<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>A DAY AT SCHOOL.</div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was with a most unwilling mind and an unhappy
heart that Mary began her third week at
school. In the first place she could not bear to
tear herself away from all that was going on at
the new house. She wanted to have a hand in the
dear delights of home-making. She wanted to
poke the camp-fire, and dabble in the paste, and
watch the walls grow fresh and clean as the paper
spread over the old patches. The smell of the fresh
paint drew her, and gave her a feeling that there
were all sorts of delightful possibilities in this
region, yet unexplored.</p>
<p>In the second place, life in the new school was
a grievous burden, because the boys, seeing how
easily she was teased, found their chief pleasure in
annoying her. She was a trusting little soul, ready
to nibble the bait that any trap offered.</p>
<p>"Never mind! You'll get used to it after awhile,"
her mother said, consolingly, each evening when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></SPAN></span>
she came home with a list of fresh woes. "You're
tired now from that long walk home. Things will
seem better after supper." And Joyce would add,
"Don't look so doleful, Mother Bunch; just remember
the vicar, and keep inflexible. Fortune is bound
to change in your favour after awhile." But the
third Friday found her as unhappy as the third
Monday.</p>
<p>There were two rooms in the school building,
one containing all the primary classes, the other
the grammar grades, where Holland found a place.
Mary had one of the back seats in the primary
department, and one of the highest hooks in the
cloak-room, on which to hang her belongings. But
this Friday morning she did not leave her lunch-basket
in either place.</p>
<p>She and Patty Ritter, the little girl who sat across
the aisle from her, had had an indignation-meeting
the day before, and agreed to hide their baskets in
a hedgerow, so that there could be no possibility
of Wig Smith's finding them. Salt on one's jelly
cake and pepper in one's apple-pie two days in succession
is a little too much to be borne calmly. Wig
Smith's fondness for seasoning other people's
lunches was only one of his many obnoxious traits.</p>
<p>"There," said Mary, scanning the horizon anxiously,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></SPAN></span>
to see that no prowling boy was in sight.
"Nobody would think of looking behind that
prickly cactus for a lunch-basket! We're sure of
not going hungry to-day!"</p>
<p>With their arms around each other, they strolled
back to the schoolhouse, taking a roundabout way,
with great cunning, to throw Wig Smith off the
track, in case he should be watching. But their
precautions were needless this time. Wig had set
up a dentist's establishment on the steps of the stile,
his stock in trade being a pocket-knife and a hat
full of raw turnips. Nothing could have been
friendlier than the way he greeted Mary and Patty,
insisting that they each needed a set of false teeth.
Half a dozen of his friends had already been fitted
out, and stood around, grinning, in order to show
the big white turnip teeth he had fitted over the
set provided by Nature. As the teeth were cut in
irregular shapes, wide square-tipped ones alternating
with long pointed fangs, and the upper lip had
to be drawn tightly to hold them in place, the effect
was so comical that they could hardly hold the new
sets in position for laughing at each other.</p>
<p>In payment for his work, Wig accepted almost
anything that his customers had to offer: marbles,
when he could get them, pencils, apples, fish-hooks,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></SPAN></span>
even a roll of tin-foil, saved from many chewing-gum
packages, which was all one girl had to trade.</p>
<p>A search through Mary's orderly pencil-box failed
to show anything that he wanted of hers, but the
neatly prepared home lesson which fluttered out
of her arithmetic caught his eye. He agreed to
make her the teeth for a copy of six problems which
he could not solve. Mary had much the hardest
part of the bargain, for, sitting on the stile, she
patiently copied long-division sums until the second
bell rang, while he turned off the teeth with a few
masterful strokes of his knife.</p>
<p>"Let's all put them in as soon as we're done singing,
and wear them till we recite spelling," he suggested.
"It's mighty hard to keep from chawin'
on 'em after they've been in your mouth awhile.
