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"What's she up to then?"
"That's what I want to find out. It's evidently something she doesn't want people to know. She ought to be watched. I vote we keep an eye on her."
"I really believe we ought to."
"But mind, you mustn't let her suspect we notice anything. That would give the show away at once. Lie low's our motto."
"Right you are!" agreed Dulcie. "Mum's the word!"
CHAPTER IV
"The King of the Castle"
The members of VB often congratulated themselves that their special cla.s.sroom was decidedly larger than that of the Sixth or of VA. They were apt to boast of their superior accommodation, and would never admit the return argument that being so much larger a form, their room really allowed less s.p.a.ce per girl, and was therefore actually inferior to its rivals. On one February evening the whole nine were sitting round the fire, luxuriating in half an hour's delicious idleness before the bell rang for "second prep.". Those who had been first in the field had secured the basket-chairs, but the majority squatted on the hearth-rug, making as close a ring as they could, for the night was cold, and there was a nip of frost in the air.
"Now, don't anybody begin to talk sense, please!" pleaded Betty Scott, leaning a golden-brown head mock-sentimentally on Annie Pridwell's shoulder. "My poor little brains are just about pumped out with maths., and what's left of them will be wanted for French prep. later on. This is the silly season, so I hope no one will endeavour to improve my mind."
"They'd have a Herculean task before them if they did!" sn.i.g.g.e.red Annie. "Betty, your head may be empty, but it's jolly heavy, all the same. I wish you'd kindly remove it from my shoulder."
"You ma.s.s of ingrat.i.tude! It was a mark of supreme affection--a kind of 'They grew in beauty side by side', don't you know!"
"I don't want to know. Not if it involves nursing your weight. Oh, yes!
go to Barbara, by all means, if she'll have you. I'm not in the least offended."
"That big basket-chair oughtn't to be monopolized by one," a.s.serted Evie Bennett. "It's quite big enough for two. Here, Deirdre, make room for me. Don't be stingy, you must give me another inch. That's better. It's rather a squash, but we can just manage."
"You're cuckooing me out!" protested Deirdre.
"No, no, I'm not. There's s.p.a.ce for two in this nest. We're a pair of doves:
"'Coo,' said the turtle dove, 'Coo,' said she".
"I'll say something more to the point, if you don't take care. What a lot of sillies you are!"
"Then please deign to enlarge our intellects. We're hanging upon your words. Betty can stop her ears, if she thinks it will be too great a strain on her slender brains. What is it to be? A recitation from Milton, or a dissertation on the evils of levity? Miss Sullivan, your audience awaits you. Mr. Chairman, will you please introduce the lecturer?"
"Ladies and gentlemen, I hasten to explain that owing to severe indisposition I am unable to be present to-night," returned Deirdre promptly.
"Oh, Irish of the Iris.h.!.+" laughed the girls. "Did you say it on purpose, or did it come unconsciously?"
"I wish I were Irish. Somehow I never say funny things, not even if I try," lamented Dulcie.
"Because you couldn't. You're a dear fat dumpling, and dumplings never are funny, you know--it's against nature."
"It's not my fault if I'm fat," said Dulcie plaintively. "People say 'Laugh and grow fat', so why shouldn't a plump person be funny?"
"They are funny--very funny--though not quite in the way you mean."
"Oh, look here! Don't be horrid!"
"You began it yourself."
"Children, don't barge!" interrupted Romola Harvey. "You really are rather a set of lunatics to-night. Can't anyone tell a story?"
"I was taught to call fibbing a sin in the days of my youth," retorted Betty Scott, a.s.suming a serious countenance.
"You--you ragtimer! I mean a real story--a tale--a legend--a romance--or whatever you choose to call it."
"Don't know any."
"We've used them all up," said Evie Bennett, yawning l.u.s.tily. "We all know the legend of the Abbess Gertrude--it's Miss Birks's favourite chestnut--and what she said to the Commissioner who came to confiscate the convent: and we've had the one about Monmouth's rebellion till it's as stale as stale can be. I defy anybody to have the hardihood to repeat it."
"Aren't there any other tales about the neighbourhood?" asked Gerda Thorwaldson. It was the first remark that she had made.
"Oh, I don't think so. The old castle's very spa.r.s.e in legends. I suppose there ought to be a few, but they're mostly forgotten."
"Who used to live there?"
"Trevellyans. There always have been Trevellyans--hosts of them--though now there's n.o.body left but Mrs. Trevellyan and Ronnie."
"Who's Ronnie?"
More than half a dozen answers came instantly.
"Ronnie? Why, he's just Ronnie."
"Mrs. Trevellyan's great-nephew."
"The dearest darling!"
"You never saw anyone so sweet."
"We all of us adore him."
"We call him 'The King of the Castle'."
"They've been away, staying in London."
"But they're coming back this week."
"Is he grown up?" enquired Gerda casually.
"Grown up!" exploded the girls. "He's not quite six!"