CHAPTER XVIIITHE GOING OUT OF 19—
Next morning came the really important part of commencement,—the getting of your diploma, or, to speak accurately, the getting of somebody’s else diploma, which you could exchange for your own later.
“Let’s stand in a big circle,” suggested Madeline Ayres, “and pass the diplomas round until each one comes to its owner.”
It wasn’t surprising that Eleanor Watson, with her newly acquired duties as toastmistress, should keep getting outside the circle to consult various toasters and members of the supper committee; but it did seem as if Betty Wales might stay quietly in her place. So thought the girls who had noticed that Carlotta Young, the last girl in the line that went up for diplomas had not received any. Carlotta was a “prod”; it was only because she came at the end of the alphabet that she was left out, but thanks to Betty’s fly-awayfashion of running off to speak to some junior ushers, and then calling the Blunderbuss, whose mother wanted to see her a minute, nobody could find out positively who it was that had been “flunked out” of 19—.
The next excitement took place when the class, strolling over to the Students’ Building to have luncheon with the alumnæ—why, they were alumnæ themselves now!—met a bright-eyed, brown-haired little girl, walking with a tall young man whose fine face was tanned as brown as an Indian’s.
“Don’t you know me, 19—?” called the little girl gaily.
“Why, it can’t be—it is T. Reed!” cried Helen Adams, rushing forward.
“And her Filipino,” shrieked Bob Parker wildly.
“Of course I came. Do you think I’d have missed my own commencement?” said T., shaking hands with four girls at once. “Frank, this is Helen Adams, my best friend at Harding. Miss Parker, Mr. Howard. I’m sorry, Bob, but he’s not a Filipino. He’s just a plain American who lives in the Philippines.”
“Have you forgotten how to play basket ball, T.?” called somebody.
T. gave a rapturous little smile. “Could we have a game this afternoon? That’s what I came for, really. We meant to get here last week, but the boat was late. Yes, I’m sorry to have missed the play and the concert; but it’s worth coming for, just to see you all.” T.’s bright eyes grew soft and misty. “I tell you, girls, you don’t know what it means to be a Harding girl until you’ve been half across the world for awhile. No, I’m not sorryIleft, but it’s great to be back!”
Mary Brooks, arrayed in a bewitching summer toilette, stood at the door of the Students’ Building, and managed to intercept Betty and Roberta, as they went in.
“You may congratulate me now if you like,” she said calmly, leading them off to a secluded corner behind a group of statuary, where their demonstrations of interest wouldn’t attract too much attention. The news wasn’t at all surprising, but Mary looked so pretty and so happy and assured them so solemnly that she had never dreamed of anything of the kind at Christmas, thatthere was plenty of excitement all the same.
“And of course I must have posts at my wedding,” said Mary, whereat Betty hugged her and Roberta looked more pleased than she had when Mr. Masters called her a genius. “And bridesmaids,” added Mary, with the proper feeling for climax. “Laurie is going to be maid-of-honor, and if you two can come and be bridesmaids and the rest of the crowd almost—bridesmaids, in the words of the poetical Roberta——”
She never finished her sentence for the rest of the crowd had discovered her retreat, and guessing at the news she had for them bore noisily down upon her.
“It’s so convenient that she’s going to be married this summer,” said Babbie jubilantly. “We can have our first reunion at the wedding. I simply couldn’t have waited until June to see you all again.”
“We couldn’t any of us have waited,” declared Bob. “Somebody else must get married about Christmas time.”
“Why don’t you?” asked Babbie nonchalantly, while Madeline looked hard atEleanor and wished New York and Denver weren’t so dreadfully far apart. For how could Dick Blake, busy editor of “The Quiver,” make love to the most fascinating girl in the world when she lived at that distance.
They had something to eat after a while, sitting on the stairs with Mary, while Dr. Hinsdale beamed on them all and brought them salad and ices.
