Lydia of the Pines - LightNovelsOnl.com
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She seated Lydia near her in the a.s.sembly room, then looked her over curiously. The child's face was remarkably intelligent, a high bred little face under a finely domed head. The back of her ears and the back of her neck were dirty, and her thin hands were rough as if with housework. The galatea sailor suit was cheap and coa.r.s.e.
"A sick mother or no mother," was the teacher's mental note. "I must inquire about her. Almost too bashful to breathe. Precocious mentally, a child physically. I'll look out for her to-day."
Miss Towne had the reputation of an unfeeling disciplinarian among the pupils, but Lydia did not know this. She only knew that by some miracle of kindness she came to understand the cla.s.sroom system of recitations, that she was introduced to different teachers, that she learned how to decipher the hours of her recitations from the complicated chart on the a.s.sembly room blackboard, and that at noon she started for home with a list of textbooks to be purchased, and a perfectly clear idea of what to do when she returned on the morrow.
The streets were full of children of all ages flocking toward the book stores. Lydia walked along slowly, thinking deeply. She knew that her list of books came to something over five dollars. She knew that this sum of money would floor her father and she knew that she would rather beg on the streets than start Amos on one of his tirades on his poverty.
She pegged along homeward, half elated over the excitement of the day, half depressed over her book problem. When she turned into the dirt road. Billy Norton overtook her. He was wearing a very high starched collar and a new suit of clothes. Billy was a senior and felt his superiority. Nevertheless, he wanted to tell his troubles--even to a first year pupil.
"Gee, don't I have the luck!" he groaned. "I could get on the School football team, I know it, if I didn't have to come home right after school to deliver milk. Hang it!"
Lydia looked at him quickly. "How much milk do you have to deliver?"
"Aw, just a snag. Two quarts up the road to Essers' and two to Stones'. They both got babies and have to have it. Think of putting me off the school team for four quarts of baby milk!"
"Oh, Billy," gasped Lydia, "I'll do it for you--if--Billy, have you got your freshman textbooks still?"
"Sure," answered the boy. "They're awful banged up, but I guess all the pages are there."
Lydia was breathless with excitement. "Billy, if you'll let me have your books, I'll carry the milk for you, all winter."
The big boy looked at the little girl, curiously.
"They're a ratty lot of old books, Lydia. Half the fun of having school books is getting new ones."
"I know that," she answered, flus.h.i.+ng.
"Hanged if I'll do it. Let your dad get you new ones."
"He'd like to as well as any one, but he can't right now and I'm going to look out for my own. Oh, Billy, let me do it!"
"You can have 'em all and welcome," exclaimed Billy, with a sudden huskiness in his voice. "Gosh, you're awful little, Lydia."
Lydia stamped her foot. "I won't take anything for nothing. And I'm not little. I'm as strong as a horse."
"Well," conceded Billy, "just till after Thanksgiving is all I want.
Come on along home now and we'll fix it up with Ma."
Ma Norton twisted Lydia around and retied her hair ribbon while she listened. They all knew Lydia's pride, so she quenched the impulse to give the child the books and said, "Till Thanksgiving is plenty of pay, Billy, and when the snow comes, the two mile extra walking will be too much. Get the books out of the parlor closet. You got a--a--ink on the back of your neck, Lydia. Wait till I get it off for you."
She wet a corner of a towel at the tea kettle and proceeded to scour the unsuspecting Lydia's neck and ears. "Children in the high school are apt to get ink in the _back_ of their necks and _ears_," she said.
"_Always_ scrub there, Lydia! Remember!"
"Yes, Ma'm! Oh, gosh, what a big pile! Thank you ever so much, Billy.
I'll be here right after school to-morrow, Mrs. Norton."
Lydia spent a blissful evening mending and cleaning Billy's textbooks, with Adam snoring under her feet and her father absorbed in his newspaper.
The delivering of the milk was no task at all, though had it not been for Adam trudging beside her with his rolling bulldog gait and his slavering ugly jaw, she would have been afraid in the early dusk of the autumn evenings.
The High School was a different world from that of the old ward school.
The ward school, comprising children of only one neighborhood with the grades small, was a democratic, neighborly sort of place. The High School gathered together children from all over town, of all cla.s.ses, from the children of lumber kings and college professors, to the offspring of the Norwegian day laborer and the German saloon keeper.
There were even several colored children in the High School as well as an Indian lad named Charlie Jackson. In the High School, cla.s.s feeling was strong. There were Greek letter societies in the fourth grade, reflecting the influence of the college on the lake sh.o.r.e. Among the well-to-do girls, and also among those who could less well afford it, there was much elaborate dressing. Dancing parties were weekly occurrences. They were attended by first year girls of fourteen and fifteen as well as by the older girls, each la.s.s with an attendant lad, who called for her and took her home unchaperoned.
It took several months for Lydia to become aware of the complicated social life going on about her. She was so absorbed while in school in adjusting herself to the new type of school life,--a different teacher for each study, heavier lessons, the responsibility of collateral reading--that the Christmas holidays came before she realized that except in her cla.s.s room work, she had nothing whatever in common with her cla.s.smates.
All fall she saw very little of Kent. He was on the freshman football squad and this was a perfectly satisfactory explanation of his dereliction--had he cared to make any--as far as Sat.u.r.days went. In the a.s.sembly room because he had chosen the Cla.s.sical course, his seat was far from Lydia's, who had chosen the English course.
Sat.u.r.day was a busy day for Lydia at home. Old Lizzie, who was nearing sixty, was much troubled with rheumatism and even careless Lydia felt vaguely that the house needed a certain amount of cleaning once a week.
So, of a Sat.u.r.day morning, she slammed through the house like a small whirlwind, leaving corners undisturbed and dust in windrows, but satisfied with her efforts. Sat.u.r.day afternoon, she worked in the garden when the day was fair, helping to gather the winter vegetables.
Before little Patience's death she had gone to Sunday School, but since that time she had not entered a church. So Sunday became her feast day. She put in the entire morning preparing a Sunday dinner for her father and nearly always John Levine. After dinner, the three, with Adam, would tramp a mile up the road, stopping to lean over the bars and talk dairying with Pa Norton, winter wheat with Farmer Jansen, and hardy alfalfa with old Schmidt. Between farms, Amos and John always talked politics, local and national, arguing heatedly.
To all this, Lydia listened with half an ear. She loved these walks, partly because of the grown up talks, partly because Adam loved them, mostly because of the beauty of the wooded hills, the far stretch of the black fields, ready plowed for spring and the pale, tender blue of the sky that touched the near horizon. If she missed and needed playmates of her own age, she was scarcely conscious of the fact.
Christmas came and went, sadly and quietly. Lydia was glad when the holidays were over and she was back in school again. On her desk that first morning lay a tiny envelope, addressed to her. She opened it.
In it was an invitation from Miss Towne to attend a reception she was tendering to the members of her Algebra and Geometry cla.s.ses, freshmen and seniors.
For a moment Lydia was in heaven. It was her first formal invitation of any kind. Then she came rapidly to earth. She had nothing to wear!
It was an evening party and she had no way to go or come. She put the precious card in her blouse pocket and soberly opened her Civil Government.
At recess, she sat alone as she was rather p.r.o.ne to do, in the window of the cloak room, when she heard a group of girls chattering.
"Who wants to go to grouchy old Towne's reception when you can go to a dance? I've got two bids to the Phi Pi's party," said a fourteen-year-old miss.
"Oh, we'll have to go or she'll flunk us in Algebra," said another girl. "I'll wear my pink silk organdy. What'll you wear?"
"My red silk. Maybe she'll let us dance. I suppose Charlie and Kent'll both want to take me."
"Terrible thing to be popular! Hasn't Kent the sweetest eyes! Do you know what he said to me the other night at the Evans' party?"
The girls drifted out of the cloak room. Lydia sat rigid. Pink organdy! Red silk! Kent's "sweetest eyes"! Then she looked down at the inevitable sailor suit, and at her patched and broken shoes. So far she had had few pangs about her clothes. But now for the first time she realized that for some reason, she was an alien, different from the other girls--and the realization made her heart ache.
The bell rang and she went to her recitation. It was in Civil Government. Lydia sat down dejectedly next to Charlie Jackson, the splendid, swarthy Indian boy of sixteen.
"Did you learn the preamble?" he whispered to Lydia.
She nodded.
"He didn't say we had to," Charlie went on, "but I like the sound of it, so I did."
The rest of the cla.s.s filed in, thirty youngsters of fourteen or fifteen, the boys surrept.i.tiously shoving and kicking each other, the girls giggling and rearranging their hair. Mr. James rapped on his desk, and called on young Hansen.
"Can you give the preamble to the Const.i.tution?" he asked, cheerfully.
The boy's jaw dropped. "You never told us to learn it," he said.
"No, I merely suggested that as Americans, you ought to learn it. I talked to you during most of yesterday's period about it. I wondered if you were old enough to take suggestions and not be driven through your books. Miss Olson?"
Miss Olson, whose hair was done in the latest mode, tossed her head pertly.