Nan Sherwood's Summer Holidays

By Annie Roe Carr

Project Gutenberg's Nan Sherwood's Summer Holidays, by Annie Roe Carr

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org


Title: Nan Sherwood's Summer Holidays

Author: Annie Roe Carr

Release Date: May 20, 2011 [EBook #36176]

Language: English


*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NAN SHERWOOD'S SUMMER HOLIDAYS ***




Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, eagkw, Dave Morgan and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net









  NAN SHERWOOD'S
  SUMMER HOLIDAYS

  BY

  ANNIE ROE CARR

  [Illustration]

  THE WORLD SYNDICATE
  PUBLISHING COMPANY
  CLEVELAND NEW YORK




  _Published 1937 by
  The World Syndicate Publishing Co._

  [Illustration]

  _Printed in the United States of America_




TABLE OF CONTENTS


  CHAPTER                                    PAGE
        I  NEW YEAR'S EVE                       1
       II  SECRETS                             13
      III  PLANS AND MORE PLANS                24
       IV  DOUBT ON ALL SIDES                  34
        V  SURPRISE FOR EVERYONE!              44
       VI  ADVENTURES AHEAD!                   52
      VII  A MYSTERIOUS LETTER                 62
     VIII  OLD FRIENDS AND AN ENEMY            70
       IX  THEY'RE OFF                         80
        X  TROUBLE FOR NAN                     86
       XI  BESS HOLDS HER TEMPER               93
      XII  A SCORE TO EVEN UP                 101
     XIII  FRIENDS ABOARD SHIP                108
      XIV  A STORM AT SEA                     116
       XV  IN THE SHIP'S HOSPITAL             123
      XVI  THE HUNCH-BACK AGAIN               131
     XVII  NAN PUZZLES OVER HER SECRET        141
    XVIII  THE CAPTAIN'S DINNER               149
      XIX  LAND IS SIGHTED                    156
       XX  BE CAREFUL, NAN!                   162
      XXI  WELCOME, LASSIES, TO SCOTLAND      171
     XXII  EMBERON                            179
    XXIII  SCOTTISH GAMES AND SCOTTISH TUNES  187
     XXIV  AN ACCIDENT NEAR THE CASTLE        193
      XXV  JAMES BLAKE DOES SOME EXPLAINING   200
     XXVI  NAN'S DISAPPEARANCE                209
    XXVII  BESS HAS HER SAY                   216
   XXVIII  NAN COMES INTO HER OWN             225
     XXIX  LONDON ON HOLIDAY                  232
      XXX  THE KING IS CROWNED                241




NAN SHERWOOD'S SUMMER HOLIDAYS




CHAPTER I

NEW YEAR'S EVE


"I just can't believe it's true! I've pinched myself a dozen times. I've
pulled my own hair. I've looked at myself in the mirror again and again
and told myself that it is a fact, that I am I, Nan Sherwood of
Tillbury, United States of America and student of Lakeview Hall, and
that I am going to sail away next spring to Scotland to visit--"

The end of the sentence was lost in a muffle as Nan pulled off the
simple silk frock she had been wearing.

Bess Harley, her closest friend since primary school days, finished it.

"Emberon, the home of your mother's ancestors." Her voice sounded
unusually heavy. Nan looked around and immediately was all contrition,
for Bess's eyes were full of tears.

"Why, Bess, darling, forgive me. I'm nothing but a thoughtless old
meany." So saying, she wiped Bess's tears away and sat down beside her.

Bess caught her lip between her teeth and shook her head as she fought
for self-control. "I'm just an old silly myself," she half apologized.
"But I can hardly bear the thought of your going so far away from all of
us for a whole summer. And it's true you are going, Nan, as true as the
fact that Walter Mason cut in on more than half your dances tonight."

With this jibe, Bess' eyes twinkled, and she felt better.

Nan blushed. "Oh, Bess, was it really so bad? I told him not to, but he
said he was under orders to see that I didn't get into any more
scrapes."

Bess laughed. "You dear! Of course, it was all right. We all danced with
him--for a few seconds at least."

Nan looked somewhat unconvinced. Walter, she felt, was paying her rather
special attention these days and because she did like him, she hardly
knew whether to be pleased or angry. She succeeded only in being
embarrassed.

Now, a knock diverted her thoughts. She jumped up, but before she could
open the door, two of her other companions at Lakeview Hall entered.

"May we come in?" It was pretty little Grace Mason speaking. After her
followed Rhoda Hammond, her dark eyes sparkling with excitement.

"Oh, Grace, it was such a nice party!" Nan exclaimed enthusiastically as
she placed chairs for the two visitors. "Your mother and dad are perfect
peaches to have us all here tonight."

Grace smiled shyly. "It was fun for me, too. Do you know, I've never
before stayed up to watch the old year out and the New Year in! It's my
first New Year's party."

"And we'll always remember it, too," Rhoda chimed in. Then she looked
rather sad, for it was the first time she had ever spent the holiday
away from her pretty blind mother, her dad, and Rose Ranch.

"Yes," it was curly headed Bess speaking now. "We will. Would you
believe it? Tonight when I stood down there near the big windows,
looking out across the room, and saw you all with dishes of ice cream in
your hands, the clock chimed out eleven-thirty and I felt as though Mrs.
Cupp should come in, clap her hands, and tell us all to report to Dr.
Prescott's office tomorrow. That's almost always happened, you know,
when we have had a really good spread at school."

The girls laughed merrily. They had pictures in their minds of
everybody at the party dropping their dishes and scurrying away at the
appearance of Mrs. Cupp.

"If you feel too guilty," Nan looked across at Bess, "I'll tell Dr.
Beulah when we get back to Lakeview next Wednesday. Perhaps she can be
persuaded to impose the silent treatment on you."

"Oh, Nan," Bess laughed, "Remember the time she did that to you and I
tried so hard to make you talk. It was so dull having a roommate who did
nothing but shake her head when I opened my mouth and let out words of
wisdom."

"I don't remember," Nan tried to keep her face straight as she made the
statement and then paused before she added--"the words of wisdom."

The girls all laughed. Then there was silence as each one thought of all
the good times they had had in the past years. It was Grace who spoke
first.

"Mother will be in before long, I'm afraid," she said, "to tell us that
we must go to bed. Nan, before she does, tell us more about your going
to Europe. Just imagine--"

"Please, Grace," Nan interrupted her friend. "I'm sorry, but I can't
tell you anything more tonight."

With this, all the girls looked more questioning than ever and Rhoda
protested, "But Nan, you can't be mysterious about a trip abroad. We
simply couldn't stand it!" This was unusual coming from the generally
quiet Rhoda and for a moment they all looked at her. Her face flushed
slightly. The words sounded strange even to her. Could she be forgetting
those southern manners that always made her so mindful of others'
feelings? Now, as she saw the expression on Nan's face and then looked
at Bess, she guessed at Nan's reasons for wishing to delay talk of the
European trip. With her usual tact, she changed the subject entirely.

"Have any of you made any New Year's resolutions?" she asked.

Almost as quick as Rhoda to sense the reason for Nan's unwillingness to
talk, Grace answered the question.

"I've thought of a million things I ought to resolve to do, but it's so
discouraging. I never seem to be able to keep any of my resolutions."

Nan smiled her thanks to both of the girls, and then turned to Bess.
"There's one resolution we all ought to make," she said.

"What's that?" Bess asked as she tried to guess what fault they all had
in common.

"To be nicer to Linda Riggs when we go back to school."

"Nicer to Linda Riggs!" Bess exploded. "Why, if I make any resolution
at all about that girl, it will be to utterly ignore her when I get
back! Nicer to Linda Riggs! Why, Nan Sherwood, and after all she has
done to you! If I had her here this minute I'd like to slap her snobbish
face. Just because her father happens to own a railroad, she thinks that
she owns the world."

"Why, Bess!" Nan exclaimed. "Be quiet! There's no point in your talking
that way about her, no matter what she does. If you don't keep quiet,
I'll think you are as bad as she."

"Maybe so," Bess half admitted. "Just the same, I wish she wasn't coming
back to school at all. I don't think she should be allowed to after
causing that explosion. She might have killed us all."

Nan nodded her head at this last. It was true that Linda had done a very
risky thing in meddling with the steam valve in the basement of the
school.

"Yes, but even so, I'm going to be nicer to her in the spring term," Nan
resolved. "Maybe she has some good qualities we don't know about."

"Nan means," Rhoda interpreted, "that there is some good in all of us.
Perhaps she is right. Perhaps Linda has never been given a chance."

Bess snorted very inelegantly. "You can all turn the other cheek if you
want to," she insisted, "but I'm not going to. She's just a mean hateful
old thing, and I don't care what you think, Nan. I'm going to watch her.
You had better do it too, if you're going to live to go to Europe."

At this, Grace giggled. "Nan could live through almost anything, I
believe," she said. "Mama says she never knew a girl who at Nan's age
had had so many adventures and had come up so smiling from all of them.
Dad agrees. He thinks Nan has a charmed life, that she has at least nine
lives--"

"Like a cat?" Nan interrupted, for she was embarrassed at this praise of
herself. Now, her eyes twinkled as the girls all laughed. Nan was really
a charming girl. Her clear brown eyes were frank and trusting. Her
brown, bobbed hair, cut in a wind-blown style and brushed so that it
shone and looked soft and silky, gave her an almost boyish appearance.
But her quick sympathy, her readiness to help anyone in distress, and
her fondness for children made a real girl of her. Everyone liked her,
but Bess Harley liked her most of all.

Bess was a pretty girl with curly hair. Though indulgent parents had
spoiled her so that she was inclined to over-value the luxuries money
could buy, her constant association with Nan through the years had
somewhat remedied that. However, this New Year's Eve, she did feel out
of sorts. The thought of being separated from Nan was still new to her.
Moreover, she was envious. She had heard some place that Linda Riggs was
going to spend the summer in Europe, and she did not want Linda to go
any place that she couldn't go. Now, as she sat quietly, after
expressing herself on the matter of that overly proud young person, she
was really thinking of ways and means of persuading her parents to let
her go to Europe, too.

"Anyway," Grace brought the girls back to the subject of Linda, "maybe
Nan is right. So, I hereby resolve," she said solemnly, "to be nice to
Linda Riggs for one whole month, the month of January. During that time,
I will not say one mean thing to her."

"Bravo!" Nan applauded. "And you, Rhoda?"

But it was not Linda Riggs that troubled the pretty southern girl. She
had really never had any direct contact with her. So when Nan turned to
her, she began, "Well, Linda doesn't really annoy me. I simply overlook
her. But there is something else that does bother me. You all know that
when I first came to Lakeview Hall, it was hard for me to fit into your
way of doing things."