“You mustn’t talk about it, you know,” Mary explained, “because it won’t be announced until next week, and you mustn’t think of running off and leaving us out here alone.”
“All right,” Katherine promised her. “We’ll be the mossy bank for your modest violet act. Only do try not to look so desperately in love or everybody who sees you will guess the whole thing, and it will look as if we told.”
Most of the seniors spent the afternoon at the station seeing their families off, but Betty left hers in Nan’s care and went canoeing with Dorothy King in Paradise. Dorothy was just as jolly and just as sweet as ever. She wanted to know about everything thathad happened at Harding since she left it, and especially all about Eleanor Watson.
“You’ve pulled her through after all, haven’t you?” she said.
“No, she pulled herself through,” Betty corrected her. “I only helped a little, and a lot of others did the same. Why even Jean helped, Dorothy.”
Dorothy laughed. “I can’t imagine Jean in that rôle,” she said, “but I’ll take your word for it. Let’s go and see Miss Ferris.”
Miss Ferris was alone and delighted to see her visitors.
“Everything has come out right, hasn’t it?” she said, smiling into Betty’s radiant face.
Betty nodded. “Just splendidly. Did you know about Eleanor’s being toastmistress?”
“Yes, she came in to tell me herself. What has come over Jean Eastman, Betty?”
“I don’t know,” said Betty with a tell-tale blush that made Miss Ferris laugh and say, “I thought you were at the bottom of it.”
“Dorothy used to be the person who managed things of this kind,” she went on. “Who’s going to take your place, Betty?”
“According to what I hear nobody can do that,” said Dorothy quickly, and Betty blushed more than ever, until Miss Ferris took pity on her and asked about her plans for next year.
Betty looked puzzled. “Why, I haven’t any, I’m afraid. I never get a chance to make plans, because the things that turn up of themselves take all my time. I’m just going to be at home with my family.”
“Leave out the ‘just,’” advised Miss Ferris. “So many of you seem to feel as if you ought to apologize for staying at home.”
“Oh, I’m glad to hear you say that,” said Betty soberly. “A lot of girls in our class who don’t need to a bit are going to teach, and Carlotta Young said to me the other day that she thought we all ought to test our education in some such way right off, so as to be sure it was really worth something.”
“And you are sure about yours without testing it?” asked Miss Ferris quizzically.
Betty smiled at her happily. “I’m sure I’ve got something,” she said. “I’m afraid Carlotta wouldn’t call it much of an education and I know I ought to be ashamed thatit isn’t more, but I’m awfully glad I’ve got it.”
“I’m glad you have, too,” said Miss Ferris so earnestly that Betty wondered what she meant. But she didn’t get a chance to ask, for somebody knocked just then and the two girls said good-bye and hurried off to dress for their respective class suppers.
19—’s was held in the big hall of the Students’ Building. The junior ushers had trimmed it with red and green bunting, and great bowls of red roses transformed the huge T-shaped table into a giant flower-bed.
“I hope they haven’t more than emptied the treasury for those flowers,” said Babe anxiously, when she saw them.
“Hardly,” Babbie reassured her. “Judge Watson sent the whole lot, so you needn’t worry about your treasury. He consulted me about the color. Isn’t he a dear?”
“Yes, he is,” said Bob, “and he evidently thinks his only daughter is another. Where’s the supper-chart?”
“Out in the hall,” explained Babbie, “with the whole class fighting for a chance at it. But I know where we sit. Betty thoughtwe’d better keep things lively down at the end of the T.”
“Well, I guess, we can do that,” said Babe easily. “Where is Betty, anyway?”
“Here,” answered Betty, hurrying up. “And girls, please don’t say anything about it, but non-graduates don’t generally come to the suppers and the seating committee forgot about T. Reed, so she hasn’t any place.”
“The idea!” cried Bob indignantly. “But she can have Eleanor’s seat.”
