Judy of York Hill - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Just now Eleanor was keen upon getting the two plays given just before the Christmas vacation well started before the busy time at the end of term: it was the custom for the Old Girls to entertain the New Girls at a play and for the New Girls to return the compliment.
So the absorbing topic of Queen's new hockey coach being exhausted for the time being, "Got any good stuff for the play in your cubicles, Cathy?" asked Eleanor; "looks to me as if they are a nice lively little bunch. What a little witch Sally May is, and what lovely eyes Judy has!
I'm glad she and Nancy are such pals--they make a good team."
"They're darlings, all of 'em," said Catherine enthusiastically; "but 'not too good for human nature's daily food.'" And she unfolded the plan for the midnight supper.
"Well, of course," said Eleanor, laughing reminiscently, "you couldn't expect them to go home for the holidays without a story of some such adventure as that. Remember the time we went down to the gym and Pat fell over the dumb-bell rack."
"And it was such a mean supper to get punished for," added Catherine, grinning; "only cold baked beans and apples. The trouble is that Miss Marlowe is death on suppers since Christine Dawson caught pneumonia last year when they climbed out on to the sun-parlour roof, and of course now that I know--"
"Oh, of course we'll have to do something. But what?"
Various plans were discussed, but nothing satisfied their desire for poetic justice until suddenly Catherine exclaimed: "I've got it! Let them have their supper, and then we'll make them wish they hadn't--let's lock the door of the common room (that's where they mean to go) and give them a good long time in which to repent of their sins. I've got the key--Miss Marlowe loaned it me for the dress rehearsals."
"Good," said Eleanor. "I'll see that the windows are kept shut during the evening so that they won't catch cold, and I'll oil the lock at tea-time."
And in spite of the solemnity befitting prefects, their eyes danced as they pictured the dismay of the young sinners when they discovered themselves caught; for prefects, notwithstanding their dignity and general "high and mightiness," are not by any means above a bit of a lark themselves.
CHAPTER V
"ENOUGH IS AS GOOD AS A FEAST"
THE crew of the "Jolly Susan" did little work during the evening study hour; Judith, especially, found that she could not keep her mind on her tasks. This was the full flavour of life at a boarding-school, surely, to break the rules, and creep down the corridor in the dark to eat forbidden food! She even let her mind play round the food itself--chicken, meringues! She could hardly wait for bedtime.
If Catherine had not been in the secret, she would have been amazed at the swiftness with which her family went to bed. Josephine was usually incorrigibly slow, and Sally May always needed reminding that the devotion bell would ring in two minutes' time. To-night clothes were neatly arranged ready for the morning, rooms were in impeccable order, hair was properly brushed, and there was no mad rush to be at one's own door when the fatal bell sounded.
At last "Lights out" bell rang and silence descended on South House.
Ten o'clock, and the prefects put out their lights, only the tiny red fire-escape lamps shone dimly at intervals down the corridor. Eleven o'clock, and the night watchman had creaked by on his way to East House.
The way was clear.
Out of bed slipped the conspirators. Judith's cheeks burned with excitement as, obedient to orders, she put on her warmest kimono, and, carrying mug and sofa pillow, followed Josephine and Jane to the corridor.
Nancy and Sally May had already gone, Josephine informed her in a piercing whisper, and Nancy had said to be _very_ careful of the boards opposite Miss Marlowe's door because they sometimes squeaked horribly.
Stealthily in Indian file they crept down the corridor.
Horrors! The boards certainly did creak! Miss Marlowe's light was still on! What if she should open her door!
Judith, with her eyes glued on the crack of light, clutched her kimono more tightly as if to escape being seen, and in some inexplicable way her mug slid from her cold fingers.
The fate of Sally May's party hung in the balance for just so long as it takes a mug to fall to the ground, and Judith for a nightmare second felt the bitterness of having betrayed her friends to the enemy; but Jane, with a magical dexterity, caught the mug "on the fly" as Judith described it later, and for the time being they were saved.
Judith's heart was still thumping from their narrow escape when they joined the rest of the party in the common room at the head of the stairs. The blinds had been pulled up to let in the pale moonlight, and in the semi-darkness Judith could see five shadowy forms seated on their pillows around the precious box.
"Are we all here?" said Sally May in a sepulchral whisper.
"We are--thanks to Jane," said Judith, and the episode of the mug was told to appreciative listeners.
"Put on your flash, Nancy," commanded Sally May; "no one is going to pa.s.s this door and we'll never manage to carve the chicken with this miserable knife unless we have more light."
With infinite precautions the papers were unwrapped, and mouths began to water as certain favorite goodies appeared.
"Who's going to carve?" asked Sally May surveying with a certain dismay a plump brown bird and a seemingly inadequate pocketknife.
"Draw lots," suggested Rosamond.
"Uggledy wuggledy doo, Rackety wackety boo, Out goes you!"
"Here, Jane, you're it." And Jane lost no time in attacking her job.
"My children! what _do_ you think? Here's a jelly or a mousse or something--it's all creamy and quivery, anyway, and we haven't any spoons!"
"I asked you--" began Jane reproachfully.
"Yes, I know you did, but Mother never mentioned a jelly and I thought spoons would make a noise."
"Well, we'll have to have some," said Nancy practically.
"Uggledy wuggledy doo,"
Judith felt in her bones she was going to be _it_. And she was.
"Let me go," said Nancy generously.
"No," said Judith, "Certainly _not_. Where'll I get spoons?"
"Oh, just collect what you can," said Sally May, handing round rolls and sandwiches. "I've got a shoe-horn and a medicine spoon, and so has Jane. Watch out for Miss Marlowe."
Fear and the desire to partake of the "eats" speeded Judith on her way, and she lost no time in gathering up what utensils the "Jolly Susan"
could offer. Her thoughts flew to Catherine for a moment as she pa.s.sed her door and she wished their beloved captain could be with them. She little knew how nearly her wish was fulfilled.
On the return journey as she hurried up the corridor, having safely pa.s.sed Miss Marlowe's door, she suddenly heard a soft footfall or the swish of a kimono, and then discovered a dark form bearing down upon her. Could it be Miss Marlowe? No, it wasn't tall enough. It must be Miss Ashwell. Judith flattened herself against the wall, which was fortunately in the shadow, in the hope that she would not be seen. But it was a very slender little hope, and for the second time that evening Judith was sure that their plans for a good time were ruined, when, just as she had given herself up for lost, the figure turned about and a voice, unmistakably Miss Ashwell's, said, "Bother! I've forgotten my sponge again."
Another disaster averted!
What a _gorgeous_ time they had! What a heavenly chicken!
What luscious meringues! And if you have never in semi-darkness balanced a precious morsel of jelly on the end of a nail-file, you have missed one of thrills of _real_ living.
"The spiffingest feed I ever had," declared Judith as they began to pack up the remains and remove all traces of their feast.
"Well, we haven't had all the thrills that you've had to-night, Judibus, but for once I've had a perfectly good meal," confessed Rosamond, who was holding the useful little flashlight, "and now I'm good and ready for my perfectly good bed." She was voicing a unanimous thought--they had had a jolly time, but their feet had gone to sleep and their eyes were beginning to feel drowsy--yes, certainly bed would be good.
Pillows were sorted out, and Nancy with the tiny light led the way. She tried to open the door; it would not budge! She pulled hard. Josephine pulled harder; Sally May tried; and then consternation took possession of their souls. Some one _had them_, had them with a vengeance! Whatever would they do now?