Helen’s choice of closed windows in preference to invading companies of moths and June-bugs had made the room so insufferably warm that between heat and excitement Betty could not get to sleep. Instead she tossed restlessly about on her narrow couch, listening to the banging of the trolleys at the next corner and wishing she were still sitting on the breezy front seat, as the car dashed down the long hill toward the station. At length she slipped softly out of bed and opened the door. Perhaps the breeze would come in better then. As she stood for a moment testing the result of her experiment, she noticed with surprise that Eleanor’s door was likewise open. This simple fact astonished her, because she remembered that on the hottest nights last fall Eleanor had persisted in shutting and locking her door. She had acquired the habit from living so much in hotels, she She chose Katherine instead of Rachel, because she had heard Eleanor speak about going to Paradise, and so could best help to decide whether it was reasonable to suppose that she was still there. Rachel was steadier and more dependable, but Katherine was resourceful and quick-witted. Besides, she was not a bit afraid of the dark. She was sound asleep, but Betty managed to wake her and get her into the hall without disturbing any one else. “Goodness!” exclaimed Katherine, when she heard the news. “You don’t think—” “Yes, but it doesn’t seem possible to get lost on that little pond.” “It’s bigger than it looks,” said Betty, “and there is the mist, too, to confuse her.” “I hadn’t thought of that. Does she know how to manage a boat?” “Yes, capitally,” said Betty in so frightened a voice that Katherine dropped the subject. “She’s lost up stream somewhere and afraid to move for fear of hitting a rock,” she said easily. “Or perhaps she’s right out in the pond by the boat-house and doesn’t dare to cross because she might go too far down toward the dam. We can find her all right, I guess.” “Then you’ll come?” said Betty eagerly. “Why, of course. You weren’t thinking of going alone, were you?” “I thought maybe you’d think it was silly “She might, but I doubt it,” said Katherine. “She was painfully intent on solitude when she left here. Now don’t fuss too long about dressing.” Without a word Betty sped off to her room. She was just pulling a rain-coat over a very meagre toilet when Katherine put her head in at the door. “Bring matches,” she said in a sepulchral whisper. Betty emptied the contents of her match-box into her ulster pocket, threw a cape over her arm for Eleanor, and followed Katherine cat-footed down the stairs. In the lower hall they stopped for a brief consultation. “Ought we to tell Mrs. Chapin?” asked Betty doubtfully. “Eleanor will hate us forever if we do,” said Katherine, “and I don’t see any special advantage in it. If we don’t find her, Mrs. Chapin can’t. We might tell Rachel though, in case we were missed.” “Or we might leave a note where she would find it,” suggested Betty. “Then if we weren’t missed no one need know.” It was very strange being out so late. Before ten o’clock a girl may go anywhere in Harding, but after ten the streets are deserted and dreadful. Betty shivered and clung close to Katherine, who marched boldly along, declaring that it was much nicer outdoors than in, and that midnight was certainly the top of the evening for a walk. “And if we find her way up the river we can all camp out for the night,” she suggested jovially. “But if we don’t find her?” Katherine, who had noticed Betty’s growing nervousness, refused to entertain the possibility. “We shall,” she said. “But if we don’t?” persisted Betty. “Then I suppose we shall have to tell somebody who–who could–why, hunt for her more thoroughly,” stammered Katherine. “Or possibly we’d better wait till morning At the campus gateway the girls hesitated. “Suppose we should meet the night-watchman?” said Betty anxiously. “Would he arrest us?” Katherine laughed at her fears. “I was only wondering if we hadn’t better take the path through the orchard. If we go down by the dwelling-houses we might meet him, of course, and it would be awkward getting rid of him if he has an ordinary amount of curiosity.” “But that path is spooky dark,” objected Betty. “Not so dark as the street behind the campus,” said Katherine decidedly, “and that’s the only alternative. Come on.” When they had almost reached the back limit of the campus Katherine halted suddenly. Betty clutched her in terror. “Do you see any one?” she whispered. Katherine put an arm around her frightened little comrade. “Not a person,” she said reassuringly, “not even the ghost of my grandmother. I Betty lifted her face from Katherine’s shoulder and looked at the black darkness that was the road and the river bank, and below