Betty hesitated. “No, because they changed the chart after they heard about Christy’s not coming. But Cora Thorne is sick, so I’m going to let T. have my seat, right among you girls that she used to know——”
“You’re not going to do anything of the kind,” declared Babbie hotly. “Shove everybody along one place, or else put in a seat for T.”
“The chairs are too close together now and Cora’s place is way around at the other end. It would make too much confusion to move so many people. Here comes T. now. I shall be almost opposite Eleanor and Katherine, and I don’t mind one bit.”
So it happened that Betty Wales ate her class supper between Clara Madison and the fat Miss Austin, and enjoyed it as thoroughly as if she had been where she belonged, between Babbie and Roberta. The supper wasn’t very good—suppers for two hundred and fifty people seldom are—but the talk and the jokes, the toasts and the histories, Eleanor’s radiant face at the head of the table, the spirit of jollity and good-fellowship everywhere,—these were good enough to make up. Besides, it was the last time they would all be together. Betty hadn’t realized before how much she cared for them all—for the big indiscriminate mass of the class that she had worked and played with these four years. She had expected to miss her best friends, but now, as she looked down the long tables, she saw so many others that she should miss. Yes, she should miss them all from the fat Miss Austin who was so delighted to be sitting beside her to the serious-minded Carlotta Young, with her theories about testing your education.
Katherine was reading the freshman history, hitting off the reception, with its bewilderinggaiety and its terrifying grind-book, those first horrible midyears, made even more frightful by Mary Brooks’s rumor, the basket-ball game—when that was mentioned they made T. Reed stand on her chair to be cheered, and then they cheered the rest of the team, who, as Katherine said, “had marched so gallantly to a glorious defeat.” As Christy wasn’t there, somebody read her letter, which explained that her mother was better but that the twins had come down with the measles and Christy was “standing by the ship.” So they cheered the plucky letter and then they sang to its author.
“Oh, here’s to our Christine,We love her though unseen,Drink her down, drink her down,Drink her down, down, down!”
When the team was finally allowed to sit down, Katherine went on to the joys of spring-term, with its golf and tennis, its Mary-bird club and its tumultuous packing and partings. When she had finished and been applauded and sung to, and finally allowed to sit down and eat a very cold croquette, Bettylooked over at Emily Davis and the next minute for no reason at all she found herself winking back the tears. She had had such a good time that year and K. had picked out just the comical little things that made you remember the others that she hadn’t mentioned.
Little Alice Waite was toasting the cast. Alice was no orator. She stammered and hesitated and made you think she was going to break down, but she always ended by saying or doing something that brought down the house.
“I think you ought to have given this toast to somebody else,” she began innocently. “I can’t act, and I can’t speak either, as it happens. Besides words speak louder than actions. No, I mean actions speak louder than words, so I will let the cast toast themselves.”
“Roast themselves, you mean,” said Katherine, pushing back her chair.
And then began a clever burlesque of the casket scene in which Gratiano played Portia’s part, Shylock was Nerissa, Gobbo Bassanio, and Jessica the Prince of Morocco. NextAlice called for the Gobbos and Portia and the Prince of Morocco “stood forth” and went through a solemn travesty of the scene between the father and son that left the class faint and speechless with laughter.
Then there were more toasts and when the coffee had been served they made the engaged girls run around the table. Betty was sorry then that she wasn’t in her own place, to help get Babbie Hildreth started. Her friends were all sure that she was engaged and she had hinted that she might tell them more about it at class-supper, but now she denied it as stoutly as ever. Finally Bob settled the question by getting up and running in her place,—a non-committal proceeding that delighted everybody.
After that came the last toast, “Our esprit de corps.” Kate Denise had it, for no reason that Betty could see unless Christy had wanted to show Kate that the class understood the difference between her and the other Hill girls. And then Kate was one of 19—’s best speakers and so could do justice to the subject.
