A College Girl by Mrs George de Horne Vaizey (reading in the dark .TXT) đ
- Author: Mrs George de Horne Vaizey
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Ten minutes later the three girls had taken up their position in the kitchen garden in a spot which to the town-bred girl seemed ideal for comfort and beauty. The strawberry-bed ran along the base of an old brick wall on which the branches of peach-trees stretched out in the formal upward curves of great candelabra. An old apple-tree curved obligingly over the gravel path to form a protection from the sun, and it was the prettiest thing in the world to glance up through the branches with their clusters of tiny green apples, and see the patches of blue sky ahead. Darsie sat stretching out her hand to pluck one big strawberry after another, an expression of beatific contentment on her face.
âYesâitâs scrumptious to live in the countryâin summer! If it were always like this Iâd want to stay for ever, but it must be dreadfully dull in winter, when everything is dead and still. I shouldnât like it a bit.â
âNo! No!â the Percival girls protested in chorus. âItâs beautiful always, and livelier than ever, for thereâs the hunting. Hunting is just the most delightful sport! We hunt once a week always, and often twiceâthe most exciting runs. We are sorry, absolutely sorry when spring comes to stop us.â
âOh, do you hunt!â Darsie was quite quelled by the thought of such splendour. In town it was rare even to see a girl on horseback; a hunt was a thing which you read about, but never expected to behold with your own eyes. The knowledge that her new friends actually participated in this lordly sport raised them to a pinnacle of importance. She munched strawberries in thoughtful silence for several moments before recovering enough spirit to enter another plea in favour of town.
âWell, anywayâif you donât hunt, it must be dull. And lonely! Arenât you scared to death walking along dark lanes without a single lamppost? I should live in terror of tramps and burglars, and never dare to stir out of the house after three oâclock.â
âNo you wouldnât, if you were accustomed to it. Our maids come home quite happily at ten oâclock at night, but if they go to a city they are nervous in the brightly lit streets. Thatâs curious, but itâs true. We used to leave doors and windows open all day long, and hardly trouble to lock up at night, until a few months ago when we had a scare which made us more careful. Till then we trusted every one, and every one trusted us.â
âA scare!â Darsie pricked her ears, scenting an excitement. âWhat scare? Do tell me! I love gruesome stories. What was it? Thieves?â
Noreen nodded solemnly.
âYes! Itâs gruesome enough. Simply horrid for us, for so many other people lost theirâbut Iâll tell you from the beginning. It was the night of the Hunt Ball at Rakeham, and the house was crammed with visitors. We were allowed to sit up to see them all start. They looked so lovelyâthe men in their pink coats, and the ladies in their very best dresses and jewels. Well, it was about half-past seven; the ladies had gone upstairs to dress about half an hour before, when suddenly there was a great noise and clamour, and some one shouted âFire!â and pealed an alarm on the gong. No one knew where it was, but you never heard such a hubbub and excitement. Doors opened all down the corridors, and the ladies rushed out in dressing-gowns and dressing-jackets, with hair half done, or streaming down their backs, shrieking and questioning, and clinging to one another, and rushing downstairs. The men were more sensible; they took it quite calmly, and just set to work to put the fire out. It was in a little room on the second floor, and the strange thing was that it hadnât been used for months, and no one could account for there being a fire there at all. After a little time one of the men came out into the corridor, and said: âThereâs something wrong about thisâthis is not the result of accident! I donât like the look of it at all.â Then he turned to the ladies, who were all huddled together, gasping and questioning, with their maids and the other servants in the background, and said: âLadies! I advise you to go back to your rooms as quickly as possible. There is not the slightest danger, but it might be just as well to look after your jewellery!â
âYou should have heard them shriek! They turned and rushed like rabbits, and the maids rushed after them, shrieking too, but that was nothing to the noise two minutes after, when they got back to their rooms and found their jewels gone! They were laid out ready to be put on, on the dressing-tables, and the alarm had been cleverly timed to give the ladies enough time to get half dressed, but not enough to have put on their jewellery. Only one out of all the party had put on her necklace. She was pleased!