it to the pond that glistened here and there where the starlight fell on its cloak of mist. “Of course,” said Katherine after a moment’s silence, “we can keep together just as well as not, as far as I am concerned. I only thought that perhaps, since this was your plan and you are so fond of Eleanor–oh well, I just thought you might like to have the fun of rescuing her,” finished Katherine desperately. “Do you mean for me to go ahead and call, and if Eleanor answers not to say anything to her about your having come?” “Yes.” “Then how would you get home?” “Wouldn’t you be afraid?” “Hardly.” “But I should be taking the credit for something I hadn’t done.” “And Eleanor would be the happier thereby and none of the rest of the world would be affected either way.” Betty looked at the pond again and then gave Katherine a soft little hug. “Katherine Kittredge, you’re an old dear,” she said, “and if you really don’t mind, I’ll go ahead; but if she asks me how I dared to come alone or says anything about how I got here, I shall tell her that you were with me.” “All right, but I fancy she won’t be thinking about that. The matches are so she can see her way to you. It’s awfully hard to follow a sound across the water, but if you light one match after another she can get to you before the supply gives out, if she’s anywhere near. Don’t light any till she answers. If she doesn’t answer, I’ll come down to you and we’ll walk on up the river a little way and find her there.” “Oh, right under this tree, I guess,” answered Katherine carelessly. “Good-bye.” “Good-bye.” When Betty had fairly gone, doubts began to assail Katherine, as they have a habit of assailing impulsive people, after it is too late to pay heed to them. It occurred to her that she was cooperating in what might easily turn out to be a desperate adventure, and that it would have been the part of wisdom to enlist the services of more competent and better equipped searchers at once, without risking delay on the slender chance of finding Eleanor near the wharf. “Eleanor would have hated the publicity, but if she wants to come up here in the dark and frighten us all into hysteria she must take the consequences. And I’d have let her too, if it hadn’t been for Betty.” An owl hooted, and Katherine jumped as nervously as Betty would have done. Poor Betty! She must be almost at the landing by this time. At that very moment a little quavering voice rang out over the water. For a long moment there was silence. Then the owl hooted again. That was too much. Katherine jumped up with a bound and started down the bank toward Betty. She did not stop to find the path, and at the second step caught her foot and fell headlong. Apparently Betty did not hear her. She had not yet given up hope, for she was calling again, pausing each time to listen for the answer that did not come. “Oh, Eleanor, Eleanor, aren’t you there?” she cried and stopped, even the courage of despair gone at last. Katherine, nursing a bruised knee on the hill above, had opened her mouth to call encouragement, when a low “Who is it?” floated across the water. “Eleanor, is that you? It’s I–Betty Wales!” shrieked Betty. Katherine nodded her head in silent token of “I told you so,” and slid back among the bushes to recuperate and await developments. For the end was not yet. Eleanor was evidently far down toward the dam, close to the opposite bank. It was hard for her to hear “Shall–I–come–for–you?” shouted Betty. “You can’t,” returned Eleanor again. “Non–sense!” shrieked Betty and then stood still on the wharf, apparently weighing Eleanor’s last opinion. “Go ahead,” called Katherine in muffled tones from above. Betty did not answer. “Thinks I’m another owl, I suppose,” muttered Katherine, and limped down the bank to the wharf, frightening the nervous, overwrought Betty almost out of her wits at first, and then vastly relieving her by taking the entire direction of affairs into her own competent hands. “You go right ahead. It’s the only way, and it’s perfectly easy in a heavy boat. That “No, I’ll go,” answered Betty eagerly, vanishing into the boat-house after a pair of oars. “She must be hanging on to something on shore,” went on Katherine, when Betty reappeared, “and she’s lost her nerve and doesn’t dare to let go. If you can’t get her into your boat, I’ll come; but somebody really ought to stay here. I had no idea the fog was so thick. Hurry now and cross straight over. You’re sure you’re not afraid?” “Quite sure.” Betty was off, splashing her oars nervously through the still water, wrapped in the mist, whispering over and over Katherine’s last words, “Hurry and go straight. Hurry, hurry, go straight across.” When she reached the other shore she called again to Eleanor, and the sobbing cry “Why didn’t you beach the