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Marjorie Dean College Freshman Part 5

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"You are not," the Crane hastened to inform him. "That choice selection we just rendered was in honor of the girls. Don't credit yourself with everything. It's horribly conceited."

"I'm glad you named it as a 'selection,'" Hal made scathing retort.

"What, may I ask, would you name it?" queried Danny with a dangerous affability.

"Making night hideous, or, a disgraceful racket, or, the last convulsions of a would-be jazz band. Any little appellation like that would be strictly appropriate." Hal beamed ironically on the three.

"Nice little drummer boy you have there."



Supposedly offended, Danny could not repress a loud snicker at this fling. Miles Burton stood six feet, minus shoes. With Charlie's toy drum strung round his neck on a narrow blue ribbon, he was distinctly mirth-inspiring.

"Throw any more remarks like that about me and you'll find out my real disposition," warned Miles in a deep ba.s.s growl.

"Come ladies; let us hasten on before trouble overtakes us-me, I mean.

Back, varlets. Grab your instruments of torture and begone." Hal grandly motioned the objectionable varlets out of the way.

"That's what I say," called Jerry from the top step. "For once I agree with Hal. Let the girls come up on the porch, can't you? You four sillies can stay outside and rave. Notice how well Laurie and Harry are behaving. Try to be a little like them, if you can."

"You can't know them as I do," rumbled Miles.

"No; I _guess not_," emphasized Hal. "Well, I'd rather be called a silly than a varlet."

"That will do from all of you." Jerry ran down the steps and with a few energetic waves of the arms drove the masculine half of the guests up onto the brightly-lighted veranda. There the entire company lingered to talk, presently strolling into the long old-fas.h.i.+oned drawing room which Constance used for dancing purposes when entertaining her friends.

"Be happy and make yourselves at home," she said in her pretty, graceful fas.h.i.+on. "Father and Uncle John will soon be here to play for us. They are helping Mr. Beaver, the leader of the Sanford orchestra, organize some of the Sanford working boys into an orchestra. It's a fine idea. I think Father and Uncle John will help him all they can whenever they are at home."

Marjorie cast a quick, inquiring look toward Constance. Her eyes luminous with affection, she asked: "Has it come at last, Connie?"

"Yes, Marjorie," Constance answered, in a proud, happy tone. "I would like you to know," she continued, turning to the others, "that Uncle John is to be a first violin in Father's symphony orchestra. You can understand just how glad we feel about it."

Connie's news met with an echoing shout. All present cherished the warmest regard for gentle Uncle John, who had ever been so willing to play for them. Far removed from poverty, he had gradually regained the lost faculty of memory and could now be relied upon for symphony work.

"Oh, just wait until he gets home!" promised Hal. "Won't he get a reception, though?"

"Surest thing in the world!" Laurie's dark blue eyes were darker from emotion. Laurie had known for a very long time that, if Constance's adopted family were not his own, some future day, it would not be his fault.

"That explains why we haven't seen Charlie," smiled Marjorie. "He is actually helping, at last, to organize a big band. I meant to ask for him. There was so much sarcasm being hurled back and forth, my voice would have been lost in the uproar," she slyly added.

"He took his violin and music. The music was a lot of old stray song sheets. He will play them and put everyone out, if he has a chance,"

Constance predicted with an infectious little giggle.

The entrance of Miss Allison into the drawing room brought the young folks to their feet. Her fondness for youth made her a welcome addition at their parties. She particularly enjoyed Danny Seabrooke's antics and the sham penalties they invariably brought on him.

"You young gentlemen will soon be leaving for college as well as our girls," she remarked to Hal. "I am glad Laurie has decided to go through college before making music his profession. He really needs the college training. Constance, on the contrary, will do as well to begin her training for grand opera at once. She must study Italian and Spanish.

That, with her vocal practice, will keep her fully occupied. How I shall miss my boys and girls! They have been life to me." Miss Allison's delicate features saddened unconsciously.

A m.u.f.fled sob, too realistic to be genuine, rent the air at her right.

Her sad expression vanished as her eyes lighted upon the mourner.

Slumped into the depths of a big velvet chair, Danny was struggling visibly with his sorrowful emotions.

"To see us all here tonight, who would dream of the parting to come so soon-n; s-o s-o-o-o-on-n!" he wailed, covering his freckled, grief-stricken countenance with both hands. No one arising to a.s.suage his sorrow, his gurgles and sobs grew louder.

"Won't some one please choke off that bellow?" Laurie viewed the perpetrator of the melancholy sounds with a cold, unrelenting eye.

"_De_-lighted." Hal rose from a seat on the davenport beside Marjorie and advanced with threatening deliberation upon Danny.