âWell, they shrieked, and shrieked, and some of the men left the fire and came upstairs to the rescue. Captain Beverley was the smartest, and he just tore along the corridor to a dressing-room over the billiard-room, and there was a man letting himself drop out of the window, and scrambling over the billiard-room roof to the ground! Captain Beverley gave the alarm, and the servants rushed out to give chase. It was very dark, and they could not tell how many men there were, for they kept dodging in and out among the trees. Some people said there were only two, and some said they saw four, but only one was caught that nightâan idle, loafing young fellow who had been staying at the village inn for a few weeks, pretending to be a city clerk convalescing after an illness. The worst of it was that he had only a few of the smaller things in his pockets, none of the really big, valuable pieces.â
âGoodness!â Darsieâs eyes sparkled with animation. âThat was an excitement. I wish Iâd been here. Go on! What happened after that?â
âOh, my dear, the most awful evening! The visitors had all brought their very best things, as the Hunt Ball is a great occasion, and they almost all cried, and one poor lady went into hysterics. Her father had been an ambassador and had all sorts of wonderful orders and things which she had had made into brooches and pendants, and they could never be replaced, no matter how much money she spent. Dinner was the most weepy meal you can imagine, and only one or two of the sensible ones went on to the ball. The others stayed at home and moped, and mother had to stay, too. Poor dear! she had to keep calm, and comfort every one else, when sheâd lost all her own pet things. There was one string of pearls which has been in our family for generations, and each new owner adds a few more pearls, so that it gets longer and longer, and more and more valuable. It would have belonged to Ralphâs wife some day. He was so funny about it, so disappointed! He kept saying: âPoor little girl! it is rough luck!â We said: âWhy pity her, when you havenât the least idea who she is?â He said: âWhy not, when I know very well that I shall know some day!ââ
Darsie smiled with politely concealed impatience. She was not in the least interested in Ralphâs problematical wife, but she was devoured with anxiety to hear further particulars of the exciting burglary.
âWell, well! Go on! You said they only caught one man that night. That means, I supposeââ
âYes!â Noreen sighed tragically. âThat was the saddest part of it. The next morning they found another man lying just outside the walled garden. He had scrambled up, holding on to the fruit-trees, and had then jumped down and broken his leg, and he was not a stranger, but one of our very own menâan under-gardener whom we had all liked so much. Father believed that he had been bribed and led away by the man from London, and offered to let him off if he would tell all he knew, how many thieves there had been, and give the names and descriptions of the ones who had escaped, but he wouldnât. Nothing would make him speak. We all tried in turns, and then the Vicar came and was shut up with him for an age, but it was no use. They say âthereâs honour among thieves,â and itâs true. He wouldnât give the others away, so the two were sent to prison together, and they are there still. Father says they wonât mind a few monthsâ imprisonment, for when they come out they will get their share of the money and be quite rich. Theyâll probably sail off for America or Australia and buy land, and live in luxury ever after. It is a shame! Father and mother feel it awfully. Such a dreadful thing to happen when you ask your friends to stay!â
âYes! itâs a comfort to have nothing to lose. Mother has one diamond ring, which she always wears above the wedding one, and thereâs nothing else worth stealing in the house, except watches and silver spoons, so that Aunt Maria need fear no qualms on account of her present visitor. No one will set her house on fire on account of my jewelsâa few glass beads and a gold safety-pin, all told! You see them before you now!â Darsie tossed her head and pointed towards her treasures with an air of such radiant satisfaction that Noreen and Ida dropped the effort to be polite, and pealed with delighted laughter.
âYou are a funny girl! You do amuse us. Itâs so nice to have a new friend. The girls near here are so deadly dull. You seem so full of spirit.â
âToo full. It runs away with me. I act first and think afterwards. Not a good principle for a working life,â pronounced Miss Darsie sententiously as she searched among the green leaves for a strawberry sufficiently large and red to suit her fastidious taste. The Percivals watched her with fascinated gaze. An hour before they would have professed the most profound pity for a girl who lived in a street, owned neither horse nor dog, and looked forward to earning her own living, but it was with something more closely resembling envy that they now regarded Darsie Garnett, weighted as she was with all these drawbacks. There was about her an air of breeziness, of adventure, which shook them out of their self-complacence. It no longer seemed the all-important thing in life to belong to a county family, attend the hunt, and look forward to a presentation at Court; they felt suddenly countrified and dull, restricted in aim and interest.
It was while Darsie was still conversing in airy, discursive fashion, and her companions listening with fascinated attention, that footsteps were heard approaching, and Ralphâs tall figure appeared at the end of the path. He was evidently taking a short cut through the grounds, and as Darsie was out of his line of vision, being planted well back among the strawberry plants, he saw only his two sisters, and advanced to meet them with cheerful unconcern.
âHulloa! Hereâs luck! Hasnât she come?â
âOh, yes! But it is luck all the same. Look for yourself!â cried Noreen gleefully, pointing with outstretched hand to where Darsie sat, a pale blue figure among a nest of greenery, her little, flushed, laughing face tilted upward on the long white throat, her scattered locks ashine in the sun. With the air of a queen she extended finger-tips crimson with the strawberry juice towards the newcomer, and with the air of a courtier Ralph Percival
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