canoe, and stay on shore?” asked Betty, who had tied her own boat just above and was now up to her knees in the water, pulling Eleanor in. “I tried to, but I lost my paddle, and so I was afraid to let go the tree again, and the water looked so deep. Oh, Betty, Betty!” Eleanor sank down on the bank, sobbing as if her heart would break. Betty patted her arm in silence, and in a few moments she stood up, quieted. “You’re going to take me back?” she asked. “Of course,” said Betty, cheerfully, leading the way to her boat. “Please wait a minute,” commanded Eleanor. “Yes,” said Eleanor, quickly, “but first I want to say something. I’ve been a hateful, horrid thing, Betty. I’ve believed unkind stories and done no end of mean things, and I deserve all that I’ve had to-night, except your coming after me. I’ve been ashamed of myself for months, only I wouldn’t say so. I know you can never want me for a friend again, after all my meanness; but Betty, say that you won’t let it hurt you–that you’ll try to forget all about it.” Betty put a wet arm around Eleanor’s neck and kissed her cheek softly. “You weren’t to blame,” she said. “It was all a mistake and my horrid carelessness. Of course I want you for a friend. I want it more than anything else. And now don’t say another word about it, but just get into the boat and come home.” They hardly spoke during the return passage; Eleanor was worn out with all she had gone through, and Betty was busy rowing and watching for Katherine’s matches, which From her appointed station under the pine-tree Katherine heard the grinding of the boat on the gravel, the rattle of oars thrown down on the wharf, and then a low murmur of conversation that did not start up the hill toward her, as she had expected. “Innocents!” sighed Katherine. “They’re actually stopping to talk it out down there in the wet. I’m glad they’ve made it up, and I’d do anything in reason for Betty Wales, but I certainly am sleepy,” and she yawned so loud that a blue jay that was roosting in the tree above her head fluttered up to a higher branch, screaming angrily. “The note of the nestle,” laughed Katherine, and yawned again. Down on the wharf Betty and Eleanor were curled up close together in an indiscriminate, happy tangle of rain-coat, golf-cape, and very drabbled muslin, holding a conversation that neither would ever forget. Yet it was perfectly “Oh, Betty, you can’t imagine how dreadful it was out there!” Eleanor was saying. “And I thought I should have to stay all night, of course. How did you know I hadn’t come in?” Betty explained. “I don’t see why you bothered,” said Eleanor. “I’m sure I shouldn’t have, for any one as horrid as I’ve been. Oh, Betty, will you truly forgive me?” “Don’t say that. I’ve wanted to do something that would make you forgive me.” “Oh, I know you have,” broke in Eleanor quickly. “Miss Ferris told me.” “She did!” interrupted Betty in her turn. “Why, she promised not to.” “Yes, but I asked her. It seemed to me queer that she should have taken such an interest in me, and all of a sudden it flashed over me, as I sat talking to her, that you were at the bottom of it. So I said, ‘Miss Ferris, Betty Wales asked you to say this to me,’ and “I didn’t mean to hurt your feelings by what I said at that class meeting, Eleanor,” said Betty shyly. “You didn’t hurt them. I was just cross at things in general–at myself, I suppose that means,–and angry at you because I’d made you despise me, which certainly wasn’t your fault.” “Eleanor, what nonsense! I despise you?” A rustling on the bank reminded Betty that Katherine was waiting. “We must go home,” she said. “It’s after midnight.” “So it is,” agreed Eleanor, getting up stiffly. “Oh, Betty, I am glad I’m not out there hanging on to that branch and shivering and wondering how soon I should have to let go and end it all. Oh, I shall never forget the feel of that stifling mist.” They walked home almost in silence. Katherine, missing the murmur of conversation, “I’m only sorry there isn’t more of spring term left to have a good time in. Why, Eleanor, there’s only two weeks.” “But there’s all next year,” answered Eleanor. “I thought you weren’t coming back.” “I wasn’t, but I am now. I’ve got to–I can’t go off letting people think that I’m only a miserable failure. The Watson pride won’t let me, Betty.” “Oh, people don’t think anything of that kind,” objected Betty consolingly. “I know one person who does,” said Eleanor with decision, “and her name is Eleanor Watson. I decided while I was out there waiting for you that one’s honest opinion of herself is about as important as any outsider’s. Don’t you think so?” “Perhaps,” said Betty gaily. “But the thing that interests me is that you’re coming back next year. Why, it’s just grand! Shall you go on the campus?” |