“I think we ought to drink this toast standing,” she began. “We’ve drunk to the castand the team, to our presidents, our engaged girls, our faculty. Now I ask you to drink to the very greatest pride and honor of this class,—to the way we’ve always stood together, to the way we stand together to-night, to the way we shall stand together in the future, no matter where we go or what we do. It’s not every class that can put this toast on its supper-card. Not every class knows what it means to be run, not in the interest of a clique or by a few leading spirits, but by the good-feeling of the whole big class. And so I ask you to drink one more toast—to the girl who started this feeling of good-fellowship at a certain class-meeting that some of us remember, and who has kept it up by being a friend to everybody and making us all want to be friends. Here’s to Betty Wales.”
When Betty heard her name she almost jumped out of her chair with amazement. She had been listening admiringly to Kate’s eloquent little speech, never dreaming how it would end and now they were all clapping and pushing back their chairs again, and Clara Madison was trying to make her stand up in hers.
“Speech!” shouted the irrepressible Bob and the girls sat down again and the big table grew still, while Betty twisted her napkin into a knot and smiled bravely into all the welcoming faces.
“I’m sure Kate is mistaken,” she said at last in a shaky little voice. “I’m sure every girl in 19— wanted every other girl to have her share of the fun just as much as I did. The class cup, that we won at tennis in our sophomore year is on the table somewhere. Let’s fill it with lemonade and sing to everybody right down the line. And while they’re filling the cup let’s sing to Harding College.”
It took a long time to sing to everybody, but not a minute too long. Betty watched the faces of the girls when their turns came—the girls who were always sung to, like Emily Davis, and the girls who had never been sung to in all the four years and who flushed with pride and pleasure to hear their names ring out and to feel that they too belonged to the finest, dearest class that ever left Harding.
“Now we must have the regular stunts,” said Eleanor. There was a shuffling of chairs and she and Betty and the people who hadhad toasts slipped back to their own particular crowds, leaving the top of the table for the stunt-doers. It was shockingly late, but they wanted all the old favorites. Who knew when Emily Davis would be back to do her temperance lecture or how long it would be before they could hear Madame Patti sing “Home, Sweet Home” through a wheezy gramophone?
“Was it all right?” Eleanor whispered to Betty as they hunted up their wraps a little later.
“Perfectly splendid,” said Betty with shining eyes. “The loveliest end-up to the loveliest commencement that ever was.”
“We haven’t got to say good-bye yet,” said somebody. “There’s a class meeting to-morrow at nine, you know.”
“Half of us will probably sleep over,” said Babe in a queer, supercilious tone. Not for all the morning naps in the world would Babe have missed that good-bye meeting.
CHAPTER XIX“GOOD-BYE!”
“And after commencement packing,” said Madeline Ayres sadly, “and that’s no joke either, I can tell you.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” said Babe airily. “Give away everything that you can’t sell, and you won’t be troubled. That’s what I’ve done.”
“I couldn’t give up my dear old desk,” said Rachel soberly, “nor my books and pictures.”
“Oh, I’ve kept a few little things myself,” explained Babe hastily, “just to remember the place by.”
“My mother wanted to stay and help me,” laughed Nita. “She thought if we both worked hard we might get through in a day.”
“Mary Brooks did hers in two hours,” announced Katherine, “and I guess I’m as bright as little Mary about most things, so I’m not worrying.”
“Isn’t it time to start for class-meeting?” asked Betty, coming out on the piazza with Roberta.
“See them walk off together arm in arm,” chuckled Bob softly, “just as if they knew they were going to be elected our alumnæ president and secretary respectfully.”
“Don’t you mean respectively, Bob?” asked Helen Adams.
“Of course I do,” retorted Bob, “but I’m not obliged to say what I mean now. I’m an alum. I can use as bad diction as I please and the long arm of the English department can’t reach out and spatter my mistakes with red ink.”