The girls nodded their heads sympathetically. Rhoda had stood apart
from them for some weeks after her arrival but they had forgiven her for
her apparent misunderstanding of them. They had long before forgotten
that she had been a "poor sport" at the hazing when she first entered
Lakeview. Now Rhoda herself brought it back to mind.

"I simply couldn't understand your way of making me welcome when I came
north," she said in her own soft southern drawl. "I puzzled about it for
a long time, sure all the while that you were wrong and I was right!"

Nan caught her eye and smiled. "We were mean, weren't we?" she admitted.

"Oh, Nan, it wasn't you," the loyal Bess interposed. "You tried to make
everything easier for Rhoda, but we simply wouldn't help you. Why, I
believe we were jealous," she ended as though the idea was an entirely
new one. "Girls, remember how Rhoda looked the first time we ever saw
her?"

They all nodded.

"You were lovely," she went on speaking directly to Rhoda.

Rhoda blushed slightly at the frank praise, but Bess paid no heed. "You
were dressed in the most perfect brown hat and coat I've ever seen," she
continued. "I'll never forget it."

"Nor will I," Rhoda ruefully agreed. "I have never in my life felt so
strange and so entirely alone. You were all talking among yourselves and
having a grand time. Everyone seemed to know everyone else. I was such
an outsider! And when Laura Polk addressed me as Rollicking Rhoda from
Rustlers' Roost, the wild Western adventuress that you had heard so much
about, I wished that the floor would open wide and swallow me.

"Since it didn't, I wanted to turn and run, run as fast as I could back
to Rose Ranch and the people I knew. Have you ever felt like that?"

"Many, many times," Grace agreed heartily. "I've wanted to run when I
flunked in recitations before the whole class. I've wanted to go away
and hide just dozens of times when things went wrong. I can hardly bear
it when Mrs. Cupp tells me before everyone that Dr. Beulah wants to see
me."

"Especially when Linda Riggs is there and hears it and looks as though
she was the most perfect person in the world," Bess chimed in.
"Sometimes, when I see her looking that way when you people have to go
to the office, I feel as though I'd like to tell all I know about her."

At a warning look from Nan, Bess subsided. Nan patted Grace on the
shoulder. "You mustn't take those things too seriously," she said. "We
all feel that way."

"But you just can't help yourself," Rhoda continued. "My mother has
always tried to teach me to have poise, but generally, when I feel as
I did that night, I forget everything she has ever said, and I act
like such a fool. I feel miserable afterwards, because I know how
disappointed she would be.

"Now, I want to resolve to be a good sport, no matter what happens. I
want to remember to stand my ground and not run just because things seem
to be unpleasant."

The girls were silent for a moment after this. Rhoda was so utterly
sincere that they realized for the first time how unhappy she must have
been in the days after her hazing, when for so long they ignored her.

"Well, I declare," the cheery voice of Grace's mother broke in on the
silence. "A good old fashioned round table, I do believe!" She had
entered the room quietly and now stood alone near the doorway. "I hate
to send you all off to bed, but it really is getting late. Tomorrow you
must all be up early, pack, and catch that early train for Lakeview. I
promised Dr. Prescott on my word of honor that I'd have you all back to
school on time."

At this, the girls got up, wished one another and Mrs. Mason a Happy New
Year, and then prepared for bed.

"It has been a happy, happy day," each one thought as she pulled the
covers up over her shoulders and fell off to sleep. It was only Nan who
lay awake. She was thinking of her trip and wondering what lay before
her. But had the others been able to see into the future, they, too,
would have lain awake thinking, and planning, and hoping.




CHAPTER II

SECRETS


"Where's Nan?" Rhoda whispered as she stuck her head into Bess and Nan's
room at Lakeview Hall.

Bess got up from the gayly covered studio couch where she had been
reading and opened wide the door. "It's all right. Come on in," she
invited. "Nan's gone away for the afternoon, down to old Mrs. Bagley's
to see how she's getting along."

"How did you manage?" Rhoda asked as she pulled off her pretty brown
sports coat. "Do you think she smells a plot."

"Oh, I don't think so. She's been intending to go down there for some
time, and today was the first free time she has had. I'm sure she
doesn't suspect, but we will have to be careful."

"I know it! Nan's so smart that she will catch on in a minute if we
make her suspicious at all." Rhoda lowered her voice to a whisper as
someone passed by the door. "When are the others coming?" she asked when
the footsteps had died away.

"They'll be here any time now," Bess answered. "I can hardly wait, can
you? I'm so anxious to get things started."

Rhoda nodded as she peered out of the double windows near her to see if
she could sight her friends coming up the long hill from the village.

"Anyone coming, Sister Anne?" Bess laughed.

Rhoda grinned. "Do you always feel like the sister of Bluebeard's wife,
too, when you keep watching for someone?" she asked.

"Always. For some reason, that gory fairy tale and Cinderella were my
favorites when I was a kid."

"I liked them, too," Rhoda agreed, "but they weren't my favorites, not
by any means. I was brought up on stories of buried treasure, tales that
have been handed down from generation to generation till no one knows
whether they are true or false."

Rhoda's eyes were alight as she spoke, and her face had a far away look
on it. She was recalling the tales an old Spanish maid had regaled her
with as a child. They were tales of bloody massacres, of hidden
treasure, of gold and silver and rubies and sapphires locked in heavy
Spanish chests and concealed in caves, of lost mines, richer than any
man has ever remembered, of wandering tribes who knew the answers but
would never tell lest the wrath of God descend upon them and wipe them
all away.

She sighed softly.

Bess sat quietly, waiting and hoping that Rhoda would talk more. But the
girl was silent, as she once more looked down the hill. "You're
expecting Grace Mason, Procrastination Boggs, and Laura Polk, aren't
you?" she asked.

"Yes, they've been the closest friends Nan has had here," Bess returned.
"So I asked them all."

Bess was right. They were Nan's closest friends, as anyone who has read
the complete Nan Sherwood series knows. Of all the girls, Bess is the
only one who has been with Nan since the beginning. She made her
appearance in the very first volume of the series, "Nan Sherwood at Pine
Camp, or the Old Lumberman's Secret." This volume opens with Nan living
happily on Amity Street in Tillbury with her mother and dad.

She goes to Tillbury High School, enjoys sports, makes good grades, and
is popular with her classmates. Her only real regret, which she
carefully conceals from her parents, is the knowledge that she cannot
afford to accompany Bess Harley to Lakeview Hall where they had both
always hoped to go together. Suddenly Papa Sherwood loses his job and
Mama inherits a fortune in Scotland that makes it necessary for the two
to cross the ocean, leaving Nan behind. The plucky young girl then
accompanies her uncle, a bluff, hearty lumberman, to Northern Michigan.
There in a series of adventures that follow one on the other in swift
succession, Nan clears up the mystery surrounding her uncle's title to a
valuable piece of property and wins the admiration of all whom she
meets.

In "Nan Sherwood at Lakeview Hall or the Mystery of the Haunted
Boathouse," the two girls arrive at the big boarding school on the
bluff overlooking Lake Huron and immediately find themselves in trouble
with Laura Riggs. In chapter after chapter of fun and excitement and
thrills galore we see the two girls at school. Constantly getting in
and out of difficulties themselves, they involve their new friends,
Grace Mason, whose acquaintance you have already made in this book,
Laura Polk, a lively red-headed girl with a vivid imagination, and
Amelia "Procrastination" Boggs, a serious soul with a roomful of clocks.
But perhaps the principal character is a ghost that nearly does away
with Mrs. Cupp, the stern watchful assistant of Dr. Beulah Prescott,
the school's principal. Nan meets the ghost and conquers it with some
help from Walter Mason, Grace's brother, amid much mystery and much
trouble.

This over, the Masons invite Nan and her friends to spend the Christmas
holidays with them in Chicago. So, in "Nan Sherwood's Winter Holidays or
Rescuing the Runaways" we see her continuing her adventures in the
biggest city she has ever visited. How she makes friends with a famous
movie star and solves the mystery of the disappearance of two young farm
girls who have come to the city to make their fortunes is told in this
volume.

In her next big adventure, recounted in "Nan Sherwood at Rose Ranch or
The Old Mexican's Treasure", our heroine and her friends meet Rhoda
Hammond a pretty, young westerner at school and accompany her to her
home, a big ranch, for their vacation. What a vacation that is! A raid!
An antelope hunt! A stampede! Lost treasure! And a pretty Mexican girl,
Juanita! This is a volume brimming over with new experiences.

From Rose Ranch, Nan and her chums return once more to Lakeview to work
and study. They do well, so when Mrs. Mason invites them all to
accompany Grace and Walter to Florida, they have no trouble getting
permission from home. In "Nan Sherwood at Palm Beach or Strange
Adventures among the Orange Groves" they all have a part in solving poor
old Mrs. Bagley's troubles, and Walter has cause to admire again the
boundlessness of Nan's pluck.

She is as generous as she is plucky, and so the Saturday afternoon on
which this chapter opens, Nan is down in Freeling, the village below
Lakeview Hall, working away in Mrs. Bagley's cottage.

"By the way, how is Mrs. Bagley?" Rhoda asked, in an effort to keep
herself from watching the windows so constantly.

"Oh, she's getting along all right, I think, since she got her money.
But you know how Nan is. She's always afraid something might happen.
Why, I honestly believe that she still fears that those horrid men who
tried to get the deed to Mrs. Bagley's property away from her might turn
up again after they get out of prison."

"Why, Bess Harley, I don't believe she thinks any such thing!" Rhoda
exclaimed. "You are the one. You know you have been frightened half to
death of the dark ever since Nan had those awful scares down in Palm
Beach!"

Bess looked guilty. "Well, maybe it is me," she conceded ungrammatically.
"But I do worry, at times about Nan. Sometime something's going to
happen to her--"

"Going to happen to whom?" queried a new voice and Laura Polk,
red-headed and freckle faced and homely but withal very likable, bounded
into the room.

In the confusion that followed the question went unanswered. Grace and
Amelia Boggs were right at Laura's heels. "Don't ask me why we are
late," Laura grinned impishly, "Or I might tell."

"That is just what I am afraid of," Bess replied.

"--And if you don't, I'll tell anyway," Laura continued. "We met a tall
handsome dark-haired man--"

"You didn't either," Bess interrupted.

"Well, then he was short and fat."

"Laura Polk, you know very well that you didn't meet any man at all. You
either lingered too long over the chocolate soda that you have spilled
on that plaid skirt or, and this is more likely, you relied on Amelia's
watch which is always slow."

"If it isn't old Sherlock Holmes himself! And what a disguise! Why,
Sherlock, if it weren't for your super intellect and your remarkable
powers of observation, which no one could mistake, I'd swear on a stack
of Bibles that you were Elizabeth Harley of Lakeview Hall, otherwise
known to her intimates as Lunch-Box Lizz. Really, Sherlock, you amaze
me," Laura continued as she turned Bess slowly around. "Amazing, truly
amazing."

