"Don"t care. Want to see it," declared Ruth. "I hope we can get a boat.
I didn"t see many in use this morning."
"Some of the girls own their own. Especially canoes," said Jennie Stone.
"But it"s _the_ thing to make the "eight." Let me tell you, us Ardmores are supposed to be some rowists! Our first eight beat the Gillings College first eight last June."
"We"ll all try for the eight then," Helen said.
"And _you_, Jennie?" asked Ruth, mildly.
"Oh, _me_!"
"String beans for yours, Heavy," Helen cried, clapping her hands.
"You"ll have to diet on them until you have reduced to little more than a string yourself if you expect to make the eight."
"Bet I could do it," grumbled Heavy.
"A bet"s a bet!" cried Helen. "I take you."
"Don"t be rude, girls," advised Ruth. "You sound like regular, sure-enough gamblers. And, anyway, Heavy will never be able to make the eight. She might as well pay her wager now."
"Oh! oh! oh!" laughed Helen. "A palpable hit!"
"You just see!" said Heavy, firmly. "I"ll show you."
"My dear," Ruth said, "if you show us a sylph-like form in time to make the freshman eight----"
"It will be the eighth wonder of the world," finished Helen.
Jennie tossed her head. "I don"t know about the sylph-like form, but at least I mean to possess a slender figure when I have followed Miss Cullam"s advice on diet. You"ll see!"
"Poor Heavy!" groaned Helen. "She is letting herself in for a most awful time, and no mistake."
After luncheon the three girls set forth to explore the place.
"If I keep this up I"ll need nothing else to get me thin. We have tramped miles," the fleshy girl announced at length. "Oh! my poor, poor feet!"
"Wear sensible shoes, then," said Helen, who was the very last person to follow her own advice on this point.
"Easy enough to say," groaned Jennie. "There ain"t any such an animal!
You know that in this day and generation shoe makers have ceased to make sensible shoes. I look at "em in the shop windows," pursued the aching girl, "and I wonder what sort of foot the human pedal extremity will become in a generation or two. Those pointed toes!
"Why," declared the suddenly warmed up Jennie Stone, "they tell us about a two-toed sloth living in Central and South America. Believe _me_! the present-day shoemaker seems to have secured a last to fit a _one_-toed sloth."
"I don"t know about the number of their toes," Ruth said, laughing; "but many of those who wear the fancy shoes are _sloths_, all right."
They had looked over the library before this, and walked down past Hoskin and Hemmingway Halls on the west side of the campus, and so reached the lake. There were some girls at the boathouse, and a few craft were out. It was possible for the three friends to get a boat and Ruth and Helen rowed, with Heavy lazily reclining in the stern.
"Beginning that strenuous life that is to reduce your weight, Heavy?"
questioned Helen.
"I am practising deep breathing," Jennie said. "They say that helps a lot."
They headed the light skiff directly for Bliss Island. It was not more than a mile off sh.o.r.e, and was a beautiful place. At the landing they saw several girls whom they knew were soph.o.m.ores, for among them was May MacGreggor.
"Here are some more of Cook"s Trippers," said the Scotch girl, gaily.
"Seeing the sights, _mes infantes_?"
"Trying to," Jennie announced. "But you"re really not so bad looking, Miss MacGreggor. I wouldn"t call you a "sight.""
"Now, that will be all of that, Miss Stone!" exclaimed the soph.o.m.ore, but her brown eyes danced as the other girls laughed. "I believe you three girls are Briarwoods, are you not?"
"Yes," Helen said.
"I can believe it," said May. "I have felt the briers. Now, let us call a truce."
"With all my heart, Miss MacGreggor," Ruth said quickly.
"You"re a good little thing!" returned the Scotch girl. "I know your heart is big enough. And we sophs really shouldn"t nag you freshies, you know, for we must pull together against the seniors and juniors. But you"ll hear about that to-night."
"Thank you, Miss MacGreggor," Ruth said. "And now that we are at this island, would you mind telling us where the Stone Face is situated?"
"Ah! one of the wonders of the place," said May. "And who told you about the Stone Face, Freshie?"
"I have heard it is well worth seeing," said Ruth, demurely.
"I will be your escort," said May.
They found the Scotch girl very companionable. She led them up a rugged path through the trees and around the rocks.
"And did that girl have to come up here--_and in the dark_?" murmured Ruth at last.
"What girl?" Helen asked.
"Who are you talking about, Miss Fielding?" asked the soph.o.m.ore.
"That girl--Miss Rolff."
"Oh! don"t mention her name!" groaned May MacGreggor. "If it hadn"t been for _her_, you-uns and we-uns wouldn"t be cut out of the sororities. A wicked shame!"
"Oh, I"ve heard about that," said Jennie, puffing because of the hard climb. "Did she really have to come here, and _alone_, when she was initiated?"
"She started for here," said May, gloomily. "With a flashlight, I believe. But she lost her nerve----
"There! there"s the rock you"re looking for."
It was a huge boulder in an open field. At the angle from which they viewed it, the face of the rock really bore some semblance to a human countenance--the features of an old, old woman.
"Ugly old hag!" was May MacGreggor"s comment upon the odd boulder.