And hurry they did.
Blue Bonnet turned out the light in her room, which she had left burning, and threw up the window blinds, letting in a stream of silver light.
"I reckon we can undress by that," she said, "and I can get up an hour earlier in the morning and unpack."
But the rising-bell had been sounding some seconds when Blue Bonnet opened her eyes to the light the next morning. She sprang out of bed with a bound, and dragged forth Carita, who still clung to her slumbers.
"Get up, Carita," she said. "That"s some kind of a bell ringing for something or other--goodness knows what! Maybe it"s breakfast. I don"t know."
A look at her watch rea.s.sured her. Seven o"clock. Breakfast was at seven-thirty--she remembered hearing that somewhere.
"Oh, Blue Bonnet, I could have slept twenty minutes yet," Carita wailed sleepily. "I can dress for a party in ten minutes. Yes, I can, honestly!"
"Maybe--in Texas! You"re in Boston now. Boston means a cold bath with a good rub, and getting into your clothes for the day--all of which takes time."
At seven-thirty they were dressed, waiting for the breakfast-bell to ring.
The dining-room at Miss North"s was not large, but it was cheerful and inviting. There were some five or six tables and at the head of each sat a teacher.
Miss North met Blue Bonnet and Carita at the door and took them to her own table. When the meal was over she a.s.signed them to their regular places, and again Blue Bonnet found to her dismay that she and Carita were separated.
As they left the dining-room Mary Boyd came along and took Carita off peremptorily.
"I"ll take care of her," Mary announced, with a wave and a smile.
"She"ll be in a lot of my cla.s.ses." They pa.s.sed on, arm in arm.
Blue Bonnet was feeling a bit forlorn and neglected when a voice, soft and sweet, said at her elbow:
"Miss North has asked me to show you about this morning."
Blue Bonnet turned and looked into the face of the Southern girl she had admired the first day she visited the school.
"Perhaps you don"t remember me, but we were introduced. My name is Annabel Jackson."
"Oh, I remember you--yes, indeed; and I"m Blue Bonnet Ashe."
"We have prayers the first thing," Annabel said, leading the way to the chapel. "The gong will ring in five minutes. I reckon we won"t be too early if we go now."
"Dear me, do you have a gong to breathe by?" Blue Bonnet asked laughingly. "Seems to me one rings every five minutes."
"Not quite; but that little electric hammer runs the school--with Miss North behind it."
Miss North"s school was supposed to be non-sectarian, so far as religious government went; but in expression it was very much Episcopalian.
Blue Bonnet listened to the prayers read in a pleasant monotone by one of the teachers, taking part in the responses.
Prayers over, Annabel led the way up-stairs.
"We have a half hour to put our rooms in order," she said, leaving Blue Bonnet at her own door. "I"ll call for you in a little while. I"m just down the hall--number fifteen--if you get through first, stop for me."
"I haven"t unpacked yet. I think, if I have a minute, I had better take my gowns out of the trunk," Blue Bonnet answered.
"You won"t have much time now. Wait until this afternoon. We have from four to five o"clock free. I"ll help you then."
The rest of the morning was spent in the cla.s.sroom. By noon Blue Bonnet had met a number of the girls--including two of Annabel"s most intimate friends: Sue Hemphill, from somewhere in the Middle West, and Ruth Biddle, a Pennsylvania girl. Ruth was Annabel"s room-mate; a plain-looking girl, but decidedly aristocratic--blue blood written in every line of her delicate features and rather aloof bearing.
Sue Hemphill was the nicer, Blue Bonnet thought after a few moments"
conversation. She was much friendlier, and much prettier; with soft grey eyes that twinkled mischievously, and a saucy little nose that inclined upward, giving her face a piquant, merry expression, quite irresistible.
"Miss Ashe is a new girl--a Junior," Annabel explained to her friends.
"She"s on our floor--in number ten, with Joy Cross."
Sue Hemphill crumpled up like a withered rose-leaf and leaned against a blackboard for support.
"Oh, you poor thing! You must have been born for trouble--."
"Now, Sue, don"t!" Annabel protested. "Just because you had her last year and didn"t like her--"
"Do you? Does Ruth? Does anybody?" Sue asked.
"Miss North does," Ruth replied; "and Mrs. Goodwin and Mrs. White and Madame de Cartier and Professor Howe--"
"The entire Faculty, to say nothing of the janitor and maids," Sue interrupted.
"You mean--that she"s a sort of teacher"s pet?" Blue Bonnet, asked slowly.
"Well--"pet" would be going some, for Joy," Annabel laughed. "But you"re warm--very warm!"
"Or you will be, before many days. You"ll be a regular barometer, going up--going up--going up--"
Annabel put her hand over Sue"s mouth.
"Stop, Sue! Don"t mind her, Miss Ashe. She"s an awful tease. Joy isn"t anything worse than a stick--a bore. If you have a nice disposition you"ll get on splendidly--Sue hasn"t!"
"Oh, thanks," Sue said, bowing profoundly. "It is because of my long a.s.sociation with you, then;" and with this good-natured banter she was off to lunch.
At two-thirty in the afternoon there was a general exodus from the cla.s.srooms, the recitations for the day being over. It had been rather a strenuous period for Blue Bonnet--the continuous round from seven o"clock in the morning. She was a little weary as she left the English cla.s.s, and filed out with the other girls who stopped to chat for a minute as they put away their books.
Down the hall came Mary Boyd with Carita still in her train. Blue Bonnet stopped them and inquired how Carita had got on during the day.
Carita was all enthusiasm.
"Oh, just fine, Blue Bonnet, thank you. Mary has been such an angel. We are in the same Algebra cla.s.s--and French, too. Isn"t that nice? We can get our lessons together."
Annabel Jackson came out of a cla.s.sroom and joined the group.
"h.e.l.lo, Sozie," she said to Mary, pinching her cheek affectionately.