The election of officers didn’t take long. It had all been cut and dried the night before, and the nominating committee named Betty for president and Shylock for secretary without even going through the formality of retiring to deliberate. Then Katherine moved that the surplus in the treasury be turned over to “our pet philanthropy, the Students’ Aid,” and Carlotta Young inquired anxiously whether the first reunion was to be in one or two years.
“In one,” shouted the assembly to a woman, and the meeting adjourned tumultuously. But nobody went home, in spite of the packing that clamored for attention.
“Good-bye, you dear old thing!”
“See you next June for sure. I’m coming back then, if I do live away out in Seattle.”
“You’re going to study art in New York, you say? Oh, I’m there very often. Here, let me copy that address.”
“Going abroad for the summer, you lucky girl? Well, rather not! I’m going to tutor six young wigglers into a prep. school.”
“Wasn’t last night fun? Don’t you wish we could have it all over again,—except the midyears and the papers for English novelists.”
“Good-bye!”
“Good-bye!”
“Good-bye!”
But these weren’t the good-byes that came hardest; those would be said later in the dear, dismantled rooms or at the station, for very close friends would arrange to meet again there. But the close friendships would be kept up in letters and visits, whereas thesecasual acquaintances might never again be renewed.
“I’ve seen you nearly every day for three years,” Madeline Ayres told little Miss Avery, whose name came next to hers on the class-list, “and now you’re going to live in Iowa and I’m going to Italy. The world is a big place, isn’t it?”
But Nita Reese thought it was surprisingly small when she found that Emily Davis was going to teach French in the little town where she lived, and Betty got a great deal of comfort from the fact that four other 19— girls lived in Cleveland.
“Though I can’t believe it’s really over,” Betty confided to Bob. “I don’t feel a bit like an alum.”
“That’s because you still look just like a freshman,” returned Bob, unfeelingly. “I’ll bet you a trolley-ride to any place you choose that you’ll be taken for one before you leave Harding.”
Sure enough Betty, hurrying across the campus a moment later to intercept the man who had promised to crate her desk and then never come for it, was stopped by a timid littlesub-freshman with her hair in a braid, who inquired if she was going to take the “major French” examination, and did she know whether it came at eleven or twelve o’clock?
“So we’re all got to go off on a trolley-ride,” shouted Bob jubilantly, and though Betty protested and called Helen to witness that she hadn’t promised Bob any trolley-ride whatever, everybody agreed that they ought to have one last picnic somewhere before they separated. So they all hurried home to do what Katherine called “tall strides of work,” and at four o’clock they were waiting, with tempting-looking bags and bundles tucked under their arms, for a car.
“We’ll take the first one that comes,” Bob decided, “and go until we see a nice picnic-y place.”
Generally no one place would have pleased everybody, but to-day no one said a word against Bob’s first choice,—a steep, breezy hillside, with a great thicket of mountain laurel in full bloom near the summit and a flat rock, shaded by a giant elm-tree, for a table.
"LADIES, BEHOLD THE PRECEPTRESS OF THE KANKAKEE ACADEMY"“LADIES, BEHOLD THE PRECEPTRESS OF THE KANKAKEE ACADEMY”
It was such a comical supper, for each girl had obeyed Bob’s haphazard instructions to bring what she liked best. So Roberta had nothing but ginger-snaps and Babbie solemnly presented each guest with a bottle of olives. Madeline had brought strawberries with sugar to dip them in, and Helen, Betty and Eleanor discovered to their amazement that they had all chosen chocolate éclairs.
“It’s not a very substantial supper,” said Madeliner “but we can stop at Cuyler’s on our way back.”
“For a substantial ice,” jeered Bob.
“Who’s hungry anyway after last night?” asked Nita.
“I am,” declared Eleanor. “They took away my salad before I was through with it, and K. stole my ice.”
“Well, you’re growing fat,” Katherine defended herself, “and you’ve got to save your lovely slenderness until after Mary’s wedding. She’ll tell everybody that you’re the college beauty and you must live up to the reputation or we shall be undone.”
