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"We came here to deliver our invitations in person," Jane finally said with a smile. "Miss Leonard, I'd love to be your cavalier for the freshman frolic."
"Thank you. I'd love to go to it with you, I'm sure," accepted Ida Leonard, a tall, thin girl with fair hair and a plain, but interesting face.
Jane having set the ball rolling, Adrienne promptly invited Marie Benham, a slim little girl with an eager, boyish face, framed in curly brown hair.
This left Kathie Meddart, an extremely pretty girl of pure blonde type, to Judith.
Considerable merriment arose over the extending and acceptance of the invitations. Poverty had not robbed the four young hostesses of a cheery, happy-go-lucky air that charmed their more affluent guests.
For an hour the congenial company talked and laughed as only girls can.
Kathie finally excusing herself, disappeared kitchenward, presently returning with a huge, brown pitcher of lemonade and a plate piled high with crisp little cakes, which she a.s.sured were of her own making.
Needless to say, they disappeared with amazing rapidity, the guests loudly acclaiming their toothsome merits.
"I'm glad you like them," declared Kathie, pink with pleasant confusion.
"I took a course in cookery at a night school at home last year. I often used to make this kind of cakes for parties. I had lots of orders and made enough money to pay my tuition fees at Wellington for this year."
"How splendid!" approved Jane. Her approval was echoed by the others.
"I'm hoping, after I get acquainted here in college, to do a little of that sort of thing," confided Kathie rather shyly. "I could spare an hour or so a day to do it. Only I don't know how to go about it."
"Would you--could you--would you care to make some for me, some day?"
hesitated Jane. "They would be simply great if one were giving a spread."
"Why, that's ever so kind in you," glowed Kathie. "When I just spoke of it I wasn't fis.h.i.+ng for an order. I mentioned it before I thought."
"It's a good thing you did. I'll order two dozen for my own special benefit the minute my check comes," laughed Judith. "I sha'n't give Jane Allen one. I'll sit in a corner of our room and gobble them all up."
"I adore those cakes!" Adrienne clasped her small hands. "Would it then be possible that I might have some to-morrow? Perhaps two dozen? Ah, but I am not the greedy one. I will share with my friends, even most selfish Judy."
This provoked a laugh at Judith's expense. So it was, however, that Kathie received her first order which she agreed to deliver the next day.
As a matter of fact, she had been the only one to demur when Freda had announced that the Madison Hall girls were coming there that evening.
She had advanced the argument that "those rich Madison Hall girls won't care to ask us to the dance when they see how poor we are." Now she wondered how she could ever have so misjudged such a delightful lot of girls.
CHAPTER XIII
THE EXPLANATION
When at length the quintette of callers regretfully agreed that they must be getting back to the Hall, Freda said rather nervously:
"Please don't go just yet. I--we--there is something we think we ought to tell you."
"Very well, tell us," invited Judith gaily.
She had an idea that the something might relate to the all-important question of gowns. If Freda were worrying over that, Judith proposed to dismiss the subject lightly. Precisely the same thought had occurred to Jane, who noted Freda's sudden flush and evident confusion.
"Something--well--not very pleasant happened this afternoon," Freda continued. "A--we had a caller--a girl----Why shouldn't I be frank? This girl was of the freshman cla.s.s. We saw her at cla.s.s meeting the other day, but we have never been introduced to her. She brought a paper with her and asked us to sign it. It was about three of you girls; Miss Allen, Miss Dupree and Miss Stearns, and----"
"About us?" chorused a trio of astonished voices.
"Yes," nodded Freda, her color heightening. "It began, 'We, the undersigned,' I can't recall the exact words, but it was an agreement not to accept an invitation from any one of you to the dance or to notice you throughout the year, because of the discourteous and hateful way you had treated a member of the freshman cla.s.s. There were----"
"How perfectly disgraceful!" burst indignantly from Judith. "What did I tell you, girls? I knew there was something wrong. We didn't expect to find it out in this strange way, though. Well, 'murder will out,' as the saying goes."
"You said the paper began, 'We, the undersigned'?" questioned Jane in a clear, hard voice. "How many names were signed to it?"
"I can't say positively." Freda looked distressed. "You see, it made me so disgusted that I handed it back the instant I had read it. The girl offered it to my chums, too, but they wouldn't look at it. She said that nearly all the members of the cla.s.s had signed it. I know better. I believe not half the cla.s.s had signed."
"Would you object to telling us the name of the girl who brought you the paper to sign?" steadily pursued Jane.
"I wouldn't object; no. Why should I? A girl like that deserves no clemency," Freda returned spiritedly. "The trouble is, I don't know her name. She is small and dark, with sharp black eyes and a pointed chin.
She's very homely, but dresses beautifully. She----"
"Thank you. We know who she is," interrupted Judith. "Her name is Elsie n.o.ble, and she lives at Madison Hall."
"Ah, but she is the hateful one," sputtered Adrienne. "It was most kind in you, Miss Marsh, and your friends also, to thus refuse to sign this hideously untruthful paper. We have done this girl no harm. Rather, it is she who would harm us because we have respected our own rights."
"I suspected it to be a case of spite work," a.s.serted Freda. "It is not usual for a cla.s.s in college to adopt such harsh measures."
"We were rather surprised at her coming to us with the paper," put in Kathie. "We've seen her with a crowd of girls who don't appear to know that we are on the map. She said she understood that you girls were going to invite us to the dance and felt it her duty to call on us and object to our accepting your invitations."
"But how could she possibly know that?" cried out Ethel Lacey. "No one except the five of us knew it until Norma told you this morning."
"I hope you don't think----" began Freda.
A hurt look had crept into her soft, brown eyes.
"How could we possibly think such a thing?" cut in Jane a.s.suringly. "We can readily understand that Miss n.o.ble's call must have been a complete surprise to you. On the contrary, we are very grateful to you and your friends for not signing the paper."
"Yes, indeed," nodded Judith. "Frankly, we suspected that something unpleasant was in the wind. When first we heard about the dance, we each invited freshmen whom we knew. Every one of them turned us down. We didn't think anything of that in the beginning. We supposed we had just happened to invite the wrong ones. Afterward we thought differently."
"I am sorry we didn't make it our business to get acquainted earlier with you girls. We really should have, you know," Judith apologized.
"We were so busy getting started in our cla.s.ses that we hadn't had time yet to be sociable. Jane and I had both agreed to try to know every girl in the freshman cla.s.s this year. I'm glad it has turned out like this.
I'm sure we'll all have a splendid time at the dance, no matter whether some people like it or not."
"I'm very sure of it, too," declared Kathie Meddart. "I can't understand how a girl could be so contemptible as to deliberately set out to injure others."
"Oh, well, she hasn't succeeded," reminded Judith, "so why should we care? We've invited our freshmen in spite of her."
"What are you going to do about that paper?" Ida Leonard asked a trifle curiously. "If I were you girls, I think I would make a fuss about it.
We'll stand by you if you do."
"Indeed we will," echoed Marie Benham. "I wouldn't allow such a doc.u.ment to travel about college."