell the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></SPAN></span> whole school, and everybody
will laugh and—and—"</p>
<p>The three regarded her with unbending mien. They were not to be moved by
a few tears.</p>
<p>"You said that Rosalie was a silly little goose to make such a fuss over
nothing," Priscilla reminded her.</p>
<p>"And at least he was a live man," said Patty, "even if he did have a
crooked nose."</p>
<p>"Do you still think she was a silly goose?" Conny inquired.</p>
<p>"N—no!"</p>
<p>"Don't you think you've been a great deal more silly?"</p>
<p>"Y—yes."</p>
<p>"And will you apologize to Rosalie?"</p>
<p>"No!"</p>
<p>"It will make quite a funny story," Patty ruminated, "the way we'll tell
it."</p>
<p>"I think you're perfectly horrid!"</p>
<p>"Will you apologize to Rosalie?" Priscilla asked again.</p>
<p>"Yes—if you'll promise not to tell."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"We'll promise on one condition—you're to break your engagement to
Cuthbert St. John, and never refer to it again."</p>
<p>Cuthbert sailed for England on the <i>Oceanic</i> the following Thursday; St.
Ursula's plunged into a fever of basket-ball, and the atmosphere became
bracingly free of Romance.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span><br/></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN></span><br/>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></span></p>
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