Part 24 (1/2)
”Why, sweetheart, this is the day of your school anniversary,” said Aunt Barbara, as she and Dorothy sat at tea. ”You ought to have been acting 'Queen of the Daffodils'.”
”Don't talk of that, Auntie! I got Vera to take it instead.”
Dorothy's eyes were full of tears.
”I'm sorry you were disappointed, darling.”
”Auntie, it's not that; please don't misunderstand me. Ever since you were ill I've wanted to tell you that I know now what a nasty, ungrateful wretch I've been. You've been working and toiling for me all these years, and I took it just as a matter of course, and never thought how much you were giving up for me. I'm going to work for you now. I'm afraid I can't do much at first--with money, I mean--but I'll try my hardest at the Coll., and perhaps in a year or two I may be a help instead of a burden.”
”A burden you have never been, child,” said Miss Sherbourne. ”If I had only got well a little sooner, we would have made you the costume. I sent the articles off the afternoon I was taken ill, and a cheque for them came a week ago.”
”Then you must spend it on yourself, please. No, I'm glad the daffodil dress wasn't made. I should always have hated myself for having it.”
”But you've missed the whole festival,” regretted Aunt Barbara.
”Never mind, it's May Day here as well as at Avondale. Look at the lilac and the columbines, and this bowl of wallflowers! The air is so sweet and soft now, and there's a thrush's nest in the garden. All the harsh winds and the cold seem to be gone, and summer has come.”
”Yes, summer has indeed come,” said Aunt Barbara, gazing, not at the flowers, but at Dorothy's face, where a new, softened look had replaced the old frown of discontent.
CHAPTER XIV
Water Plantain
Dorothy returned to Avondale resolved to work doubly hard. There was certainly plenty to be done if she did not wish to fall behind in her Form. She had missed many of the lessons, and to recover the ground that she had lost meant studying the textbooks by herself, and trying to a.s.similate endless pages of arrears.
”Yet I must,” she thought. ”If I leave out the least sc.r.a.p, that's sure to be the very piece I shall get in the exam. I'm going over every single line--though it's cruel translating Virgil and learning Racine in such big doses. Never mind, Dorothy Greenfield, you've got to do it. I shan't let you off, however much you hate it.”
Faithful to her determination, Dorothy set the alarum in her bedroom for a quarter to six, and had nearly an hour and a half's study each morning before Martha called her at 7.15. It was very tempting sometimes to turn over and go to sleep again; but she soon began to grow quite used to her early rising, and it seemed almost a shame to stay in bed when the sun was up, and the thrush was singing cheerily in the elder bush outside.
[Ill.u.s.tration: A NURSING EXPERIENCE]
The aim that Dorothy had in view was so ambitious that she hardly dared confess it even to herself. Every year a prize was given at Avondale called the William Scott Memorial. It was thus named after the founder of the College, who had left a sum of money in his will for the purpose.
It was awarded annually to the girl in any form who obtained the highest percentage of marks in the examinations. Though it was generally gained by members of the Sixth, it did not of necessity fall to them; every girl had an equal opportunity, for it went entirely by their relative scores, the object being to distinguish the pupil who had worked the best, irrespective of age.
”I believe it fell once to the Second; but the Sixth have had it for four years now,” thought Dorothy. ”Time for a new departure. I don't suppose I've the slightest ghost of a chance, but it's worth trying. I shan't mention my hopes to anybody, though--not even to Aunt Barbara--they're so remote.”
Her increased efforts could not fail to win notice, however, at the College.
”Dorothy Greenfield, you're just swatting!” said Mavie Morris one day.
”I don't believe you'd a fault in your last German exercise, and you recited all that Virgil without one single slip. What's come over you?”
”Nothing,” replied Dorothy, turning a little red. ”You talk as if I'd been committing a crime.”
”So you have. You're raising the general average of the standard, and that's not fair to the rest of the Form. When Pittie sees you with three 'excellents' to your name, she thinks I ought to do the same.”
”Why can't you?”
”Why? You ask me why? Do you think I'm going to muddle my brains more than I can help, just in the middle of the tennis season? You little know Mavie Morris. No, Dorothy, I've a distinct grievance against you.
There you are now--actually surrept.i.tiously squinting at a book while I'm talking to you!”