Let's see who can keep them in longest. Every
five minutes by the clock, if the teacher isn't lookin',
we'll all grin at onct to show that they're still in."</p>
<p>Needless to say, the usual Friday morning studiousness
did not prevail in the primary room that
morning. Too many eyes were watching the clock
for the moment of display to arrive, and when it
did arrive, the coughing and choking that was set
up to hide the titters, plainly told the teacher that
some mischief was afoot. If she could have turned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></SPAN></span>
in time to see the distorted faces, she must have
laughed too, it was such a comical sight, but she
was trying to explain to a row of stupid little
mathematicians the mysteries of borrowing in subtraction,
and always looked up a moment too late.</p>
<p>Mary Ware, having written every word of her
spelling lesson from memory, and compared it with
her book to be sure that she knew it, now had a
quarter of an hour of leisure. This she devoted
to putting her desk in order. The books were dusted
and piled in neat rows. Everything in her pencil-box
was examined, and laid back with care, the
slate-rag folded and tucked under the moist sponge.
There was another box in her desk. It had bunches
of violets on it and strips of lace-paper lining the
sides. It smelled faintly of the violet soap it had
once held. She kept several conveniences in this,
pins, and an extra hair-ribbon in case of loss, a
comb, and a little round mirror with a celluloid
back, on which was printed the advertisement of a
Plainsville druggist.</p>
<p>As she polished the little mirror, the temptation
to use it was too great to resist. Holding it under
the desk, she stretched her lips back as far as possible
in a grotesque grin, to show her set of turnip
teeth. They looked so funny that she tried it again<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></SPAN></span>
with variations, rolling her eyes and wrinkling her
nose. So absorbed was she that she did not realize
that a silence had fallen in the room, that the recitation
had stopped and all eyes were turned upon
her. Then her own name, spoken in a stern tone,
startled her so that she bounced in her seat and
dropped the mirror.</p>
<p>"Why, <i>Mary Ware</i>! I'm <i>astonished</i>! Come
here!"</p>
<p>Blushing and embarrassed at being called into
public notice, Mary stumbled up to the platform,
and submitted to an examination of her mouth.
Then, following orders, she went to the door, and
with much sputtering spat the teeth out into the
yard.</p>
<p>"I'll see you about this after school," remarked
the teacher, sternly, as she stumbled back to her
seat, overcome by mortification.</p>
<p>If the teacher had not been so busy watching
Mary obey orders, she would have noticed a rapid
moving of many jaws along the back row of seats,
and a mighty gulping and swallowing, as the other
sets of teeth disappeared down the throats of their
owners.</p>
<p>"So this has been the cause of so much disturbance
this morning," she remarked, crossly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></SPAN></span>
"I'm astonished that one of the quietest pupils in
the school should have behaved in such a manner."
Then as a precaution she added, "Is there any one
else in the room who has any of these turnip teeth?
Raise your hands if you have."</p>
<p>Not a hand went up, and every face met Mary's
indignant accusing gaze with such an innocent stare
that she cried out:</p>
<p>"Oh, what a story!"</p>
<p>"Open your mouths," commanded the teacher.
"Turn your pockets wrong side out."</p>
<p>To Mary's amazement, nobody had so much as
a taste of turnip to show, and she stood accused
of being the only offender, the only one with judgment
awaiting her after school. With her head
on her desk, and her face hidden on her arms, she
cried softly all through the spelling recitation.