Bess laughed and blushed. "Lunch-Box Lizz" was an appellation that was
hard to swallow, but she knew from of old that there was absolutely no
use in trying to silence Laura.

"Anyway," she retorted, as she winked at Rhoda, "You missed the fudge
that Mrs. Cupp sent up to us."

"If Mrs. Cupp sent you up fudge, then I'm a monkey," Laura returned.
Nevertheless, she proceeded to look around for the empty plate,
muttering the while that if Bess was any kind of friend at all she'd
have saved some of the loot.

Bess watched her for a few seconds. Then feeling anxious to get on with
the business of the day, she laughed, "There's no plate and no crumbs
and no fudge, but you're a monkey, anyway, Laura Polk."

Laura laughed, as the other girls joined in. "Well, you see it's like
this," she explained, "It's been so long since I've had anything besides
a chocolate soda, that I'm just starved for something good to eat. But,
Bess, since I wouldn't eat any old chocolate fudge even if you offered
it to me on a great big silver platter, will you please break down and
tell me what all the mystery is about."

"Yes, for Pete's sake," Amelia exploded, "What have you got on your
mind? You and Rhoda have been going around the last two days looking as
though you knew the answer to why Dr. Beulah wanted to know if our
parents were at home this winter. What a question that was! I wrote home
right away to find out what was up. What happened? Nothing. I don't even
get an answer."

"What's more, I don't either," Rhoda joined in. "Do you know I haven't
had a letter from my mother for two weeks now! I hope that if Dr. Beulah
has something to write home, she is getting more response than I am."

"Oh, we're all neglected," Laura dismissed the question. "What I want to
know is, what have you two companions in mystery cooked up now? Come on,
spill it," she looked menacingly at Bess.

Bess turned to Rhoda, "You tell them," she said.

Rhoda shook her head, "No, it's your idea. Come, Bess, they are dying to
know."

Bess cleared her throat. "Well--", and she looked around the room at the
girls sitting on the chairs and cross-legged on the floor. It was nice
to be there holding their attention.

"Bess Harley," Laura threatened, "Don't you go trying to pull any of my
stunts. It's all right for me to go round working up suspense, but I
won't have you doing it. I can't stand it. Are you going to tell what's
eating you, or aren't you?"

Bess got up, went to the door and looked up and down the hall, "Just
want to make sure that Linda Riggs isn't around," she explained.

"Oh, she's not here at all now and you know it," Laura laughed. "Come
on, you tell us your secret and I'll tell you really and truly what
Grace and Amelia and I were doing down in the village this afternoon."

Bess looked doubtful. "She will, honestly," Grace couldn't contain
herself any longer. "If she doesn't, I will. Now come on, Bess, don't be
mean."

"Can't you guess?" Bess asked. "Can't you guess, when you know as I do
that Nan will be leaving about the end of April to go away?"

"Can't you guess," Rhoda chimed in, "When you know that it's a secret,
that it's about Nan, that you are all--"

"Invited," supplied Amelia.

"That there will be food," Grace put in her bit.

"That everybody will know eventually," Bess added.

"That it's to be a great big surprise party on Nan!" they all chorused
together, and then laughed.

"Sh! Did I hear somebody at the door?" Bess broke in on the confusion.

Immediately everybody was silent. The room was quiet as a tomb, as Bess
got up and went to the door.




CHAPTER III

PLANS AND MORE PLANS


She clasped the knob firmly in her hand and opened the door suddenly.
Though she saw nothing, she felt something soft and furry brushing
against her legs. She turned white and screamed.

It was Laura who brought her back to her senses. "Oh Bess, be quiet!"
she commanded. "You'll have the whole dormitory in here. You'll spoil
everything. You are not afraid of a cat, are you?"

"A cat!" Bess exclaimed.

"Yes, a cat. What's more it is as frightened as you are!" Laura said in
great disgust. "How did it get into the building anyway?"

"How do I know?" Bess asked shortly, for she was still frightened.

"Now, there, don't take it so hard," Amelia comforted her friend, as
Bess turned to view her unexpected visitor.

In a far corner of the room, its back arched high in anger was a very
black, very angry looking cat.

"What's the matter, pussy cat?" Rhoda coaxed. "Did Bess nearly scare you
out of a year's growth?"

But the cat was not to be appeased. At the sound of Rhoda's voice
directed toward it, it moved, slowly, around the edge of the room with
its back still arched, however, and its heavy tail slowly curling.

"Ooh, it _is_ mad!" Grace exclaimed as she got up from her place on the
floor. "Better get it out of here."

"What do you suppose I'm trying to do?" Bess helplessly asked.

Laura took command of the situation. "Now, don't move, any of you," she
warned. "I've a way with cats."

"And it doesn't work," Amelia rejoined, as the black ball of fury
snarled at the red-headed girl.

"Well, I'll show you, Mrs. Cat, who is boss." Laura's temper had been
aroused. She grabbed Grace's green suede jacket.

"Get out of here--now," she ordered, shaking it before the animal.

The cat turned, leaped over a chair, jumped up on a bookcase, sprang
to the window-sill and pushing out the already loose screen, it
leaped across space to a tree outside, jumped to the ground and was
disappearing around a corner just as the girls, recovering from their
surprise, got to the window.

"Well, that is that." Laura pretended to wash her hands of the whole
matter. "Did I get rid of that cat, or didn't I?"

"You did!" Bess agreed emphatically, as she slammed down the window as
though to preclude the possibility of the animal's doing a leap in
reverse as she had seen swimmers do in news reels. "But will you tell
me," she asked, "what it all means?"

"Simply that someone left a door open downstairs," answered the
practical Amelia.

"And the cat smelled a mouse. So she came up here." Rhoda dismissed the
question.

"Oh, you two know what I mean," Bess exclaimed impatiently. "I don't
like black cats, especially when they walk right in on a party I'm
planning."

"You think it casts a great big black spell over everything?" Laura
supplied.

Bess shook her head. She was almost in tears.

"Oh, come, Bess," Rhoda put her arm around the girl's shoulder. "Don't
be like that. That black cat can't do you or anybody else any harm.
Don't be superstitious."

Bess smiled through her tears. "Guess I was more upset than I thought,"
she half apologized. "If that door is closed," she nodded toward the one
the cat had entered, "let's go on with what we were talking about."

The party! The girls now all sat down close together in a circle on the
floor. It was Bess who remembered in spite of her recent scare.

"Say, you two," she said, addressing Laura and Amelia. "You had a
secret, too. What was it?"

Both the girls looked guilty.

"You fooled me!" Bess was indignant.

"No, not exactly that, O Suspicious One," Laura denied, "But the truth
is that Amelia and I had thought of a going away party too, and we were
down in the village to find out about how much it would cost."

"Just a whole gang of people with a single idea," Rhoda laughed.

"And that idea is Nan!" Bess agreed. "Now let's get busy before she
comes," she continued as she raised her arm to note the time. The watch
had been a Christmas present and Bess was still self-conscious about it
and very, very proud. "It's four-thirty," she said. "We'll all have to
get ready for dinner shortly, and Nan will be here, if she isn't coming
already," she added as she heard footsteps in the hall.

"Sounds like Mrs. Cupp," Laura whispered.

"It was," Bess breathed a sigh of relief. "No one else rustles like
that."

"Good reason," Laura couldn't help adding. "No one else has a figure
like that."

The girls giggled appreciatively.

"How will we organize this?" Bess appealed to Rhoda for help.

"Let's have committees," Grace answered the question.

"I'll take charge of food," Laura jumped in with a suggestion.

"Not if I have anything to do about it," Amelia contributed her bit.

"And I'd like to know why not!" Laura retorted.

"Simply because I was just down in the village with you and I know what
kind of food we would get, if you did the buying, just one course after
another of chocolate sodas with chocolate cream, and then you would top
it all off with devil's food cake a la mode." With this, Amelia looked
significantly at the spot on the front of Laura's skirt.

"Oh, darling, let's make peace," Laura capitulated, "or we will never
accomplish anything at all this afternoon. I nominate Rhoda to have
charge of the food. Do I hear a second?"

"I second the motion," Bess replied. "All in favor say 'Aye'."

There was a chorus of "Ayes".

"The motion is carried," Bess, the self-appointed chairman closed the
question. "Now, who wants to take charge of the guest list?"

"Aren't we getting pretty high-hat with guest lists, and all?" Laura
asked. "Just ask the people to come. There doesn't have to be any fuss
about it."

"Oh, Laura, it's about time you grew up," Bess silenced her friend.
"We're going to do this party up right. It's not going to be a secret
midnight spread, though they are fun," and her eyes twinkled as she
remembered the one down in the boathouse at which they had entertained
Mrs. Cupp.

"Let's make this different than anything we have ever had before. Let's
make it dignified and have everybody wear party dresses. Let's invite
Dr. Beulah and Professor Krenner. Nan loves them both. I'm sure she
would feel very proud, if they came."

"Bess, you will have to hire a hall," Grace rather timidly interposed.
"How can we ever entertain all those people? They'll scare the life out
of me. Just imagine going up to Dr. Beulah and saying, 'We are going to
have a party, will you come to it?' What if she said, 'No!' Then what
would the person who had asked her say? Why, it gives me gooseflesh just
to think about it."

"Never you mind, little Gracie, you won't have to do the asking," Laura
reassured her, "We'll let either Bess or Rhoda do that."

"That's an idea!" Amelia approved. "Rhoda already has a job. Bess, you
make up a list of people you think we ought to invite and then you
invite them. It seems to me, though, if you are going to do it in a
grand manner, you really ought to write out the invitations, and that
you will have to invite Mrs. Cupp."

The girls groaned.

"That's right." Amelia stuck to her point.

For a second Bess looked crestfallen, almost as though she had rather
give up the party than have grim looking Mrs. Cupp present watching over
it.

Laura, however, cheered her up. "Never mind, Bess," she consoled, "she's
really not so bad, you know, after you have thawed her out with
something warm to drink and given her something good to eat. Really, she
can be quite human when she wants to be."

"At any rate, we don't have to think about Linda Riggs this time," Bess
said in an effort to find one patch of brightness in the situation. "My,
doesn't it seem good not to have her here this term!"

"Better than anything that has happened to us for a long time," Grace
agreed. "But let's not crow too loud about it, you never know when she
will turn up. Then you'll invite Mrs. Cupp, too?" she asked Bess,
looking as though she was very glad she didn't have to do it.

"I suppose so," Bess agreed half heartedly. "How many will we invite?"

"I've been wondering about that, too," Rhoda spoke up. "And I can
see no end to a list. Nan has so many friends that it is positively
embarrassing! We can't possibly have a dinner, even if Dr. Beulah and
Mrs. Cupp would let us. There just wouldn't be enough room."

"Nor enough money," Amelia added significantly.

