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"Surely I'll tell her," nodded Ethel. "I don't think she's in now, though. I met her going down the walk as I came up it. She said she had to go to the library for a book she needed. I imagine she'll be back soon."
"Be sure to tell her," Jane impressed upon Ethel. "Thank you ever so much. Tell Adrienne, too. Don't dress up. It's a strictly informal party. Meet me in the living-room at six."
With this Jane departed to go on to Dorothy's room. Pa.s.sing the door of Alicia's room she noted that it was now closed. As Alicia was out she guessed that Elsie n.o.ble was in. She was now not sorry that she had refrained from approaching it. Undoubtedly she would have met with an unpleasant reception.
Finding her other friends at home, Jane quickly made the rounds and hurried back to her own room.
Judith appeared soon afterward with the information that Christine and Barbara had joyfully accepted and would be on hand at the Inn.
When at six o'clock the party from the Hall gathered in the living-room, first glance about showed her that Alicia was missing.
Going over to where Ethel stood, Jane anxiously asked: "Did you see Alicia, Ethel?"
"Yes. She isn't coming. She said to tell you it was impossible for her to accept. I went to her room a few minutes after you left. I knocked until I was tired but no one answered. So I went back to my room. After a while I tried again and while I was standing at her door she came down the hall with Miss n.o.ble. I asked her to come into my room a minute and told her."
"Funny she didn't give you any reason why she couldn't come," pondered Jane with drawn brows.
"She looked as though she'd been crying," returned Ethel. "I thought maybe she'd had bad news or something so I didn't urge her. She wasn't a bit snippy. She just looked white and a little bit sad."
"I wonder if I ought to run up and see her."
Jane stared at Ethel, her eyes fall of active concern.
"Better wait until to-morrow," advised Ethel. "Whatever's the matter with her, she may feel like being alone. You know how it is sometimes with one."
"Yes, I know."
Jane knew only too well how it felt to be sought out by even her friends when occasional black moods descended upon her.
"We may as well start," she said slowly. "As hostess I mustn't neglect my guests. I'll surely make it a point to see Alicia in the morning."
Nevertheless as the bevy of light-hearted diners left Madison Hall and strolled bare-headed in the sunset toward Rutherford Inn, a vague uneasiness took hold of Jane. She regretted that she had not gone upstairs to see Alicia. Nor did it leave her until after she had reached the Inn, where for the time being the lively chatter of her companions served to drive it from her mind.
CHAPTER XI
REJECTED CAVALIERS
One glaring result of Jane's dinner party was the ignoring of the ten-thirty rule that night.
It was eight o'clock when the congenial diners finished an elaborate dessert and strolled gaily out of the Inn. The beauty of the night induced the will to loiter. Some one proposed a walk into Chesterford and a visit to a moving-picture theatre.
When they emerged from it it was half-past nine, thus necessitating a quick hike to the campus. Jane and Judith made port in their room at exactly twenty-five minutes past ten.
Visions of unprepared lessons looming up large, they decided that for once "lights out" should not be the order of things.
As a consequence of retiring at eleven-thirty, both overslept the next morning and dashed wildly off to chapel without breakfast.
Occupied from then on with cla.s.ses, it was not until she had finished her last recitation of the morning and was on her way to Madison Hall that Jane remembered her resolve to see Alicia.
Determined to lose no more time in putting it into execution, she quickened her pace. Coming to the stone walk leading up to the steps of the Hall, Jane uttered a little cluck of satisfaction. She had spied Alicia seated in a rocker on the veranda, engaged in reading a letter.
"Oh, Alicia!" she called as she reached the foot of the steps. "You're the very person I most want to see!"
Sound of Jane's voice caused Alicia to glance up in startled fas.h.i.+on.
She had been faintly smiling over her letter when first Jane glimpsed her. Now her pale face underwent a swift, ominous change. She hastily rose.
"I didn't wish to see _you_," she said stiffly, and marched into the house.
Jane's primary impulse was to follow her and demand an explanation. The rebuff, however, had stirred again into life the old, rebellious pride which had formerly caused her so much unhappiness.
For a moment she stood still, hands clenched, cheeks flaming with mortification. Then with a bitter smile she walked slowly up the steps and into the house. After that affront Alicia would wait a long time before she, Jane Allen, would seek an explanation.
"Well, it has come," she said sullenly, as she entered her room where Judith sat at the dressing table, recoiling her long brown hair.
"What's come? By 'it' do you mean yourself?"
Judith turned in her chair with a boyish grin.
"No," Jane answered shortly. "Alicia Reynolds has gone back to her old chums."
"You don't mean it!"
Judith's hands dropped from her hair. In her surprise she let go of half a dozen hair pins she had been holding in one hand.
"Now see what you made me do," she laughingly accused. "Get down and help me pick them up."
"Oh, bother your old hairpins!" exclaimed Jane savagely. "I'm awfully upset about this, Judy. I felt last night as if I should have gone to Alicia and asked her what was the matter. This is some of Marian Seaton's work."
"Of course it is," calmly concurred Judith. "I haven't the least idea of what it's all about, but I agree with you just the same. I'll agree even harder when I do find out."
In a few jerky sentences Jane enlightened Judith.
"So that's the way the land lies," commented Judith. "Well, I'm not surprised. Take my word for it the ign.o.ble n.o.ble has had a hand in this.
Just the same I don't believe Alicia has gone back to Marion Seaton.
She's merely hurt over some yarn that's been told her. You'd better see her, Jane, and have it out with her."
"I won't do it." Jane shook an obstinate head. "Alicia ought to know better than listen to those girls. She knows how badly Marian Seaton behaved last year about basket-ball. She knows that Marian is untruthful and dishonorable. If she chooses to believe in a person of that stamp then she will have to abide by her choice."
It was the stubborn, embittered Jane Allen of earlier days at Wellington who now spoke.
"Only the other day I said to Dorothy that I didn't hate Marian Seaton any longer; that I felt only sorry for her. I said, too, that there must be some good in her if one could only find it. What a simpleton I was!"
The sarcastic smile that hovered about Jane's red lips, fully indicated her contempt of her own mistaken sentiments.
"Adrienne was right," she said after a brief pause. "She said she could never forget nor forgive an injury. I thought I could, but I can't. I mean I don't want to."