"It wasn't fair," she sobbed to herself.</p>
<p>Patty comforted her at recess with half her stick
of licorice, and several of the other girls crowded
around her, begging her to come and play Bird, and
not to mind what the boys said, and not to look
around when Wig Smith mimicked the teacher's
manner, and called after her in a tantalizing tone,
"Why, Mary Ware! I'm <i>astonished</i>!"</p>
<p>Gradually they won her away from her tears,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></SPAN></span>
and before recess was over she was shrieking with
the gayest of them as they raced around the schoolhouse
to escape the girl who, being "It," personated
the "bad man."</p>
<p>As they dropped into their seats at the close of
recess, hot and panting, a boy from the grammar
room came in and spoke to the teacher. It was
Paul Archer, a boy from New York, whose father
had recently bought a ranch near by. He held up
a string of amber beads, as the teacher asked, "Does
this belong to any one in this room?"</p>
<p>They were beautiful beads. Mary caught her
breath as she looked at them. "Like drops of rain
strung on a sunbeam," she thought, watching them
sparkle as he turned and twisted the string. Paul
was a big boy, very clean and very good-looking,
and as little Blanche Ellert came up to claim her
necklace, blushing and shaking back her curls, he
held it out with such a polite, dancing-school bow
that Mary's romantic little soul was greatly impressed.
She wished that the beautiful beads had
been hers, and that she had lost them, and could
have claimed them before the whole school, and
had them surrendered to her in that princely way.
She would like to lose a ring, she thought, that is,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></SPAN></span>
if she had one, or a locket, and have Paul find it,
and give it to her before the whole school.</p>
<p>Then she remembered that she had worn her best
jacket to school that morning, and in the pocket was
a handkerchief that had been hung on the Sunday-school
Christmas-tree for her in Plainsville. It was
a little white silk one, embroidered in the corners
with sprays of forget-me-nots, blue, with tiny pink
buds. What if she should lose that and Paul should
find it, and hold up the pretty thing in sight of all
the school for her to claim?</p>
<p>As the morning wore on, the thought pleased her
more and more. The primary grades were dismissed
first at noon, so she had time to slip the
handkerchief from her jacket-pocket, tiptoe guiltily
into the other cloak-room, and drop it under a
certain wide-brimmed felt hat, which hung on its
peg with a jauntier grace than the other caps and
sombreros could boast. It seemed to stare at her
in surprise. Half-frightened by her own daring,
she tiptoed out again, and ran after Patty, who was
hunting for her outside.</p>
<p>"There won't be any salt in our cake and pepper
in our pie to-day," Patty said, confidently, as they
strolled off together with their arms around each
other. "Let's get our baskets, and go away off out<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span>
of sight to eat our dinners. I know the nicest place
down by the lateral under some cottonwood-trees.
The water is running to-day."</p>
<p>"It'll be like having a picnic beside a babbling
brook," assented Mary. "I love to hear the water
gurgle through the water-gate."</p>
<p>Seated on a freshly hewn log, after a careful survey
had convinced them that no lizards, Gila monsters,
or horned toads lurked underneath, the little
girls opened their baskets, and shook out their napkins.
The next instant a wail rose from them in
unison:</p>
<p>"Ants! Nasty little black ants! They're over
everything!"</p>
<p>"Just look at my chicken sandwiches," mourned
Mary, "and all that lovely gingerbread. They're
walking all over it and through it and into it and
around it. There isn't a spot that they haven't
touched!"</p>
<p>"And my mince turnovers," cried Patty. "I
brought one for you to-day, too, and a devilled egg.
But there isn't a thing in my basket that's fit to
eat."</p>
<p>"Nor mine, either," said Mary, "except the apples.
We might wash them in the lateral."</p>
<p>"And I'm nearly starved, I'm so hungry," grumbled<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span>
Patty. "An apple's better than nothing, but
it doesn't go very far."</p>
<p>"It's no use to go and ask Holland for any of
his lunch," said Mary. "By this time he's gobbled
up even the scraps, and busted the bag. He always
brings his in a paper bag, so's there'll be no basket
to carry home."</p>
<p>Cautiously leaning over the bank of the lateral,
Mary began dabbling her apple back and forth in the
water, and Patty, kneeling beside her, followed her
example. Suddenly Patty's apple slipped out of
her hand, and she clutched frantically at Mary's
arm in her effort to save it, and at the same time
keep her balance. Both swayed and fell sideways.