"That's right," Laura stuck in her oar. "How are we going to get the
money to pay for all of this."

The question fell on a quiet room. No one had thought of paying for it!

Finally, Bess broke in on the silence, "Maybe I could get my father to
send me some extra money this month," she offered doubtfully. "I could
write and ask him for two months' allowance at once. I think he would do
it." Bess did have a way with her father and mother that usually secured
for her what she wanted, for she was an only child and they loved her
dearly. For this reason, she had no conception at all of the value of
money. "You seem to think," Nan often told her, "that it is something
you go out and pick off from bushes. Don't you know that people work for
money?"

Now it was Amelia who put a damper on Bess's generous but thoughtless
offer. "That wouldn't be fair at all," she rejected Bess's proposal.

"Why?" This from Bess.

"Because we are all giving the party, and we all want to help."

"Thata girl, Amelia," Laura applauded slangily.

"Why can't we," Rhoda began slowly as though she hadn't quite worked the
idea out in her own mind yet, "make up a list of people that we know
would like to do something for Nan--goodness knows, there's enough of
them--and invite them asking each one to contribute fifty cents to help
take care of expenses?"

"But we couldn't ask Dr. Beulah to give fifty cents!" Grace cried out
without even thinking.

"Of course not!" Laura agreed. "But we could make out a list of extra
special people whom we would invite as guests. They wouldn't pay
anything at all."

"That's perfect!" Bess chimed in. "That takes care of everything. At
fifty cents apiece, we will have some money left, and we can use that to
buy Nan a going away present."

"And Laura and Amelia and I will be the committee to buy the gift,"
Grace added. "And let's have the party on a Sunday afternoon and just
serve simple refreshments so that there will be lots of money left
over!"

"Yes, we want to get something nice for Nan, something that she would
never buy for herself and something that she will use all the time she
is away, so that she will think of us often," Bess added rather sadly,
for she wasn't quite reconciled yet to Nan's going away without her.

"Sh! I hear someone coming, and it's not a cat this time," Laura
whispered in the silence that followed Bess's statement.

Bess jumped up. "Everybody get busy," she just had time to say, "so
that this will be the very nicest party Lakeview Hall has ever seen,"
before Nan burst into the room on the conspirators.




CHAPTER IV

DOUBT ON ALL SIDES


"Do you think she suspects?" Amelia asked Laura as the two walked down
the corridor of the dormitory after working their way out of the
confusion that followed Nan's breaking in on their secret meeting.

"She's pretty smart," Laura answered. "We'll never be sure but I think
that Rhoda saved the day."

"The poise that girl has!" Amelia admired. "Every once in a while she
does something with such grace and tact that you can just feel the
generations of good breeding that are in back of her. She always knows
what to say and when to say it. She's a girl in a million and so utterly
unaware of it all too," she added half wistfully.

Tall, thin, angular Amelia had grown somewhat self-conscious about
herself in the days since she first came out of Wauhegan to Lakeview
Hall. It had done her good, however. She was developing into a less
abrupt, more considerate sort of person than she was when, as a newcomer
to Lakeview, she had taken part in the Procession of the Sawneys.

"Yes, she is unaware of it, fortunately," Laura answered. "She would be
an awful snob, if she wasn't. Now, take Nan. I don't think she could be
a snob no matter what happened to her. She's true blue all the way
through."

"That's because she has known what it is to be poor," Amelia replied.
"Her family has often had to fight to get along."

"Not even money would have made a difference," Laura maintained. "Not to
our Nan. Gee, but she's swell!"

But how "swell" she was, neither of the girls could really know, even as
they couldn't know what a big surprise the surprise party they
themselves were planning was going to be. Even as the arch-conspirators
talked and planned the days away, a certain lady that was head of a
certain school that you have all heard about in the Nan Sherwood books
smiled to herself.

"This school is so full of plots," Dr. Beulah Prescott said to herself
one night as she closed her office before retiring, "That I'm afraid it
is positively demoralizing." But as she said it, her grey eyes twinkled
and she looked for a moment as though she liked nothing better than
plots and plotters. "Now let's see," she paused as she put the keys into
her purse, "tomorrow I must see Professor Krenner and get in touch with
Grace's parents again. I don't see how we are going to manage about
Walter."

At the thought, she shook her head. Then she smiled again to herself.
"Problems, problems, problems all the while," she said as if she
relished them all.

Alone in her own apartments in the dormitory that night, Dr. Beulah sat
down with books and maps and plans and worked away until the small hours
of the morning.

"Is there something wrong?" Nan asked the next day as the girls left
German class. Bess started guiltily.

"What do you mean, 'wrong'?" she asked.

"Oh, I don't know exactly," Nan replied. "It's just a feeling I have
that there is something in the air. Say, Bess, is Dr. Beulah sick?"

Bess breathed a sigh of relief. "Safe again," she thought. "Why, not
that I know of," she answered quite truthfully. "What makes you ask?"

"I was up last night, late, sorting out some things that I don't want to
take away with me, because I couldn't sleep, I was so excited. There was
a light across the garden court in Dr. Beulah's apartment. I wondered
about it then, but forgot it this morning until I noticed that Dr.
Beulah was not in Chapel. That's quite unusual."

"I noticed that, too," Bess puzzled, "but then so many strange things
have been happening lately, that I've given up trying to solve them."

"Do you expect me to believe that?" Nan teased.

"Well, anyway," Bess half retracted what she had said, "I'm not as
interested as I once was."

"And why, pray tell?" Nan was curious now.

Bess blushed, but the postman coming down the hall toward the offices
relieved her discomfiture and perhaps saved the situation. It was hard
for Bess to keep a secret from Nan.

Now they both paused to speak to the genial old man who brought their
mail up from the village. "Anything for us?" It was Nan who spoke.

"Sure, and if it isn't pretty Nan Sherwood this fine mornin'," the old
Irishman paused to look through the mail he was carrying. "And pray,
who'd be after writing you in this springtime. Is it poetry you are
expecting from some good-looking young gentleman?"

Bess giggled and Nan blushed till even the tips of her ears were pink.

Old Pat went on fingering his way through the mail, "Dr. Prescott,
Professor Krenner, Lakeview Hall, Dr. Prescott again. Sure and she's a
fine lady. And another and another for her." He looked up regretfully at
the girls. "There's none for you today," he shook his head sadly, for
Pat did love a romance. "Sure and you'd better tell him where he is
headin' in," he shook an admonishing finger at Nan as he started on.

"But Pat," Nan and Bess stopped him again, "are you sure there's nothing
there for us from Tillbury?" Pat sighed and looked through again.

"So you'll not give up," he chuckled. "Well, let's see. Till--Tillbury,"
he almost spelled out as he looked at the postmarks. Nan put out her
hand.

"But it's not for you, girlie. Not today. Nothing for either of you," he
added and walked on, leaving two very crestfallen and somewhat worried
girls behind him.

At first neither spoke, and Bess swallowed a hard lump in her throat.
Nan put an arm around her shoulder. "Never mind, honey," she consoled.
"We'll probably hear tomorrow."

"But there was something there from Tillbury, I saw it."

"Oh, you probably made a mistake," Nan said, though she too felt sure
that she had seen a Tillbury postmark. "You're not such an expert at
reading upside down. Moreover, those postmarks weren't stamped very
plainly, and it would be easy to misread them."

"Nan, you might be able to convince yourself that everything is as it
should be, but you can't convince me." Bess stamped her foot. "Do you
know that something has happened and are you keeping it from me?" she
half accused Nan.

"Elizabeth Harley, what are you saying?" Nan was genuinely indignant.
"Here, I've been thinking all week that you were keeping something from
me, you've been acting so strangely, but I've said nothing about it. Now
you go and jump on me."

This brought Bess to her senses as nothing else could have. She laughed
and with remarkable control for her, carried the situation off and
allayed Nan's suspicions. "Oh, Nan, have you?" she burst out. "If I've
been acting more strangely than usual it's because I have been worried
about not hearing from mother. It's two weeks now, you know." And she
seemed so utterly sincere about it, for she was in part, that as they
pushed open the big doors of the class building they were in and walked
across the quadrangle to the Hall, Nan believed her entirely.

That night, Bess was alone for a second with Rhoda. "Do you know," she
confided, "I'll be so glad when this party is over that I'll be willing
to kiss Mrs. Cupp--well, almost," she qualified, as a picture of that
lady came to her mind.

Rhoda laughed. "I want to be there when you do it," she said. "But tell
me, why are you so anxious to have the party over and done with? I
thought you loved to plan parties."

"I do, generally, but I'm so afraid that I'm going to have a fight with
Nan before this one is over that I don't know which way to turn. We've
never had a fight as long as we have known one another. Wouldn't it be
just my luck to have one over something nice I was trying to do for
her!"

"Don't worry, you won't have a fight. Nan won't let that happen. Anyway,
the party is tomorrow afternoon, so there is only one more day to wait."
Rhoda's face was alight, for she, too, found it hard to wait.

"Have you been able to find out," she continued, "what it is that
Laura's committee has bought for a present?"

"No, not yet," Bess answered. "I've asked, but they vow they won't tell
unless they know what the refreshments are going to be."

"And I won't tell that," Rhoda confirmed a previous stand. "Besides, I
think it's more fun, if the committees do keep their decisions secret.
It's like Christmas when every cupboard and closet in the house is
brimming over with surprises."

"Yes, isn't it. Do you know, I'll bet I won't sleep a wink tonight,"
Bess admitted. "I'm so excited about the whole thing."

"Sleep tonight!" Rhoda exclaimed. "Why, I haven't slept for a week!"

"I wouldn't have either, if I had had your job," Bess admitted. "I think
it is the hardest one of them all."

"I liked it," Rhoda smiled. "How did your end of it work out?"

"You'll see for yourself, tomorrow," Bess looked mysterious, too. "I'll
just say this, Dr. Beulah is the most charming person I've ever come
across. She wrote the sweetest note thanking us for the invitation! And
she offered to help us in any way she could. In fact, do you know what
she's done?"

Rhoda shook her head.

"She's solved the problem of what to do with Nan until everything is
ready. She asked her if she would mind going down to the village
tomorrow morning on an errand that will take her all day. Then she asked
her to call Mrs. Bagley and bring her up here for Sunday afternoon tea.
And did Nan ever fall for it? It did my heart good. She's going to be
the most surprised person in this county tomorrow!" Bess rubbed her
hands gleefully. It was fun putting something over on Nan!

Sunday was a grand day, bright and clear and fresh as only an early
spring day can be. The crisp ruffles of the curtains in Nan and Bess's
room waved slightly in the breeze. Nan dressed herself in a fresh
looking dark silk print as she breathed deeply of the soft, warm air.

"Oh, it's good to be alive!" she exclaimed, "and this is one of those
days when you feel sure there is nothing but good in store for you."