"You needn't mind. I am getting used to the idea of parting now." The "bellow" ceased like magic. Danny spoke in a small, sad voice that might have belonged to a five-year-old girl. "Soon I shall be able to contemplate it without a single tear. I could part from _you_," he suddenly recovered his own voice, "or that ruffian of an Armitage, and smile; yes, sir; actually _smile_. I'd rather part at any time, and from anybody than to be murderously 'choked off' by you two bullies."

Danny hastily arose, after this defiant declaration, and retreated to the lower end of the room. Crowding himself into a small rocking chair belonging to Charlie, he rocked and smirked at Hal, who had followed him to the chair and now stood over him.

"Move back a trifle, Mr. Macy. I refuse to be responsible for other people's s.h.i.+ns. I have all I can do to take care of my own. If I were to kick you, _accidentally_, I should be _so_ sorry!"

"Oh, undoubtedly! Wouldn't you, though?" Bending, with one swift movement of the arm, Hal upset the rocker and its grinning occupant.

"Now will you be good?" he inquired sarcastically. Leaving the struggling wag to right himself, Hal strolled back to Marjorie.

The room rang with laughter at Danny's upheaval, nor did it lessen as he went through a series of ridiculous attempts to rise from the floor. In the midst of the fun Charlie Stevens marched into the drawing room, his little leather violin case tucked importantly under one arm, his music under the other. Behind him were Mr. Stevens and John Roland.

"What for is he doing to my chair?" Charlie asked very severely.

"He's trying to part with it, Charlie, and he's either stuck in it or pretending he is," Harry Lenox replied to the youngster.

"You mustn't ever sit in a chair that don't look like you, Danny,"

reproved Charlie. "That chair looks like me. You ought to know better."

This was too much for the erring Daniel. With a shout of mirth he slipped free of the chair, and, catching up the little boy, swung him to his shoulder. "You're the funniest little old kid on creation!" he exclaimed.

"That's what I think," returned Charlie, with an innocent complacency that again brought down the house. From that on Charlie divided honors with Uncle John, who was due to receive the sincere congratulations of the young folks he had so often made happy by his music. To see the white-haired, patient-faced old musician surrounded by his young friends was a sight that Miss Allison never forgot. When, a little later, she led Charlie from the room, bedward bound, there was thankfulness in her heart because she had found the lonely people of the Little Gray House in time.

With the musicians on the scene, dancing was promptly begun and continued unflaggingly until a late supper was served in the dining room. There a surprise awaited Marjorie. While the company were engaged in eating the dessert, she had a dim idea that something unusual was pending. She dismissed it immediately as a vague fancy.

Next she became aware that a silence had settled down upon the supper party. Then Hal Macy rose from his chair and said in his clear, direct tones: "I am going to read you a little tribute to a very good friend of ours. I know you will agree with me that Marjorie Dean is largely responsible for a great many pleasant times we have enjoyed since we have known her. By that I mean, not only the merry evenings we have spent at her home, but the happiness that has been ours because of her fine influence. As well as I could, for I am no poet, I have tried to put our sentiments into verse. While the meter may be faulty, the inspiration is flawless."

Applause greeted this frank, graceful little preamble. When it had subsided, Hal read his verses. They fitly expressed, to the amazed, and all but overcome, subject of them, the strength of her friends'

devotion. When he had finished she had no words with which to reply. She was grateful for the fresh round of approbation that began. It gave her time to force back her tears. She did not wish to break down if she could help it. She felt that she owed it to Hal to thank him with a smile.

Hardly had quiet been restored when Constance took the floor. In her right hand she held an oblong box of white velvet. When she began to speak, it was directly to Marjorie.

"What Hal has said to you, tonight, Marjorie, is so true and beautiful that I couldn't better it if I tried. He has expressed just the way we feel about you, and what your sunny, dear influence has been to us. We are afraid that someday you may run away and leave us, so we wish to tie you to us with a bowknot of affection."

Constance flitted the length of the table and around the end to the side opposite from her seat. Pausing behind Marjorie's chair, she slid a bare white arm over her chum's shoulder and gently dropped the velvet box in front of her.

"I-I think I am going to cry," quavered Marjorie, "and I don't-want-to.

Please-I-don't think-I-deserve--"

"I would advise you not to weep, Marjorie, or you may be treated as I was," warned Danny's bland tones. "It's not safe to sob around here."

Marjorie gave a half tremulous giggle that was the forerunner of recovery. Her tears checked, her hands trembled as she opened the white velvet box. Then her emotion became that of sheer wonder. Resting on its satin bed gleamed a string of graduated pearls from which hung a pearl pendant in the form of a bowknot.

"What made you do this?" she faltered. "It isn't _I_ who have ever done anything to make you happy. It's _you_ who have done everything to make me happy. I don't know what to say, only you are all so dear to me and thank you."

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