Mary's arm plunged into the water, wetting her
sleeve nearly to her shoulder, but, clawing at the
earth and long grass with the other hand, she managed,
after much scrambling, to regain her position.</p>
<p>Patty, with a scream, rolled over into the water.
The ditch was shallow, not more than waist-deep,
but as she had fallen full length, she came up soaking
wet. Even her hair dripped muddy little rivers
down over her face. There was no more school
for Patty that day. As soon as her old yellow
horse could be saddled, she started off on a lope
toward dry clothes and a hot dinner.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mary looked after her longingly, as she sat with
her sleeve held out in the sun to dry, and slowly
munched her one cold apple. She was so hungry
and miserable that she wanted to cry, yet this child
of nine was a philosopher in her small way.</p>
<p>"I'm not having half as bad a time as the old
vicar had," she said to herself, "so I won't be a
baby. Seems to me, though, that it's about time
fortune was changing in my favour. Maybe the
turn will be when Paul finds my forget-me-not
handkerchief."</p>
<p>With that time in view, she carefully smoothed
the wrinkles out of her sleeve as it dried, and pulled
the lace edging into shape around the cuff. Then
she combed the front of her hair, and retied the
big bows. She was not equal to the task of braiding
it herself, but a glance into the little celluloid
mirror satisfied her that she looked neat enough
to march up before the school when the time should
come for her to claim her handkerchief.</p>
<p>Every time the door opened before the afternoon
recess she looked up expectantly, her cheeks growing
red and her heart beating fast. But no Paul
appeared, or anybody else who had found anything
to be restored to its owner. She began to feel<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span>
anxious, and to wonder if she would ever see her
beloved forget-me-not handkerchief again.</p>
<p>At recess she dodged back into the hall after every
one had passed out, and stole a quick glance into
the other cloak-room. The handkerchief was gone.
Somebody had picked it up. Maybe the finder had
been too busy to search for the owner. It would
be brought in before school closed; just before
dismissal probably. The prospect took part of the
sting out of the recollection that she was to be kept
after school that evening, for the first time in her
life.</p>
<p>During the last period in the afternoon, the A
Geography class always studied its lesson for next
day. Mary specially liked this study, and with her
little primary geography propped up in front of
her, carefully learned every word of description,
both large print and small, on the page devoted to
Africa.</p>
<p>"Your hair is coming undone," whispered the
girl behind her. "Let me plait it for you. I love
to fool with anybody's hair."</p>
<p>Mary nodded her consent without turning around,
and sat up straight in her seat, so that Jennie could
reach it with greater ease. She never took her eyes
from the page. The teacher, who was putting
home lessons on the board for the D Arithmetic to
copy, was too busy to notice Jennie's new occupation.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_063.jpg" width-obs="431" height-obs="400" alt="Painting with a braid" />
<span class="caption">"SHE PROCEEDED WITH A JOYFUL HEART TO PAINT THE AFRICAN LION"</span></div>
<p>Mary enjoyed the soft touch of Jennie's fingers
on her hair. It felt so good to have it pulled into
place with smooth, deft pats here and there. After
the bows were tied on, Jennie still continued to play
with it, braiding the ends below the ribbon into
plaits that grew thinner and thinner, until they
ended in points as fine and soft as a camel's-hair
paint-brush. Evidently they suggested brushes to
Jennie, for presently she dived into her desk for
something quite foreign to school work. It was
a little palette-shaped card on which were arranged
seven cakes of cheap water-colour paint. The brush
attached to the palette had been lost on Christmas
Day, before she had had more than one trial of her
skill as an artist.</p>
<p>The water-bottle, which held the soap-suds devoted
to slate-cleaning, stood behind the pile of
books in her desk. She drew that out, and, having
uncorked it, carefully dipped the end of one of
Mary's braids into it. Then rubbing it across the
cake of red paint, she proceeded with a joyful heart
to paint the African lion in her geography the most
brilliant red that can be imagined.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mary, still enjoying the gentle pull, little guessed
what a bloody tip swung behind her right shoulder.