Katherine knew that she couldn’t come on from Kankakee for that wedding, and Helen and Rachel knew that they couldn’t either, though they lived nearer. And Madeline was sailing on Saturday for Italy, “to stay until daddy’s paint-box runs out of Italian colors.” But they didn’t talk about those things at the picnic, nor on the swift ride home across the dark meadows, nor even at Cuyler’s, which looked empty and deserted when they tramped noisily in and ordered their ices.
“Everybody else is too busy to go on picnics,” said Bob.
“We always did know how to have the best kind of times,” declared Babbie proudly.
“Of course. Aren’t we ‘Merry Hearts’?” queried Babe. “Being nice to freaks was only half of being a ‘Merry Heart.’”
“Why, girls,” cried Nita excitedly, “as long as we didn’t give away the ‘Merry Hearts,’ we can go on being them, can’t we?”
“We couldn’t stop if we tried,” said Madeline. “Remember, girls, two is a ‘Merry Hearts’ quorum. Whenever two of us get together they can have a meeting.”
They said good-night with the emphasisstrongly on the last syllable, and went at the neglected packing in earnest. Betty’s train didn’t go until nearly ten the next morning, but Helen left at nine and Madeline and Roberta ten minutes later, so there wouldn’t be much time for anything but the good-byes, that, do what you might, could not be put off any longer.
But after all they were gay good-byes. Helen Adams, to be sure, almost broke down When she kissed Betty and whispered, “Good-bye and thank you for everything.” But the next minute they were both laughing at K.’s ridiculous old telescope bag.
“It’s a long rest and a good meal of oats the poor beastie shall have at the end of this trip,” said Katherine. “Ladies, behold the preceptress of the Kankakee Academy. Father telegraphed me yesterday that I’ve got the place, and I hereby solemnly promise to buy a respectable suit-case out of my first month’s salary.”
“Oh, you haven’t any of you gone yet, have you?” asked Babbie Hildreth, hurrying up with Eleanor and Madeline. “You see Babe kept more things than she thought andit was too late to send for another packing-box, so she put them into a suit-case and a kit bag and a hat-box. And the carriage didn’t come for us, so she tried to carry them all from the car, and of course she got stuck in the turn-stile. The girls are getting her out as fast as they can. They sent us on ahead to find you.”
Just as Helen’s train pulled in Bob appeared with the rest of the “Merry Hearts” as escort and a small boy to help with her luggage; and they had a minute all together.
“Well,” said Madeline lightly, “we’re starting out into the wide, wide world at last. I’ll say it because I’m used to startingoffto queer places and I rather like it.”
“Here’s hoping it’s a jolly world for every one of us,” said Rachel.
“Here’s to our next meeting,” added Katherine.
“Girls,” said Betty solemnly, “I feel it in my bones that we are going to be together again some time. I don’t mean just for a 19— reunion, but for a good long time.”
“With me teaching in Boston,” laughed Rachel.
“And me teaching in Kankakee,” put in Katherine proudly.
“And Madeline in Italy, and the rest of you anywhere between New York and Denver,” finished Rachel. “It doesn’t look very probable.”
“It’s going to happen though,—I’m sure of it,” persisted Betty gaily.
“Oh, I do just hope so,” said little Helen Adams, stepping on board her train.
“They say that what you want hard enough you’ll get,” said Madeline philosophically. “Come on, Shylock. Don’t any of you forget to send me steamer letters.”
“Wait! we’re going on that train too,” cried Babe, clutching her parcels.
“Babe can’t make connections if we wait,” explained Babbie.
“And she’d get lonely going so far without us,” added Bob.
The four who were left stood where they could wave by turns at the two trains until both were out of sight.
Then Betty caught her three oldest friends into a big, comprehensive hug. “After all,” she said, “whether we ever get together ornot, we’ve had this—four whole years of it, to remember all our lives. Now let’s go and get one more strawberry ice before train-time.”