"And _must_ I go to school again to-morrow?" Gwen asked.
"No, indeed!" Mrs. Harcourt said, "I shall send you, hereafter, to private school, where your talents will be appreciated."
There was another pupil who was far more uncomfortable at school than Gwen had ever been, and that was Gyp.
Placed in a cla.s.s with children of six or seven, the awkward boy felt ill at ease, and out of place. Yet, while they were years younger than he, they had already spent more hours in the cla.s.s room than he ever had, and pages that they read with ease, he struggled over. He was a true gypsy, and he loved his freedom, and the fresh air.
Now, as he sat at his desk, book in hand, he thought of his long tramps over field and meadow, through forest and valley, and in his heart he hated school, and the people who forced him to attend.
"What"s the use?" he muttered, under his breath.
"I can catch woodchucks, and birds and squirrels," he said, softly, "and _once_ I caught a fox, but what kin I do here? Nothing but hold a ol" book!" A sharp command to "stop muttering, and sit still," served to increase his wrath.
He knew that it was not the teacher who was responsible for his presence at school, but he thought that she _wished_ him to be there, because she insisted that he sit still, and she would not let him leave the room.
"It was the p"liceman what _brung_ me here, but I"ll bet "twas her _axed_ him to," he whispered, thus showing how angry were his thoughts, and how greatly he needed the training that the teacher stood ready to give.
His mother had not dared to keep him at home, although she needed his help.
Gyp could not understand why she had agreed to let him go to a place where he could neither _earn_ nor _steal_ food for the family. _He_ felt that she had not stood by him.
He dared not play truant, because he so feared the policeman who had said that he _must_ attend school.
Poor Gyp! Ignorant, and born of ignorant parents, he believed, as they did, that if he did not go to school, he would be sent to jail! Jail was the only thing that Gyp thought worse than school. He considered himself a prisoner in school, but _after four_ he was _free_, so that jail was worse only because one could not get out of jail at all!
"If it"s school or jail, I"ll go to _school_!" he said.
For weeks he appeared each morning and afternoon, sullen, and unhappy.
Then something occured that made him change his mind, and his eyes grow bright, and his heart grow lighter.
Out of all Avondale, Princess Polly was the only person who spoke kindly to him. Wild, careless Gyp fairly worshipped the blue eyed, golden haired little girl who always gave him a pleasant word, and a smile.
One morning, after a heavy storm, the avenues were in fair condition, until the pupils reached a place where they must cross to the opposite side of the street to enter the school yard.
Gyp was not afraid of muddying his shoes, because they were so shabby that a little mud could not make them look worse. He sat on the wall and laughed as he saw the girls try to cross the puddle without wetting their feet.
"Oh, look at the ducks! No, geese!" he cried, adding: "Don"t be "fraid.
Water won"t hurt ye!"
After the other girls had reached the sidewalk, Princess Polly came tripping along.
She had intended to walk to school with Rose and Sprite, but Sprite, not quite ready, had asked Polly to go along, and she would soon be ready, and would overtake her.
Gyp saw her coming, and stopped laughing.
"_Jiminy_!" he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed. "Somebody ought ter do _suthin"_!"
A second later he cried:
"Stop! Oh, stop just a minute, will ye? I"ll _fix_ that puddle!"
Polly _did_ stop.
s.n.a.t.c.hing a piece of board that chanced to be lying on the ground just over the wall, he flew to where Polly was standing, placed his tiny plank over the puddle, and felt the greatest pride when he saw her walk across, her dainty shoes without a spot upon them.
"Oh, Gyp, you were nice to do that for me! Thank you, so much!" she said.
He hardly knew what to reply, but muttering something about being "no bother at all," he ran around to the other side of the school-house that she might not see his confusion. One thought filled his mind. He would go to school! Yes, he would go to school every day, so that morning and afternoon he might be where he could see her, and do any little favor, or offer any aid, that she might need.
Another thought soon followed. He would _work_ at his studies. He would not be at the foot of the cla.s.s.
He must work for promotion! He must catch up with pupils of his own age, for then he would be nearer Princess Polly, and thus able to do any little favor, or any slight service that might please her.
CHAPTER V
A BREATH OF THE SEA
It was with Polly and Rose that Sprite was happiest. She liked Lena and Leslie, and all the others.
The boys were her trusted friends, and she looked forward to a gay winter with these new friends. One sunny morning Uncle John Atherton, with Rose in the motor beside him, drove over to Sherwood Hall to call for Polly and Sprite.
"We"re going for a long ride, Rose, so tell Polly and Sprite to take their coats."
They were soon ready, and running down the walk, their coats on their arms.
"Where are we going?" they cried, as they reached the sidewalk. Without waiting for an answer they clambered into the car.
"Where are we going?" they asked again. "Oh, let"s all three sit on one seat!"
Uncle John turned to look at the three eager faces.
"Well, well! What a lucky man I am!" he cried. "Three fine young ladies all out for a ride with me. Are you ready?"
"All ready!" cried the merry chorus, "but where are we going?"
"Now _that"s_ my secret," Uncle John said, with a laugh, "but I will say that some business took me to a very charming place this morning, and I thought I"d like company on the way. I trust you"re willing to go?"
"Oh, yes, yes!" cried three laughing voices.
"Then we"ll start at once," said Uncle John, as if he had been waiting in order to be re-a.s.sured.
Over the road they flew, talking and laughing gaily.
"Rose, do you know where we"re going?" Polly asked.