The Jolliest Term on Record - BestLightNovel.com
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Katrine hesitated. One room was exactly like another. It did not seem worth while to explore further. She half turned in the direction of the stairs; then noticing that the pa.s.sage was panelled, and thinking that the room at the end might therefore be older and quainter than the rest, she changed her mind. After all, it was disappointing, as bare and empty as the others, with torn paper hanging in strips from the damp walls.
"There's a fine view of the dovecot though," said Katrine. "I can see the carving on the gable beautifully from here."
She flung the window open wide. The fresh wholesome outside air came rus.h.i.+ng in. The draught banged the door, and a sound of something falling followed, but the girls were too occupied to take any notice.
They were leaning out of the window trying to decipher the date on the worn piece of carving.
"It looks like 1600," opined Gwethyn.
"More likely 1690. The tail of the nine is cracked away. It's older than the house at any rate. I wish I had my sketch-book here, and I'd have copied it. Have you a note-book in your pocket?"
"No; and I shouldn't lend it to you if I had. We must be going at once, or we shall be late for prep."
Katrine consulted her watch, and turned to the door. Then she gave a cry of consternation. It was impossible to open it. The k.n.o.b had been loose, and when the door banged the whole handle had fallen out into the pa.s.sage. They were shut in as securely as if by bolt and bar. Here was a dilemma, indeed! They looked at one another in consternation.
"What are we to do?" faltered Gwethyn.
Katrine was trying to wedge the handle of her penknife into the empty socket, but the effort was useless. It went in a little way, but would not turn. Her attempt to slip back the catch with the blade was equally futile. The unpleasant truth was hopelessly plain--they were prisoners in the empty house.
The prospect was appalling. The Grange was in such a secluded spot that n.o.body might come near for days. No doubt they would soon be missed at Aireyholme, but would Mrs. Franklin think of looking for them here? They shouted and called out of the window, but only the birds twittered in reply. They were in the upper story, a good height from the ground, and much too far to jump. The creepers were too frail to offer any adequate support.
They turned to the door again, and tried to break through one of the panels, but the wood was well-seasoned oak and resisted their kicks and blows. Were ever two girls in such a desperate situation? The tears were raining down Gwethyn's cheeks.
"Shall we have to stop here all night?" she sobbed. "I wish we'd never come near the wretched place!"
"We're trapped like rats in a cage!" declared Katrine, pacing distractedly up and down their prison. She paused at the window.
"Gwethyn! I do believe somebody is in the garden! The blackbirds are making such a fuss!"
"Perhaps it's a cat or a hawk that's frightening them."
"Perhaps. But let us call in case it's a human being. Even a burglar would be welcome!"
"We're rather like burglars ourselves!" said Gwethyn, her sense of humour triumphing over her tears. "Only there certainly isn't anything here to burgle."
The girls leaned from the window and shouted with all the power of their lungs. Then they waited and listened anxiously. Was that a footstep crunching on the gravel.
"O jubilate! somebody's coming!" gasped Katrine. "Let's shout again! Oh, the angel!"
It was Mr. Freeman, sketching paraphernalia in hand, who stepped round the corner of the dovecot--a guardian angel in tweed knickers, smoking a most unangelic briar pipe. He looked about to see whence the noise proceeded, and, spying the girls, waved his hand.
"We're in an awful fix!" called Katrine. "We're locked into this room.
Will you please climb in through the vestibule window--it's open--and let us out?"
"All right! I'll be up in half a jiff," replied Mr. Freeman, laying his painting traps on the dovecot steps.
In a few minutes they could hear him tramping up the stairs. He soon picked up the handle, fitted it in its socket, and opened the door. He regarded the girls with an amused smile of accusation.
"It strikes me you young ladies ought to be at school instead of exploring old houses on your own," he ventured in reply to their overwhelming thanks.
"We're going back now, and a jolly sc.r.a.pe we shall get into if we're not quick about it," said Gwethyn. "The Great Panjandrum will jaw us no end."
"Is your teacher capable of scolding?"
"Rather! You should just hear her!"
"She doesn't look it."
"Oh, you don't know her! She's all right in public, but she can be a Tartar in private!"
A shade pa.s.sed over Mr. Freeman's face. He seemed disappointed.
"Oh, I don't mean Miss Aubrey!" put in Gwethyn quickly. "She's a darling. It's Mrs. Franklin I'm talking about. She's an absolutely different kind of person."
"Well, I'm glad to know somebody keeps you in order, for you seem to need it," laughed Mr. Freeman. "Have you heard from your father and mother again?"
"We had a letter on Sunday. They're getting on splendidly," replied Katrine. "Gwethyn, we must bolt!"
[Ill.u.s.tration: "THE UNPLEASANT TRUTH WAS HOPELESSLY PLAIN--THEY WERE PRISONERS IN THE EMPTY HOUSE!"]
With renewed thanks and a hasty good-bye to their rescuer, the girls made their exit, and tore back over the fields to Aireyholme. They did not deserve any luck, but they managed to arrive in the very nick of time, and walked into their cla.s.srooms just as the preparation bell stopped ringing. The teachers, supposing them to be in the garden, had not noticed their absence. They had agreed to keep the adventure to themselves in case it should reach the ears of the monitresses, so Gwethyn heroically refrained from relating her thrilling experience to Rose or Susie. She had learnt by this time not to trust their tongues too far.
CHAPTER IX
The Tennis Champions.h.i.+p
The girls at Aireyholme did not go in for cricket, but concentrated the whole of their summer energies upon tennis. They practised constantly, and prided themselves upon their play. Dorrie Vernon was Games secretary, and calculated that she knew the exact capabilities of every girl in the school. Tournaments were the order of the term, sometimes--with handicaps--between different forms, sometimes "School versus Mistresses", for Miss Spencer and Miss Andrews were good players; and occasionally, when Mrs. Franklin entertained friends, a match was arranged for "Visitors versus Aireyholme". There were few schools in the neighbourhood against whom they could try their skill, but they had received an invitation to take part in a tournament at Carford Girls'
College, and with Mrs. Franklin's sanction proposed to send two representatives. The choice of these champions was a subject of the very deepest importance. Dorrie went about the matter in a thoroughly business-like manner. She kept a tennis notebook, and carefully entered every girl's score, day by day, balancing the totals weekly. The results were discussed at the monitresses' meeting.
"Gladwin's play is fearfully off, this term," announced Dorrie. "Nan's a regular slacker, t.i.ta is unequal--you never know whether she'll be brilliant or a dead failure. Coralie and Ellaline keep fairly well up to the mark; Hilda has improved simply immensely; our own record is satisfactory."
"May I see the notebook? Who has scored highest altogether?" asked Diana.
"Well--Katrine Marsden, by absolute points," admitted Dorrie, rather unwillingly.
The three monitresses scanned the book, and looked somewhat blank. It was an unpalatable truth that the new-comer had beaten the record.
Katrine's swift serves were baffling; there was no doubt that she was an excellent player.
"It puts us in rather an awkward position," faltered Dorrie, wrinkling her brows.
"Not at all!" snapped Viola. "Katrine Marsden's out of the running for a champions.h.i.+p."
"Well, I don't know----"
"But I do know! She doesn't consider herself an ordinary pupil here, only what she chooses to call a 'parlour boarder'. Therefore she certainly can't represent the school--that's flat!"