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On a certain morning, just a week before Christmas, the little
world of school at Chilcombe Hall was awake and stirring at an
unusually early hour. Long before the slightest hint of dawn showed
in the sky the lamps were lighted in the corridors, maids were
scuttling about, bringing in breakfast, and Jones, the gardener,
assisted by his eldest boy, a sturdy grinning urchin of twelve, was
beginning the process of carrying down piles of hand-bags and
hold-alls, and stacking them on a cart which was waiting in the
drive outside. Miss Walters, dreading the Christmas rush on the
railway, had determined to take time by the forelock, and meant to
pack off her pupils by the first available trains, trusting they
would most of them reach their destinations before the overcrowding
became a serious problem in the traffic. The pupils themselves
offered no objections to this early start. The sooner they reached
home and began the holidays, so much the better from their point of
view. It was fun to get up by lamp-light, when the stars were still
shining in the sky; fun to find that rules were relaxed, and for
once they might chatter and talk as they pleased; fun to run
unreproved along the passages, sing on the stairs, and twirl one
another round in an impromptu dance in the hall.
In a top-story bedroom in an old-fashioned house in a northern
suburb of London, a girl of fourteen was kneeling on the floor,
turning out the contents of the bottom cupboards of a big bookcase.
Her method of doing so was hardly tidy; she just tossed the
miscellaneous assortment of articles down anywhere, till presently
she was surrounded by a mixed-up jumble of books, papers,
paint-boxes, music, chalks, pencils, foreign stamps, picture
post-cards, crests, balls of knitting wool, skeins of embroidery
silk, and odds and ends of all kinds. She groaned as the circle
grew wider, yet the apparently inexhaustible cupboards were still
uncleared. "Couldn't have ever believed I'd have stowed so many
things away here. And, of course, the one book I want isn't to be
found. That's what always happens. It's just my bad luck. Hello
Who's calling 'Renie'? I'm here Here In my bedroom Don't yell the
house down. Really, Vin, you've got a voice like a megaphone You
might think I was on the top of the roof. What d'you want now? I'm
busy "
Are they never going to turn up? "It's almost four now!" "They'll
be left till the six-thirty!" "Oh, don't alarm yourself! The valley
train always waits for the express." "It's coming in now!" "Oh,
good, so it is!" "Late by twenty minutes exactly!" "Stand back
there!" yelled a porter, setting down a box with a slam, and
motioning the excited, fluttering group of girls to a position of
greater safety than the extreme edge of the platform. "Llangarmon
Junction! Change for Glanafon and Graigwen!"
There's no doubt about it, we really must economize somehow! sighed
Mrs. Woodward helplessly, with her house-keeping book in one hand,
and her bank pass-book in the other, and an array of bills spread
out on the table in front of her. "Children, do you he
The warm, mellow September sunshine was streaming over the
irregular roofs and twisted chimneys of the little town of
Chagmouth, and was glinting on the water in the harbour, and
sending gleaming, straggling, silver lines over the deep
reflections of the
Ingred! Ingred, old girl! I say, Ingred! Wherever have you taken
yourself off to? shouted a boyish voice, as its owner, jumping an
obstructing gooseberry bush, tore around the corner of the house
from the kitchen garden on to the strip of rough lawn that
Gwen! Gwen Gascoyne! Gwen! Anybody seen her? I say, have you all
gone deaf? Don't you hear me? Where's Gwen? I-want-Gwen-Gascoyne!
The speaker-Ida Bridge-a small, perky, spindle-legged Junior,
jumped on to the nearest seat, and raising her shrill voice to its
topmost pitch, twice shouted the "Gwen Gascoyne," with an
aggressive energy calculated to make herself heard above the babel
of general chatter that pervaded the schoolroom. Her effort, though
far from musical, at any rate secured her the notice she desired.
"Hello, there! Stop that noise! It's like a dog howling!" irately
commanded a girl in spectacles who was cleaning the blackboard.
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