Then the caressing touch was transferred to the
left braid, and the greenest of green Bedouins,
mounted on the most purple of camels, appeared
on the picture of the Sahara.</p>
<p>The signal for dismissal, sounding from the principal's
room across the hall, surprised both the girls.
The time had passed so rapidly. Mary, putting
her hand back to feel if her bows were properly
tied, suddenly jerked her right braid forward in
alarm. The end was wet, and—was it <i>blood</i> that
made it so red? With a horrified expression she
clutched the other one, and finding that wet and
green, turned squarely around in her seat. She
was just in time to see the geography closing on
the red lion and green Bedouin, and realized in a
flash how Jennie had been "fooling" with her hair.</p>
<p>Before she could sputter out her indignation, the
teacher rapped sharply on the table for attention.
"Will you <i>please</i> come to order, Mary Ware?"
she said, sternly. "Remember, you are to remain
after the others are dismissed."</p>
<p>To have been publicly reprimanded twice in one
day, to have been kept after school, to have had
one's lunch spoiled by ants, and to have been left<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span>
miserably hungry all afternoon, to have had the
shock of a plunge almost to the shoulder in icy
water, and the discomfort of having a wet sleeve
dried on one's arm, to have had one's hair used
as paint-brushes, so that stains were left on the
back of the new gingham dress, was too much.
Mary could keep inflexible no longer. Then she
remembered that no one had brought back the forget-me-not
handkerchief, and with that to cap her
woes, she laid her head down on the desk and
sobbed while the others filed out and left her.</p>
<p>Usually, Holland found her waiting for him by
the stile when the grammar grades were dismissed,
but not seeing her there, he forgot all about her,
and dashed on after the boy who tagged him. Then
he and George Lee hurried on home to set a new
gopher-trap they had invented, without giving her
a thought. The faithful Patty, who always walked
with her as far as the turn, had not come back to
school after her plunge into the lateral. So it
came about that when Mary finally put on her hat
and jacket in the empty cloak-room, the playground
was deserted. As far as her tear-swollen eyes could
see up and down the road, not a child was in sight.
With a sob, she stood a moment on the top step
of the stile, then slowly swinging her lunch-basket,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span>
in which there were no scraps as usual to appease
her after-school hunger, she started on the long,
two-mile walk home.</p>
<p>It looked later than it really was, for the sun
was not shining. She had gone on a long way,
when a sound of hoofs far down the road made
her look back. What she saw made her give another
startled glance over her shoulder, and quicken
her pace. Half-running, she looked back again.
The sound was coming nearer. So was the rider.
Another glance made her stand still, her knees
shaking under her; for on the pony was an Indian,
a big, stolid buck, with black hair hanging in straight
locks over his shoulders.</p>
<p>She looked wildly around. Nobody else was in
sight, no house anywhere. The biggest man-eating
tiger in the jungles could not have terrified her
like the sight of that lone Indian. All the tales
that Jack and Holland had told for their mutual
frightening, all that she had read herself of tortures
and cruelties came into her mind. Their name was
legion, and they were startlingly fresh in her memory,
for only the evening before she had finished
a book called "On the Borders with Crook," and
the capture of the Oatman girls had been repeated
in her dreams.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Sure that the Indian intended to tomahawk her
the instant he reached her, she gave one stifled
gasp of terror, and started down the road as fast
as her fat little legs could carry her. A few rods
farther on her hat flew off, but she was running for
her life, and even the handsome steel buckle that
had once been Cousin Kate's could not be rescued
at such a risk.</p>
<p>She felt that she was running in a treadmill. Her
legs were going up and down, up and down, faster
than they had ever moved before, but she seemed
to be making no progress; she was unable to get
past that one spot in the road. And the Indian
was coming on nearer and nearer, with deadly
certainty, gaining on her at every breath. She felt
that she had been running for a week, that she
could not possibly take another step. But with
one more frantic glance backward, she gave another
scream, and dashed on harder than before.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />