<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2></div>
<p>It happened that Miss Myrtle Villers had not confined
her affections to Mr. Bartram Laws. She
had been seen wandering about the campus with
other youths at odd hours of the evening when young-lady
students were supposed to be safely within college
halls or properly chaperoned at some public gathering.
The “student exec” had had her in tow for several
weeks, and she had already received a number of reproofs
and warnings. A daring escapade the evening
before had brought matters to a head, and it was very
possibly because of some suspicion that they might
have found her out that Myrtle had made her plans
to be absent on that afternoon. However that was,
when the executive body in consultation with the dean
sent for her, they traced her to the Clouds’ house.
At least, they came there about seven o’clock to inquire
and hoping to take her unaware. They had found
Allison in a great state of excitement, telephoning
hither and yon to try to get some clew to his sister’s
whereabouts. They had remained to advise and suggest,
greatly worried at the whole situation, the more
so because it involved Leslie Cloud, whose bright
presence had taken great hold upon everybody.</p>
<p>And now, without knowing it, Leslie Cloud had
taken the one way to put the whole matter into the
right hands and to exonerate herself. If she had known
that any member of the faculty was in that room listening,
if she had dreamed that even her brother was
there, she would not have thought it right or honorable
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_261' name='page_261'></SPAN>261</span>
to put even an enemy in such a position, either for her
own sake or for the girl’s. She had only wanted some
wise, true adviser to know the truth, so that the girl
might learn what was right and have the responsibility
taken from her own shoulders. She thought, too, that
she had a right to be exonerated before her aunt. So
now, while she wept out her contrition in Julia Cloud’s
arms, retribution was coming swiftly to Myrtle Villers;
and her career in that college was sealed with finality.
It was only too plain that such a girl was a menace to
the other students, and needed to be removed.</p>
<p>Presently Leslie, feeling something strange in the
atmosphere, lifted frightened, tear-filled eyes, and saw
the grave faces of the dean and his companions! She
held her breath with suspense. How terrible! How
public and unseemly! She had brought all this upon
herself and her family by her persistent friendship
with this silly girl! And she fell to trembling and
shuddering, all her fine, sweet nerve gone now that the
strain was over.</p>
<p>Julia Cloud drew her down upon the couch, and
soothed her, covering her with an afghan and trying
to comfort her. Then the dean stepped over to the
couch and spoke to Leslie.</p>
<p>“Miss Cloud, you must not feel so bad,” he said
gently, as if she had been his own child. “You have
acted nobly, and no one will blame you. You have
perhaps saved Miss Villers from great shame and
sorrow, and you certainly have been brave and true.
Don’t worry, child,” and he patted Leslie’s heaving
shoulder kindly.</p>
<p>Presently the dean and his committee were gone,
taking the cowering Myrtle with them, and Leslie lay
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_262' name='page_262'></SPAN>262</span>
snuggled up on the couch, with Allison building up
the fire and Cherry bringing a tray with a nice supper.
Julia Cloud fixed a hot-water bag to warm the chilled
hands and feet. It was so good to be at home! The
tears rushed into her eyes again, and her throat filled
with sobs.</p>
<p>“O Cloudy!” She caught her aunt’s hands. “I’ll
never, never do anything again you don’t want me to!”
she sobbed out, and then burst into another paroxysm
of tears.</p>
<p>“There! Now, kid! Don’t cry any more!”
pleaded Allison, springing to her side and kneeling by
her, smoothing her hair roughly. “You were a little
winner! You had every bit of your nerve with you.
Why, you did a great thing, kid! Outwitting those two
brutes and bringing that girl back in spite of herself.
But the greatest thing of all was your making her
confess. Now they’ve got something to go on. If you
hadn’t done that, it would have been her word against
yours; and I imagine she’s always managed to keep
things where she could get around people with her
wiles. Now she’s got to face facts; and believe me,
kid, it’ll be better for her in the end. She was headed
straight for a bad end, and no mistake. All the fellows
knew it, and the faculty suspected it; and it was making
no end of trouble. But now the girl may be saved,
for that dean never lets a student go to destruction,
they say, if he can help it. Oh, of course he’ll fire her.
She isn’t fit to be around here. But he’ll keep an eye
on her, and he’ll fire her in such a way that she’ll have
another chance to make good if she’s willing to take it.
Don’t you worry about spoiling her life. She’d set out
to spoil it in the first place, and the best thing that could
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_263' name='page_263'></SPAN>263</span>
possibly happen to her was to get stopped before she
went too far. From all you say I shouldn’t think a
marriage with that fellow would have been any advantage
to her.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he was <i>awful</i>, Allison!” shuddered Leslie.
“He smelled of liquor; and he had great, coarse lips
and eyes; and he put his arms around her, and kissed
her right there before us all; and they acted perfectly
disgusting! I’m almost sure from things I heard them
say that she hadn’t been engaged to him at all, she
hadn’t even known him till last week. She met him
in town––just picked him up on the street! And that
Fred Hicks! I don’t <i>believe</i> now he was her cousin
at all.”</p>
<p>“Probably not. But leave that all to the dean.
He’ll ferret it out. He went in there to the telephone
before he left, and from what I heard I imagine he’s
got detectives out after those two guys, and they may
sleep in the lockup to-night. They certainly deserve
to. And I shall have a hand in settling with them,
too. I can’t have my sister treated that way and let
it go easily. They’ve got to answer to me. There, kid!”</p>
<p>He stooped down, and kissed her gently on her
hot, wet forehead; and Leslie caught his hand and
nestled her own in it.</p>
<p>“O Allison! It’s so good to be home!” she murmured,
squeezing his hand appreciatively. “I’ll never,
never, <i>never</i> go with a girl again that you don’t like.
I’m just going to stick to Jane. She’s the only one up
there I really love, anyway.”</p>
<p>Allison seemed quite satisfied with these sentiments,
and they had a beautiful time eating their supper before
the fire, for no one had had any appetite before; and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_264' name='page_264'></SPAN>264</span>
Cherry was as pleased to have the anxiety over and
wait upon them all as if Leslie had been her own sister.</p>
<p>Into the midst of their little family group broke
a hurried, excited knock on the door, and there stood
Howard Letchworth with anxious face.</p>
<p>“I heard that your sister and one of the college
girls had gone off in a car and got lost. Is it true? I
came right around to see if I could help.”</p>
<p>Leslie sat up with her teary eyes bright and eager,
and her cheeks rosy with pleasure, all her pretty hair
in a tumble about her face and the firelight playing over
her features in a most charming way.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s awfully good of you,” she called eagerly.
“But I’m perfectly all right and safe.”</p>
<p>He came over to the couch, and took her offered
hand most eagerly, expressing his delight, and saying
he had been almost sure it was some town gossip,
but he could not rest satisfied until he was positive.</p>
<p>But Allison would not let it go at that.</p>
<p>“I’m going to tell him, Leslie,” he said. “He
won’t let any one be the wiser; and, if people are saying
anything like that, he can help stop their mouths.” So
Allison told the whole story. When it came to the
part about Fred Hicks and Bartram Laws, Howard’s
face grew dark, and he flashed a look that boded no
good to the two young ruffians.</p>
<p>“I know who that Laws fellow is,” he said gravely.
“He’s rotten! And I shouldn’t wonder if I could
locate his friend. I get around quite a bit on my
motor-cycle. May I use your ’phone a minute? I
have a friend who is a detective. They ought to be
rounded up. Miss Leslie, would you tell me carefully
just what roads you took, as nearly as you know?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_265' name='page_265'></SPAN>265</span></div>
<p>So Leslie told in detail of the wild ride once more.
Julia Cloud watched the young man’s face as he listened,
and knew that Leslie had a faithful friend and
champion, knew also that here was one whose friendship
was well worth cultivating, a clean, fine, strong
young soul, and was glad for her little girl. Something
stirred in her memory as she watched his look,
and she went back to her childish days and the boy
friend who had kissed her when he went away never to
return. There was the same look in Howard
Letchworth’s eyes when he looked at Leslie, the age-old
beauty of a man’s clean devotion to a sweet, pure
woman soul.</p>
<p>Of course Leslie was a mere child yet, and was
not thinking of such things; but there need be no
fear that that fine, strong young man would be unwise
enough to let the child in her be frightened away
prematurely. They were friends now, beautiful
friends; and that would be enough for them both for a
long time. She was content.</p>
<p>She watched them all the evening, and listened
to their talk about the Christian Endeavor Society.
How beautiful it was that Leslie had been able to bring
the boy to a degree of interest in that! Of course it
was for her sake, but he was man enough to be interested
on his own account now; and from their talk she
could see that he had gone heart and soul with Allison
into the plans for the winter work. He had a fine
voice, and was to sing a solo at the next meeting. Presently
Leslie so far recovered her nerves as to smooth
out her hair and go to the piano to practise with him.</p>
<table summary=''><tr><td>
<p class='cg'><span class='indent4'> </span>“O Jesus, Thou art standing<br/>
<span class='indent5'> </span>Outside the fast-closed door,”</p>
</td></tr></table>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_266' name='page_266'></SPAN>266</span></div>
<p>rang out the rich, sweet notes; and the tender, sympathetic
voice brought out each word with an appeal.
The boy could not sing like that and not feel it himself
sometime. Julia Cloud found herself praying; praying,
as if she whispered to a dear Companion sitting
close beside her at the hearthside: “Dear Christ, show
this boy. Teach him what Thou art. Make him Thy
true disciple.”</p>
<p>Suddenly the young fellow turned to Allison with
a smile.</p>
<p>“I like the way you take your religion with you
into college, Cloud. It makes it seem real. I haven’t
met many fellows that had any before, or perhaps I
shouldn’t have been such a heathen as I am. But I
say, why don’t you try to get some of your frat brothers
to come down to the meeting? They ought to be
willing to do that for you, and it would be great to
have them sing. You’ve got a lot of the glee club in
your crowd.”</p>
<p>“That’s so!” said Allison. “I don’t know but
I’ll try it. I’d like to have them come the night you
sing. Guess I’ll have to hunt around and get a speaker.
No, I won’t either. Just the meeting itself is good
enough now for anybody. They’re a pretty good little
bunch down there. They’ve been working like beavers.
Jane Bristol gets the girls together, and coaches them
for every meeting. She’s some girl, do you know it?”</p>
<p>Howard Letchworth agreed that she was, but he
cast a side glance down at the bright head of the girl,
who was playing his accompaniment as if he felt there
were others. Julia Cloud was watching her darling
girl, wondering, hoping, praying that she might always
stay so sweet and unspoiled.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_267' name='page_267'></SPAN>267</span></div>
<p>But when the young man was gone home, and
Leslie came back to the couch again, she suddenly
drooped.</p>
<p>“Cloudy Jewel,” she said wearily, “it isn’t right.
I don’t deserve people to be so nice to me, the dean,
and you all, and Howard and everybody. It was a
lot my fault that all this happened. I thought I could
make that girl over if I just stuck to her. She had
promised me she would come to Christian Endeavor,
and join; and I wanted to show you all what a power
I had over her. I was just conceited; that was all
there was about it. Now I see that she was only fooling
me. I couldn’t have done anything at all alone.
I needed God. I didn’t ask Him to help. You’ve
talked a lot about that in our Sunday meetings, but it
never went down into my heart until I was driving past
that old crematory, and I felt as if I was all alone
and Death all in black trailing robes was going along
fast beside me. Then I knew God was the only one
who could help, and I began to pray. I hope maybe
I’ve learned my lesson, and I’ll not be so swelled-headed
next time. But you oughtn’t to forgive me, Cloudy,
not so easy. Cloudy, you’re just like God!”</p>
<p>It was several days before Leslie recovered fully
from the nervous strain she had been under. She
slept long the next day, and Julia Cloud would not
waken her. For a week there were dark circles under
the bright eyes, and the rose of her cheek was pale.
She went about meekly with downcast eyes, and the
bright fervor of her spirit seemed dimmed. It was
not until one afternoon when Allison suggested that
they get Jane Bristol and Howard Letchworth and go
for bittersweet-berry vines and hemlock-branches to
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_268' name='page_268'></SPAN>268</span>
decorate for the Christian Endeavor social that her
spirits seemed to return, and the unwholesome experience
was put away in the past at last.</p>
<p>Howard Letchworth had been most thoughtful
about the matter in the village, and had managed so
that the tragic had been taken out of the story that had
started to roll about, and Leslie could go around and
not feel that all eyes were upon her wondering about
her escapade. Gradually the remembrance of it died
out of her thoughts, although the wholesome lesson she
had learned never faded.</p>
<p>More and more popular in the college grew the
gatherings down at Cloudy Villa. Sometimes Leslie
brought home three or four girls for Friday and
Saturday, not often any on Sunday, unless it was Jane;
for Sundays were their very own day for the little
family, and they dreaded any who might seem
like intruders.</p>
<p>“It is our time when we catch up in our loving
for all the week,” Leslie explained with a quaint smile
to one girl who broadly hinted that she would not
mind being asked for over Sunday. “And, besides,
you mightn’t like the way we keep Sunday. Everybody
who comes has to go to church and Christian Endeavor
with us, and enjoy our Bible-reading, singing
hour around the fire; and I didn’t think you would.”</p>
<p>“Well, I like your nerve!” answered the girl; but
she sat studying Leslie afterwards with a thoughtful
gaze, and began to wonder whether, after all, a Sunday
spent in that way might not be really interesting.</p>
<p>“She’s a kind of a nut, isn’t she?” she remarked
to another friend of Leslie’s.</p>
<p>“She’s a pretty nice kind of a nut, then, Esther,”
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_269' name='page_269'></SPAN>269</span>
was the response. “If that’s a nut, we better grow a
whole tree of them. I’m going down there all I can.
I like ’em!”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud seemed to have a fertile brain for all
kinds of lovely ways to while away a holiday. As
the cold weather came on, winter picnics became the
glory of the hour. Long walks with heavy shoes and
warm sweaters and mittens were inaugurated. A
kettle of hot soup straight from the fire, wrapped in
a blanket and carried in a big basket, was a feature of
the lunch. When the party reached a camping-spot,
a fire would be built and the soup-kettle hung over an
improvised crane to put on its finishing touches, while
the rest of the eatables were set forth in paper plates,
each portion neatly wrapped in waxed paper ready for
easy handling. Sometimes big mince pies came along,
and were stood on edge near the fire to get thawed out.
Bean soup, corned-beef sandwiches, and hot mince pie
made a hearty meal for people who had tramped ten
or fifteen miles since breakfast.</p>
<p>Oh, how those college-fed boys and girls enjoyed
these picnics, with Julia Cloud as a kind of hovering
angel to minister with word or smile or in some more
practical way, wherever there was need! They all
called her “Cloudy Jewel” now whenever they dared,
and envied those who got closest to her and told her
their troubles. Many a lad or lassie brought her his or
her perplexities; and often as they sat around the
winter camp, perhaps on a rock brushed free from
snow, she gave them sage advice wrapped up in pleasant
stories that were brought in ever so incidentally.