"Maybe so," Bess responded as unenthusiastically as she could, for she
was afraid to let Nan even guess at her own excitement. "My only hope is
that there is a good breakfast waiting downstairs in the dining hall.
This being Sunday, I would like orange juice and pancakes and sausage
and some good hot cocoa with whipped cream swimming around on top."

"Ugh!" Nan made a wry face. "You and Laura Polk and your whipped cream.
I don't see how you can bear to have it for breakfast."

"Don't let it trouble you, darling," Bess was in an extraordinarily
pleasant mood, "we won't get it. You'll never catch Mrs. Cupp feeding us
whipped cream at any time. Says it's not good for our school-girl
complexions." With this, she went off to bathe and dress.

"You don't mind," Nan called after her, "do you, if I don't wait for you
this morning. I want to go to early chapel so that I can go down to the
village on the bus."

"Run along, and forget me," Bess urged her. "I'm going to take my own
lazy time about dressing this morning. I'm going to late breakfast and
late chapel and late everything. I've got spring fever with a bang."

So Nan went off and left a houseful of schemers behind her.




CHAPTER V

SURPRISE FOR EVERYONE!


At long last came four o'clock. Dr. Prescott walked down the big,
winding stairway of the castle-like structure that she had transformed
from a run-down neglected dwelling into a boarding school for girls. She
was proud of the school, proud of the work she had done there. She
looked up. Why, she was proud of every big beam that supported the high
ceilings!

As she entered the long reception room with its lovely bouquets of
fresh spring flowers and was greeted by Rhoda Hammond, she had a
momentary twinge of regret. "The girls were getting so much older!
Today," and she smiled a little to herself as the thought crossed her
mind, "they were acting especially grown-up." She looked down at the
lovely corsage of sweet-smelling violets on her gray dress and touched
them tenderly. They were a gift, a thoughtful one, from the girls who
had planned the party. Now, as she circulated among them all and felt
the excitement that there was in the room, she was glad that she had a
secret too. She looked across the room and caught Professor Krenner's
eye. He smiled and nodded. How nice everything seemed!

Meanwhile Bess and Rhoda and Laura were conferring near a big silver tea
tray. There were piles of dainty sandwiches on it, olives and pickles
and salted nuts, a plate of lemon slices with whole cloves in the center
of each, a bowl of sugar cubes with lovely silver tongs projecting from
it, a graceful silver pitcher filled with cream, and, off to one side,
pretty cups and saucers were stacked, waiting to be used.

"Oh, I wish Nan would come," Bess exclaimed.

"She'll be here any minute now," Rhoda answered, "and when she comes--"

But the sentence was never finished, for just at that moment Nan,
accompanied by Mrs. Bagley, appeared in the doorway, and with one accord
everyone called, "Surprise!"

It was a moment such as Nan had never experienced before. She seemed
stunned, unable entirely to comprehend what was happening. Then, as all
her friends came forward, smiled and shook her hand and Dr. Beulah
leaned over and kissed her, she seemed to regain her composure. But she
admitted later in private to Bess that she hardly knew all afternoon
what she said or what had been said to her.

There were one or two things, however, that did stand out clearly in her
mind.

Before the tea was poured, Laura, as chairman of the gift committee,
called her to her side, and, in the name of all those present, put three
boxes in her hands and told her to open them. From the first, Nan pulled
forth a gay corsage of daffodils which Bess promptly pinned to her
shoulder. How pretty they looked there! So yellow and bright! Nan looked
down at them, seeming for a moment to forget her other gifts.

Bess prodded her. So did Laura. Nan murmured a pardon and picked up
another box. It was the largest of the three, much longer and wider than
the first and was tied with a big perky bow which Nan proceeded to
untie, oh, so slowly, it seemed to her friends, for in her confusion her
fingers fumbled over the knot. Finally, however, the ribbon was off, the
cover removed, the tissue paper pulled aside, and Nan drew forth a
lovely long satin negligee, more beautiful than any she had ever seen.

"How lovely!" she exclaimed and buried her face for a second in its
softness, for she was so happy that she was almost crying. Then she
looked out at all the faces watching her.

"Oh, I thank you, many times I thank you," she said, before she looked
down at the robe again. It was hard to tear her eyes away from it. But
at another prod from Bess, she looked down at the third package on the
table near her. "Could it be--?" She opened it and pulled forth the
cleverest pair of little bedroom slippers! Everything was just perfect!

Nan smiled shyly at her friends. "What could she say?" In the pause that
followed, Dr. Prescott came to her rescue, moved over closer to her,
and, standing between her and Bess, she spoke.

"May I have the attention of all of you, for a moment?"

Immediately, everyone was quiet, expectantly waiting.

"What was coming?" The question was in everyone's mind. The girls looked
at Dr. Beulah and then at one another, as a million answers rushed
through their heads.

She smiled reassuringly into their puzzled faces, seemed about to speak,
but then paused as though to choose her words carefully. Finally, she
began.

"I don't know as I have ever," she said, "been prouder of Lakeview Hall
and all it stands for than I have today, and today somehow marks a
turning point in its history.

"You all know that my life has been bound up in the fortunes of this
place for some years now. When I first came here, there were about
twenty-five girls registered. We taught a little French, some music,
fine needlework, literature, and something of the social graces. Walking
was about the most strenuous of the sports for girls in those days.
Hiking was unheard of, for young ladies, I mean. It was considered quite
the thing to grow pale and to faint on the slightest provocation, that
is, if the young lady did it gracefully.

"Nan here would have been quite out of place in that old school with her
bobbed hair, her keen enjoyment of all the sports, and her interest in
Professor Krenner's class in architectural drawing."

The girls laughed. Although the course had been listed in Lakeview
Hall's catalogue ever since Professor Krenner joined the faculty, Nan
had been the first to actually elect the subject. The story of how and
why she did had long ago become a campus joke as those who have read "Nan
Sherwood at Lakeview Hall" are well aware.

Now, for the first time Nan herself began to see how really queer that
listing "Architectural Drawing" must have looked when it first appeared
on the catalogue. She giggled, as she thought of young women with long
dresses that trailed along the gravel paths of the campus taking such a
serious course.

Sharing the joke with Dr. Beulah, she smiled up at her.

"Yes, Nan would have been quite out of place there," Dr. Beulah
repeated. "Not one among those twenty-five girls was trained to take
care of herself. Here, today in the very hall where they sometimes
gathered for their lessons in "The Social Graces" and practiced entering
and leaving the room, using that door over there," she said, nodding
toward the doorway from which Nan had first viewed the surprise party,
"you girls of the modern day have planned a party for one of your number
who has had more adventures than those girls had ever dreamed or read
about.

"Whereas they walked, danced some, and fainted most expertly, you go
boating, hiking, horseback riding, and, in the winter, sleighing. You
play basketball and volleyball and golf. How they would envy you! Now,
your party is for one among you who is going to Europe. There, all sorts
of adventures await her. Just as Nan cannot imagine what these will be,
just as I could not have twenty years ago imagined this big school with
its two hundred self-reliant girls, you young ladies in planning this
party had no conception of what a big thing was going to happen to you
shortly.

"While you have been whispering and plotting among yourselves looking
forward to this day which is being so successful, I, too, have been
fostering a few secrets."

At this Bess looked over at Nan. There was an I-told-you-so gleam in her
eye. Nan nodded quickly. They were both thinking of their conversation
of a few days ago in the corridor, both remembering their disappointing
encounter with the old mailman. They turned their eyes back toward Dr.
Beulah's face. How sweet she looked! Nan sighed. If she would only hurry
and get to the point of her talk! Nan felt that she simply could not
wait any longer.

"Nan's parents," Dr. Beulah continued, "felt that they wanted her to go
to Europe under the chaperonage of some responsible person, and so,
several months ago they wrote to me."

This was news to Nan, and she was all attention as Dr. Beulah went on.

"I made inquiries of the schools and colleges which offer conducted
tours and was about to recommend that Nan join a party from a girls'
school on the Hudson that was going to England. However, before the
letter was written to Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood, Grace Mason's mother asked
me a question that has changed everyone's plans."

Rhoda Hammond put a reassuring arm around Grace, who blushed slightly
as all eyes were turned on her.

"She and Mr. Mason," the head of the school explained, "wondered whether
it would be possible for me to recommend a girls' camp for Grace to stay
in for the summer. Well, one thing led to another, and before the week
was out Professor Krenner and I were in conference behind closed doors.

"As a result, plans have been definitely made," her voice was clear and
firm in spite of the excitement in it, "for a whole party of you to go
to England this spring to see the king and queen crowned in London!"




CHAPTER VI

ADVENTURES AHEAD!


There was a murmur of surprise in the room as Dr. Prescott made her
announcement. She raised her hand to quiet it and waited a moment before
she went on.

"Much as I would have liked to have all of you go," she continued
finally to the expectant girls before her, "that was impossible. So, it
was necessary to choose those girls who have been outstanding in one way
or another since they have been here at school. Another year, there will
be more of you able to go, for I hope on this trip to be able to
establish contacts that will make exchange scholarships between Lakeview
Hall and similar schools abroad, possible. Therefore, to those who have
that keen desire to make the trip, to be explorers too, and do not find
their names on the list which I shall read presently, I want to say,
'Don't be too disappointed.'

"Most of you are younger than the girls who have been chosen, and your
opportunity will come when you are a little older. Then you may profit
by the experiences that we shall have on this first trip, yes, and by
our mistakes too, for, in a sense, we shall be explorers setting out for
strange countries. We are going to find out for sure whether the things
we have been reading and hearing about for these many years are true. We
are going to see whether, if we board a boat in New York and sail east,
we really come to a continent called Europe on our maps.

"Those of you who follow after, will but verify our findings and will
have as strange and wonderful experiences then, as we shall have now.
So, again I say, you will not be the girls I think you are, if you do
not, after the list is read, rally round those girls who are going. Help
them all you can. There is much to do between now and the time they
sail, and they and the school will need your help.

"Now after conferences with your parents and teachers, I have chosen and
secured permission for the following six girls to go: Nan Sherwood,
Amelia Boggs, Grace Mason--"

The room was tense with suspense as she paused to clear her throat, for
she was excited too, almost as excited as the girls themselves.

"Rhoda Hammond--" She smiled over at the girl, for she was fond of this
proud southern girl, so different, she thought, than the rest of her
brood.

"Laura Polk and--"

Nan put her arm around Bess' shoulder. The same question was in both
their minds. Could it be possible that Bess' name was not on the list?

"Elizabeth--Harley!"

The room was in a hubbub. Nan was kissing Bess and Bess kissing Nan;
Rhoda, shaking hands with Laura; Laura, telling Grace not to cry; Dr.
Beulah Prescott, looking as though her customary serenity was most
difficult to maintain; and Professor Krenner was smiling his kindly
smile on all of them.

Everyone shook hands with everyone else and the girls that weren't going
were so lifted up by the excitement that they hardly knew who was going
and who was not. In the commotion, Rhoda somehow or other managed to
pour the tea, and Amelia, Bess, Nan, Laura, and Grace to pass the
sandwiches and olives and pickles and cakes and nuts and candies, but no
one, as Rhoda dolefully remarked afterwards, knew what they were eating.

"The refreshment committee could have served mounds of spinach," she
said, "instead of molded boats of ice-cream, and no one would have been
the wiser." Maybe so. At any rate, the little round sandwiches, the long
narrow sandwiches, and the sandwiches shaped like balls and covered with
cheese, were all eaten to the last crumb. The olives, pickles, and nuts
disappeared. Finally, the ice cream and fancy cakes were all gobbled up,
too, so that when the matron of the Hall had the maid wheel out the
tea-wagon, none of Rhoda's refreshments were left.

It was quite the nicest party Lakeview Hall had ever had. That night no
one slept very soundly, least of all the six girls on Corridor Four who
were going to England for the Coronation of the King and Queen.

All rules, Dr. Prescott, had wisely said, would be suspended for the one
night. Though Mrs. Cupp shook her head lugubriously over the "goings
on", at ten o'clock that night Laura, Grace, Amelia and Rhoda found
themselves by one accord collected in Bess and Nan's room.

"What if it's all a dream?" Rhoda asked as they lounged about on the
day-bed and in the easy chairs. "What if we awaken tomorrow and find
that none of it's true, that it is as we thought when we planned the
party in the first place? What if we find that only Nan is going after
all?"

"That wouldn't be a dream. That would be a nightmare," Laura answered.
"The thing I can't understand is, how I managed to get in under the
wire. I was never more surprised in all my life than I was when she read
my name. Imagine me, the red-headed cyclone from nowhere, going to
Europe. Even my well-known imagination fails at the prospect. I can
believe some of my own stories quicker than this one that the powers
that be have thought up. Truth is indeed stranger than fiction. I never
thought that I would live," she said as though she was at least a
hundred, "to see the day when I would admit that."

"Nor did I either," Nan said contentedly. How pleased she was that all
her friends were going! "Remember the night we sat up like this in this
very room and talked of going to Florida. We thought nothing could be so
grand as that! Now the whole lot and caboodle of us," she went on
inelegantly, "are going on a little jaunt over to Europe."

"Yes," Laura laughed and tried to yawn, "it's all in a day's work."

"The thing that tickles me," Bess spoke up at last, she had been quite
silent since the party, unable yet to accept the fact that she was,
after all, going to Europe with her chum, "is the way Dr. Beulah kept my
name until last. Did you see the twinkle in her eye when she finally
read it off? I almost died of suspense when she said 'Elizabeth' and
then hesitated for so long before she said 'Harley'."

"I did, too," Nan said. "Really, Bess, if your name hadn't been on that
list with all the others I would have wept bitter tears with you. I
don't believe I could have gone without you."

"Nan, do you mean that, honestly?" Bess asked.

"Honest and truly," Nan reiterated. "But, girls," she cried suddenly to
them all, "there's something I know that none of you do."

"What is it?" they all chorused.

"Oh, I don't know whether I ought to tell or not," Nan teased.

"Nan Sherwood," Bess threatened, "if you don't break right down and tell
us at once I'll--I'll--I'll throw this pillow at you." With this, she
picked up one big soft pillow and raised her arm as though to pitch it
right at Nan.

"I'll give up," Nan capitulated amid much laughter. "Do you know," she
said slowly and solemnly as though to give her words greater weight,
"That Professor Krenner is going to Europe, too, this summer, that he
will be in London when we are, and that he will take us on some of the
sight-seeing tours that we are to take?"

"Oh, that's nothing," Grace Mason depreciated. "I know something
better, that none of you know. My mother and father are going to London
and they are going to meet us there before we leave! What's more, they
are going to take Walter with them!"

Nan blushed. She had been secretly wondering whether or not Walter was
going to get a chance to go to Europe this summer. She had been
reluctant to ask Grace, because she hated so to be teased. Now she tried
to be nonchalant about it.

"Oh, that's nice," she said, trying to act very much disinterested. The
girls exchanged significant glances.

"Yes, _isn't_ it," they emphasized.

Nan was dying to ask how it happened that Walter was going and who it
was that had told Grace, but she didn't dare to ask any questions. She
held her peace and hoped that someone else would solve the riddle.

For a few moments, no one said anything. It was like a mutual conspiracy
to tantalize Nan, but after a while, Bess' own curiosity got the better
of her. "How do you know, Grace," she asked, "surely no mail has come
through to you lately?"

"Not a particle!" Grace exploded. "But Dr. Beulah says that everyone
has been so busy with these plans, writing back and forth, checking and
rechecking on details, that there was no time to write just ordinary
letters. It was she who told me that dad is going over on business and
that Walter and mother are going along with him. Why, I'm almost as
pleased as Nan," she tormented her friend further, though she was
secretly pleased that Nan liked her brother so much.

"But tell me, Nan," she begged. "What were you and Dr. Beulah talking
about so earnestly in the corner over your tea. I wanted like everything
to interrupt, but even though everything was so informal that no less a
person than Mrs. Cupp condescended to congratulate us, I hesitated to
break in on one of Dr. Beulah's tete-à-tetes. I hope she doesn't scare
the life out of me, while we are away. Imagine, being with her every
day, eating--you do eat on a boat, don't you?--at her table, walking the
deck with her, and perhaps even sharing your cabin with her!"

Nan laughed heartily at Grace's last exclamation. "Why, Grace Mason,"
she burst forth, after she had wiped her eyes with her handkerchief, "If
you were dressed in clothes instead of those pajamas, I'd take you by
the ear right now and march you straight over to Dr. Beulah's apartment
and introduce her to you. She doesn't bite. She's one of the nicest, if
not the very nicest, person I have ever known. I can't imagine a
pleasanter person in all this wide world to take us on this trip.

"She was telling me," she added as an afterthought and in answer to
Grace's question, "that we are to go over on a steamship line that will
land us in Glasgow, for we are to stop first at Emberon. It seems some
distant relatives of mine want to be the first to welcome us when we
land."

"What fun!" Bess exclaimed. "All the words about going sound like magic,
don't they? Sailing, walking on deck, landing, and passports and visas
and going through customs. Do you know," she admitted, "it almost scares
me, when I think of all the strange new things that are going to happen.
Why, we will be foreigners in a strange country!" she ended in
amazement.

"Yes, and I hope they don't treat us as we treat them sometimes," Nan
added.

"Well, they hadn't better," Bess retorted indignantly, as all the girls
joined heartily in laughing at her. Bess laughed too, when she realized
what she had said, "What I mean is--"

"Never mind, Bessie," Nan comforted. "We know you are not as rude as you
sound, and that you don't mean half of what you say," she ended
teasingly.

"Oh, I don't care what you say," Bess returned nobly, "I feel so happy
that I am going to be on that boat with all of you that there is nothing
that you could say that would bother me."

"Not even," Laura goaded her, "the statement that we are going over
cabin class while Linda Riggs is going first class on the same boat."

"It's not true," Bess denied without thinking.

"Of course it isn't, Bess," Rhoda looked reprovingly across at Laura.
"No one has heard a thing about Linda for months now. She might just as
well be living in another world so far as we are concerned."

"I wish she was." Bess pouted somewhat as she made the statement. The
truth was that she was secretly triumphant at the thought that if Linda
was going to Europe, she was too. She half hoped that somewhere they
would meet, that sometime she would be able to embarrass Linda as Linda
had frequently, in the past embarrassed her. But even as the thought
crossed her mind, Nan whisked it away by saying, "I wonder what it will
all be like!"




CHAPTER VII

A MYSTERIOUS LETTER


"Oh, Nan, there's so much to do before we go that I sometimes think we
never will get started!" Bess exclaimed to her roommate one morning
several weeks later.

She was sitting on the floor sorting a boxful of things she had been
saving for her memory book and was holding the dance program of the
Grand Guard Ball they had attended during their first year at Lakeview,
when she spoke.

Nan did not answer.

"Nan, aren't you listening to what I say?" she asked without looking up.
She flourished the dance program in the air. "Doesn't this bring up
memories though," she said half wistfully. "When I remember what a jewel
Walter was that night, I'm almost jealous," she went on.

Again there was no answer. Bess looked up.

"Why, Nan Sherwood, whatever is the matter?" she cried when she saw the
expression on Nan's face. Dropping the things in her lap on the floor,
she got up and went over to the day-bed where Nan was reading a letter.

"Nan, tell me," she urged. "Don't sit there looking as though the
bottom had dropped out of everything. What's happened?"

"Oh, don't be silly," Nan forced a smile, "I just received a letter from
home and it made me homesick. That's all."

"You homesick!" Bess didn't believe a word of it.

"Yes," Nan reiterated rather crossly, "I began to think how far away we
are going and how seldom it is we see our parents these days. It made me
sad for a while."

Bess accepted the explanation without further comment. She knew that it
wasn't altogether true, just as she knew that it would be utterly
impossible to drag the real facts from Nan at the moment. However, she
determined not to forget the incident. But despite her resolve, it was
not until several weeks later when they were on the other side of the
Atlantic Ocean that the subject was reopened. Then it was not Bess who
reopened it, but a set of very peculiar circumstances.

Now, to further divert Bess' attention, Nan put her letter away, most
carefully, and began to busy herself about the room. So, they were both
sorting out their belongings when Grace broke in on them.

"What do you think?" She was breathless with excitement for she had run
all the way from the mail boxes where she had read the letter she was
now waving in her hand, "I've just had a letter from home and mother and
dad say that you should all come to Chicago with me for a few days
during the holidays.

"They say that it is almost necessary," she continued as she noted the
doubtful look on Nan's face and Bess' too. "Because you can take care of
your passports and visas much easier there than from Freeling.

"Mother says further," and Grace turned to her letter to read directly
from that,

"'Dad and I have at last given Walter our consent to take his car along
with him. He wants to so much! We feel that since it might be the only
time he ever makes the trip that we will let him do as he wishes in so
far as possible. So you and the girls may plan on taking a few side
trips to Stratford-on-Avon, Canterbury, Eton, Windsor, and wherever else
you have a mind to go by auto--that is, and this always holds true, if
Dr. Prescott is willing. You are to be in her hands entirely, you know.

"'Now, don't fail to keep in touch with me, Grace. I want to know at
every step how your plans are progressing.

                                                "'My love,
                                                      "'Mother.'"

"Isn't--that----just------grand!" Bess was the first to speak after the
letter was finished. "Oh, Grace, your mother and dad are so good to us.
Think of it, Nan, we will be able to take some drives over the lovely
English countryside in the spring of the year."

"I am," Nan answered quietly, though inside she was really more excited
than Bess. She liked Walter's car and had already had some pleasant
drives in it. Now, she could see herself in imagination skimming over
the English roads. "By the way," she turned to Grace, "when is it Walter
will be crossing?"

"Oh, not until several weeks after we do," Grace answered. "Dad's going
to be busy until well into April. But we'll all be together for the
coronation, I am sure. Did I tell you this? Mother says someplace at the
beginning of her letter that a business acquaintance of Dad's has
written that we may watch the procession go by from his offices. It
seems he is right down in Piccadilly and has an ideal location. The King
and Queen and all of them will pass right by there on their way to
Westminster from Buckingham Palace to be crowned. Then, they will pass
by, too, on their way back. Why, dad says that if we bought such seats,
we would have to pay at least a hundred dollars apiece!"

"Oh, Grace, what would we do without you!" Nan exclaimed. "That's the
biggest piece of news yet! Dr. Prescott has been having trouble getting
good seats for us, I know, for we put in our bid so late. I wrote to the
solicitors in Edinburgh who handled mother's inheritance just the other
day to find out whether anything could be done. It will be almost a
month before I can possibly hear, and I was so afraid that it would be
too late! Now, you have settled the problem entirely."

Grace blushed. She adored Nan. Praise from her sent her spirits skyward.
Now she returned to her original question. "Will you stop in Chicago at
the beginning or the end of the vacation," she persisted.

"Oh, at the end," Nan capitulated. "I couldn't possibly stop at the
beginning, I am that anxious to get home and see Momsey! There are at
least a million questions I want to ask her about all of this. I wish
the Easter vacation was twice as long as it is and that it was going to
begin tomorrow. Then I wish that we were leaving the day after vacation
ends. Oh, girls, I sometimes feel I'm going to burst!

"If you only knew how much I've wanted to see all those places Momsey
and Papa wrote about when they were over in Scotland a year or so ago!
They tell me that the old castle that belonged to the ancient Lairds of
Emberon is a queer spooky old place. Most of it is not in use anymore,
but there are a few rooms that have never been closed. These are the
ones that are to be ours for the time we stay there. Sounds thrilling,
doesn't it?"

"Thrilling!" Bess took up the word. "Why, there's nothing like this trip
ever happened to us before!"

"What are you people cooking up now?" It was Laura's voice that broke in
on them. "I declare, sometimes I think I'd better move my trunk and
belongings right into this room. Then I'd be on the spot when things
happened."

"My sentiments exactly," Rhoda chimed in as she entered.

"Late as usual," Laura observed as Amelia also came in. "Now tell us
what we've been missing."

"Oh, we're all to stop at Grace's in Chicago before we come back to
school. Her mother has a whole list of things that can best be done from
there." Bess couldn't wait for Grace to extend the invitation.

"Yes, that's the truth," Nan verified Bess' statement. "Now you'd all
better clear out of here," she laughed. "I love every hair of your funny
heads, but I can't accomplish a thing when you're around. Do you realize
that after all, we're at school, and that trip or no trip, we've got to
get through with exams before we leave?"

The girls sobered up at once.

"Ooh Nan, don't bring them up," Laura begged. "I just remembered that I
faithfully promised the French Prof that I'd prepare my lesson for
tomorrow. She declared today that she was utterly disgusted with the
assignments I had been handing in. Poor thing! I have been trying her
patience."

"And I and I and I," they all chorused.

"Now, get out!" Nan laughed, but never-the-less achieved firmness.

"Well, guess we'd better take the hint." Laura started for the door and
the others followed. "Bet I get a better French grade than any of you,
tomorrow," she challenged, just before the door was closed behind them
with an air of finality.

"Such people!" Nan laughed to Bess when they were once more alone.
"There's one thing I'm sure of--"

"And that?" Bess looked up.

"Mrs. Cupp is going to be so happy when the bus drives away from the
entrance of this school carrying all of us and our baggage, that, if she
were human at all, she'd dance a little jig of joy."

Bess giggled. "If I thought she'd do that I'd almost be willing to stay,
for that would be something worth seeing."

"Bess, there are so many things worth seeing," Nan took up the end of
the sentence seriously, "that I wish I were quintuplets so that I could
be in at least five places at once."

"You and me, too," Bess agreed, "but just now the one me that is here is
going to buckle down to work. Those exams are no joke."

So the two girls took out their books, and before long there was no
sound to be heard in the room but the ticking of the clock and the
occasional turning of a page. They studied until the signal came,
"Lights out!"




CHAPTER VIII

OLD FRIENDS AND AN ENEMY


"Welcome to our city!" It was Walter's hearty voice greeting Nan and
Bess as their train pulled into the busy Chicago station.

Nan caught her breath. How nice he looked! How much older he seemed. She
smiled up at him.

"You seem to have a habit of meeting us at stations," she remarked. They
all laughed, remembering Nan and Bess' first entrance into Freeling,
their first ride with Walter and Linda Riggs' consequent anger.

"And you seem to have a habit of going places," Walter returned as he
smiled back at them. How pretty they looked! How much older they seemed!
How pink Nan's cheeks were! Could it be that she was embarrassed? The
very same thoughts that were running through Nan's mind were running
through his. They both felt easier when Grace, Amelia, Laura, and Rhoda
descended on them.

"Come on, you old pokes," Grace said. "We've got things to do."

"Yes," Amelia contributed her bit, "and we're late already." With this
she looked meaningly at her latest acquisition--a new wristwatch.

"What, another?" Laura appeared to be stunned at the information.

"Yes, funny," Amelia wrinkled up her nose at her friend. "It was a going
away present from my dad. Don't you like it?"

The girls all crowded round to see. It was a pretty little thing, small
and oblong and tailored looking and it went quite perfectly with the
pretty tailored suit that Amelia was wearing. She turned it so they
could see her initials on the back and the date, all engraved in Old
English style.

Now as they crowded into the Mason town car and were whisked away to the
big Mason home, they compared notes on their visits. Nan and Bess had
been to four--no less than four--bon voyage parties, and they were laden
with all sorts of gifts from their friends and former class-mates at
Tillbury High School. Rhoda was the proud possessor of new luggage, the
gift of cowboys on her Dad's ranch. Amelia had her watch, Grace a
sizable check to do with as she pleased on her trip. And Laura had the
greatest surprise of all.

She had had her bright red hair curled so that it was like a soft halo
all around her pert little face! "Turn around," the girls commanded when
she took her hat off.

"It looks just darling, Laura," Bess said.

"Perfectly lovely," Nan agreed. "You'll be the belle of the boat."

"Do you really like it?" Laura sounded just a little worried as she
looked at them. "Do you think that Dr. Prescott will approve?" she asked
Nan anxiously.

"Of course she will," Nan answered confidently. "Why Laura," she said,
turning her friend's head around so that she could get a side view
again, "you've changed from an ugly duckling to a pretty young lady. I
don't see how Dr. Prescott could possibly object."

Laura grinned roguishly. "Do you know, when I look into the mirror, I
hardly recognize myself, but then when I open my mouth and hear what
comes out, I'm perfectly sure that I haven't changed a bit. Then I feel
utterly discouraged." She looked as woeful as possible, when she
finished the sentence, but nothing could disguise the fact that Laura
and the whole crowd of Lakeview Hall students were on top of the world.
It was a merry bunch that tumbled out of the car and into the Mason
home.

In no time at all, they had unpacked, washed, changed their clothes and
were coming down the broad stairway together for lunch. They stopped
midway.

"Whose voice is that?" Bess whispered the question.

"Could it be--" Nan paused to listen again,--"Dr. Beulah?"

"I'm afraid it is," Grace laughed. "In the excitement, I forgot entirely
to tell you. Mother asked her to stop on her way back to school, too,
and we are all to go together this afternoon for our passports."

"Hey, come here!" It was Nan's whisper again, arresting Laura who had
tried to retreat up the stairway as soon as she heard Dr. Beulah. Nan
caught her by the arm. "You can't do that," she said, "You've got to
face the music sometime."

"Just give me a little time," Laura entreated. "This is too unexpected.
Let me have time to think up something to say."

"Then you would be in trouble." Nan started down the stairs. "Come on,
brace up," she whispered.

At that moment, Mrs. Mason heard them all and came to the stairway.
"Come, girls," she called. "Lunch is ready."

Nan held fast to Laura's arm and advanced into the room.

Dr. Prescott looked up at their entrance. "Why, Nan, how well you are
looking."

"And--Laura! Why, Laura Polk!"

Laura looked sheepish and blushed, but for once no words came forth. Dr.
Prescott looked at her thoughtfully. Finally, the verdict came.

"Well--" she said slowly, but with a bright gleam in her eye. "I must
admit that though I have always been opposed to artificial curls, you
look very charming, Laura, and I don't blame you a bit for doing it.
Now, turn around so that I can see the back."

Laura turned.

"Yes, it is indeed--charming, very becoming to you," she repeated.
"Don't you like it, girls?" she nodded toward the others and in the
general conversation that followed, Laura regained her composure.

Lunch was followed by a conference in the Mason library. Then they were
all whisked off to the photographers to have passport pictures taken.
Each one was taken into a small room, seated on a chair, and told to
look straight into the camera. In a second it was all over.

"Don't they look just awful!" Bess exclaimed when she saw hers. "Why,
they can't use that thing to identify me. I won't even admit that I
posed for that." She laughed.

"But will you look at mine!" this from Laura. "I look like--like--"

"Like Puck," Nan supplied the word which Laura was searching for.
"Imagine the trouble we'll have dragging you past immigration officials
and through customs. We'll have to explain to every officer we meet,
'No, this isn't Puck. This is Laura Polk.' And they'll look at you and
make marks in their notebooks. Then they'll talk among themselves and
debate as to whether or not they should lock you up in a dark dungeon."

"That's the girl, Nan." Laura commended her friend, "And if they hear
you they'll lock you up with me. The United States Government will
protest--"

"Oh, no, it won't," Amelia cut in. "It will send word to keep you locked
up, two such crazy loons! Now, if we don't get a move on, the Passport
Agent's office will be closed and none of us will ever be able to even
leave the country!"

"What's this about not leaving the country?" Dr. Prescott came into the
room from an inner office.

"Oh, we were just teasing Laura," Nan explained, "about her passport
photo. They are all really very poor, Dr. Prescott. Do you think that
they will be all right?" Nan was genuinely worried.

Dr. Prescott smiled at her. "Don't fret, dear," she reassured her.
"Everything will be quite all right, I'm sure."

It seemed so. They went to the Passport Agent's office, stopped at a
bank to find out about foreign money, to tea--"so that we can get used
to having it in England in the middle of the afternoon," Grace
explained.

Before they parted so that each might do her own errands, Dr. Prescott
called Nan aside. "Will you do something for me, Nan," she asked.