There was nothing ever like preaching about Julia
Cloud; she did not feel that she knew enough to preach.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_270' name='page_270'></SPAN>270</span>
And sometimes, as they walked homeward through the
twilight of a long, happy afternoon, and the streaks
of crimson were beginning to glow in the gray of the
horizon, some one or two would lag behind and ask
her deep, sweet questions about life and its meaning and
its hereafter. Often they showed her their hearts as
they had never shown them even to their own people,
and often a word with her sent some student back
to work harder and fight stronger against some subtle
temptation. She became a wholesome antidote to the
spirit of doubt and atheism that had crept stealthily
into the college and was attacking so many and undermining
what little faith in religion they had when they
came there.</p>
<p>It came to be a great delight to many of the young
college people to spend an evening around the hearth
at Cloudy Villa. There never had been any trouble
about that question of dancing, because they just did
not do it; and there was always something else going
on, some lively games, sometimes almost a “rough-house,”
as the boys called it, but never anything really
unpleasant. Julia Cloud was “a good sport,” the boys
said; and the girls delighted in her. The evenings were
filled with impromptu programmes thought out carefully
by Julia Cloud, but proposed and exploited in
the most casual manner.</p>
<p>“Allison, why wouldn’t it be a good idea for you
to act out that story we were reading the other day
the next time you have some of the young people down?
You and Leslie and Jane with the help of one or two
others could do it, and there wouldn’t be much to learn.
If you all read it over once or twice more, you’d have
it so you could easily extemporize. Do you know, I
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_271' name='page_271'></SPAN>271</span>
think there’s a hidden lesson in that story that would
do some of those boys and girls good if they could see
it lived out, and perhaps set them to reading the book?”</p>
<p>Again they would be asked suddenly, soon after
their arrival, each one to represent his favorite character
in Shakespeare, or to reproduce some great public
man so that they all could recognize him; and they
would be sent up-stairs to select from a great pile of
shawls, wraps, and all sorts of garments any which
they needed for an improvised costume.</p>
<p>Another evening there would be brought forth a
new game which nobody had seen, and which absorbed
them all for perhaps two hours until some delicious and
unique refreshments would be produced to conclude the
festivities. At another time the round dining-table
would be stretched to take in all its leaves, and the entire
company would gather around it with uplifted
thumbs and eager faces unroariously playing “up
Jenkins” for an hour or two. Any little old game
went well under that roof, though Julia Cloud kept
a controlling mind on things, and always managed
to change the game before anybody was weary of it.</p>
<p>Also there was much music in the little house.
Allison played the violin well; two or three others who
played a little at stringed and wind instruments were
discovered; and often the whole company would break
loose into song until people on the street halted and
walked back and forth in front of the house to listen
to the wild, sweet harmonies of the fresh young voices.</p>
<p>At the close of such an evening it was not an
uncommon happening for a crowd of the frat boys to
gather in a knot in front of the house and give the
college yell, with a tiger at the end, and then
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_272' name='page_272'></SPAN>272</span>
“CLOUD! CLOUD! CLOUD!” The people living
on that street got used to it, and opened their windows
to listen, with eyes tender and thoughtful as they pondered
on how easily this little family had caught the
hearts of those college people, and were helping them
to have a good time. Perhaps it entered into their
minds that other people might do the same thing if they
would only half try.</p>
<p>In return for all her kindness a number of the
young people would often respond to Julia Cloud’s
wistful invitation to go to church, and more and more
they were being drawn by twos and threes to come to
the Christian Endeavor meetings in the village. It
seemed as if they had but just discovered that there
was such a thing, to the equal amazement of themselves
and the original members of the Christian Endeavor
Society, who had always responded to any such
suggestions on the part of their pastor or elders with a
hopeless “Oh, you can’t get those college guys to do
anything! They think they’re it!” The feeling was
gradually melting away, and a new brotherhood and
sisterhood was springing up between them. It was
not infrequent now for a college maiden to greet some
village girl with a frank, pleasant smile, and accept invitations
to lunch and dinner. And college boys were
friendly and chummy with the village boys who were
not fellow-students, and often took them up to their
frat rooms to visit. So the two elements of the locality
were coming nearer to each other, and their bond was
the village Christian Endeavor Society.</p>
<p>So passed the first winter and spring in the little
pink-and-white house. And with the first week of
vacation there came visitors.</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_273' name='page_273'></SPAN>273</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XXIV' id='CHAPTER_XXIV'></SPAN>
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