"Of course." Nan was all eagerness. It was an honor to be asked to help
Dr. Prescott.

"Will you stop at the travel agent's on Madison Avenue and pick up the
portfolio of maps and time-tables he is holding there for me? You can't
miss the place, it's near the Wrigley Building, and it has a huge
revolving globe of the world in the window. It won't take you long, and
it might be an interesting place to stop."

How interesting and upsetting this errand would be--neither could know
as Nan waved good-bye to her friends and went off adventuring by
herself. Just as Dr. Prescott had said, she couldn't miss the Wrigley
Building, nor the window with the revolving globe. She stood for a
second watching it, watching North and South America, the Atlantic
Ocean, Europe and Africa, Asia and Australia, the Pacific Ocean merge,
one into the other, as the ball moved around. Then she tore herself
away, opened the door, and went in.

There, standing at a long counter talking to the agent, was Linda Riggs,
proud and superior looking as usual! Nan gasped. Linda turned, and the
two faced one another.

"Why, Linda!" Nan spoke first, but Linda looked her up and down, stared
into her face coldly and most rudely, and then, without saying a word,
turned her back.

Nan tried to cover up her confusion, as she went forward to claim Dr.
Prescott's folio. Could she have made a mistake? She looked again. No,
no one could mistake the angle of that up-turned chin.

"I'll take the cabin on the upper deck," she heard Linda say in her slow
affected way. "I want the very best cabin you have," she said, talking a
little louder so that Nan couldn't help but hear. "I always like the
best of everything."

It was really disgusting to hear the girl talk. Everyone in the office
looked up at her. She might have been a pretty girl, but instead she
looked over-dressed, haughty, and artificial. Two or three in the room
laughed to themselves and turned away. They did not even like to look at
her. Others shook their heads. Nan tried not to pay any attention. She
wanted to get out of the office as soon as possible. She asked for Dr.
Prescott's package quietly and would have gone without even looking at
Linda again, but that girl's own words stopped her.

"I beg your pardon," she heard Linda saying to one of the agents, "but
who is that girl that is leaving now. It--seems that I have seen her
someplace before. Oh, yes, she is the one who was caught shoplifting in
a Chicago department store." She said it loudly so that everyone could
hear.

Nan stopped. They couldn't say that about her. It wasn't true! She knew
it, and so did Linda. Everyone who has read "Nan Sherwood's Winter
Holidays" knows it. But here Linda was, declaring it was true in front
of a whole crowd of strange people!

Nan wanted to protest, but the agent who had given her Dr. Prescott's
package spoke quietly. "If I were you," he said, for he knew that what
Linda was telling was a lie, "I'd say nothing. Here, let me help you."
He took her by the arm and escorted her to the door. "Don't let it
bother you," he said as she went out.

Linda turned and followed Nan with her eyes. "What strange people," she
drawled, "one meets." No one paid any attention. They had liked Nan.

Outside, Nan held the package close to her side and lost herself in the
crowd. It had been hard, not answering Linda, but by keeping still, she
had won the day. Now, as she walked along Madison Avenue thinking of
what had happened, she remembered Linda's first statement, "I want a
cabin on the upper deck, the best you have."

As she thought of it, she breathed a short prayer. "Please don't let
Linda be on the same boat with us," it said.




CHAPTER IX

THEY'RE OFF


"Ticket--passport--traveller's checks--baggage tags--trunk keys." Nan
checked them off on her list as she put them into her purse. "There,
Bess," she said, turning to her friend, "everything is done, and I'm all
ready, absolutely all ready to go. And you?"

The two girls were standing in their room in Lakeview Hall as Nan asked
the question. They were both dressed in tweed coats and matching felt
hats. Around them stood their baggage, waiting for the school janitor to
take it down to the school bus. It was the day of all days, the day on
which they were leaving for Europe.

Bess looked bewildered as Nan put the question to her. "I--I--I--guess
so. I guess I'm all ready," she answered. "Do you know, I'm so excited
that I hardly know whether I'm going or coming. I can't remember what I
packed and what I didn't pack. I don't know--why, I don't even know
where my baggage keys are!" she exclaimed as she began to look
frantically around the room. "What will I do?"

Already she was moving pillows, looking under books, in the corners of
chairs, and around the floor. Nan joined the hunt and when Laura, a few
seconds later, stuck her head in the doorway, they were both turning the
room upside down in search of the keys.

"Say, you two," the red-headed girl began, "They're coming for your
trunks next. Be ready. We've just time to catch the train." With this
she disappeared.

They heard Rhoda's voice down the hall. "Everybody ready? The bus is
coming."

They heard Amelia. "Grace," she called, "Dr. Prescott says to come
downstairs. It's time to go." She sang the words out.

But it was not until they themselves heard the chug-chug of the old
school bus as it rolled up to the entrance and came to a halt that Nan
discovered the keys in the most obvious place of all, the lock of the
trunk itself!

Now everything was all right. Bess gave one more look at herself in the
mirror. The janitor came for the luggage. The girls took one last
lingering look at their room. Then they left.

The next morning they awakened in New York City to one of the most
exciting days they had ever had. Everything around them was new, for
none of them had ever been to this largest city in the world before. As
they came out of Grand Central Station, with porters hurrying after them
with their luggage, they were caught up in a rush of people hurrying to
work.

"Oh, Nan!" Bess grabbed for her friend's arm.

"Oh, Bess!" Nan exclaimed. "Did you ever see anything like it!" Nan's
face was shining. She looked around for the rest of their crowd, caught
Dr. Prescott's eye, and smiled. It was all so new and so much fun! Dr.
Prescott smiled back. But there was not time to say anything.

They piled into a big car and went threading through the heavy morning
traffic, under elevated railway tracks, past tall white buildings,
through narrow crowded streets, around big double decker busses, and
finally rolled to a stop at the wharves.

There ship after ship was lying in the docks. There were great big ones,
bigger than any hotel they had ever seen; little fishing schooners with
loose sails flapping in the breeze; busy tugs nosing around; and off in
the distance, a gray United States battleship was lying at anchor.

Everyone was hustling about. The place seemed one mad scramble of
porters, sailors, travellers, trunks, luggage carts, and taxis
depositing more and more people all the time. It seemed as though the
whole United States was sailing off for foreign ports. Unconsciously,
the girls huddled together. Dr. Prescott looked anxiously down at her
brood and realized for the first time what a task she had undertaken.
Then Nan touched her arm.

"There, Dr. Prescott," she said, "there it is, our ship."

Sure enough, there ahead of them, riding proudly in the dock was their
boat, the S. S. Lincoln. But before they could reach it, before Bess
could place her foot on the gang-plank as she had been seeing herself do
for weeks past, in imagination a familiar voice cried excitedly, "Here
they are! Here they all are!" and they looked up into the faces of
mothers and fathers and friends who had come to see them off.

Immediately the whole rush of the outside world was forgotten. Nan was
in Momsy Sherwood's arms. Rhoda was kissing her father. Amelia was
assuring hers that her watch was running perfectly. Laura was off to one
side talking to her mother. Grace was telling her folks all about the
trip from Lakeview. Bess was declaring to her mother that she had her
keys--safe. There were introductions all round and then the group made
its way up the gang plank, proudly and happily and a little bit
tearfully.

"Nan Sherwood--Miss Nan Sherwood----Nan Sherwood--" Gradually the fact
that Nan's name was being called sifted through the minds of the happy
crowd. It was Bess who noticed it first.

"Nan, why, Nan, they're calling your name," she tried to get her
friend's attention. At last Nan looked up.

"A telegram for Miss Nan Sherwood," the boy called again. Nan reached
through the crowd for it.

"Miss Elizabeth Harley--Miss Harley," the boy began calling again. So,
one by one, the girls received letters and telegrams, cards and flowers
and books, candy and fruit, gifts and messages from friends in Florida
and Chicago and Michigan and the West where Rhoda lived, wishing them "A
Safe Journey and a Happy Landing!"

Because of all the excitement, it was not until the cry rang out "All's
ashore that's going ashore," that Momsy and Papa Sherwood were able to
warn Nan. "Now," Papa Sherwood said, "Remember, there are--as I have
told you before those at Emberon who might want to do you harm. Some
there have never become reconciled to your mother's having inherited the
fortune. They might try to make trouble for you."

"Please don't worry," Nan herself looked serious as she answered her
father. "I'll be most careful."

"Careful, did you say?" Bess was at her side. "Why Mrs. Sherwood, of
course we'll be careful. We'll all be very careful." Then as she noted
the serious expression on both Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood's face, she stopped
short. Bess looked puzzled. Somewhere in the back of her mind there was
something unsolved that this reminded her of. She tried to remember, but
couldn't. It troubled her vaguely even as she kissed Mrs. Sherwood
good-by. Then she forgot it, for Nan was laughing and smiling and
telling her mother and dad to hurry and get off if they didn't want to
be taken along too.

Next, they were all standing at the ship's rail, waving with hats and
handkerchiefs to the crowds on shore. The ship's orchestra was playing
one last tune. Tugs pushed at the boat. Slowly and majestically, it
moved away from the dock to the harbor and the open sea, carrying Nan
Sherwood and her Lakeview Hall friends along with it.




CHAPTER X

TROUBLE FOR NAN


"Now what?" Bess was feeling a little forlorn as the big ship gathered
steam and the figures on shore faded away to nothing.

Nan turned. She had been watching the white sea gulls swooping in great
arcs down over the boat, missing it, and turning to swoop again. It
looked like such fun!

"I haven't the slightest idea," she answered, "but let's go and find
out." She took Bess's hand and went inside, down the elevator, through a
long corridor toward their cabins.

Midway, they were stopped by a white jacketed steward. "I beg your
pardon, Miss," he addressed Bess, "but are you Miss Sherwood?"

Bess couldn't find her tongue. Nan spoke up. "I'm Nan Sherwood," she
said, "Is there anything wrong?"

"How many pieces of baggage did you have?" he answered her question with
another.

"Two," Nan answered quickly.

"What were they?"

"A small trunk and a suitcase."

"The color?" He was making notations on a small slip of paper.

"Brown."

"Did you have them sent to storage or directly to your cabin?"

"To the cabin."

"Were they properly tagged?"

"Why, I thought so," Nan was completely baffled at the questions.

"Your cabin number?" He smiled at the girl now. "There's been some
confusion," he said, "and one of the other passengers is quite excited
about it. I'm trying to straighten out the difficulties."

"648. I thought my baggage was in my cabin." Nan _was_ puzzled now.

"Of course it was," Bess chimed in. "Your father and my father came down
and checked on that to make sure before they got off the boat. I'm
certain they said your baggage was there. Come let's look."

The two girls and the steward continued down the corridor to the cabins
where the rest of the Lakeview crowd was already at work unpacking.

"Oh, here they are now." Rhoda looked up as the two girls entered. "We
were just wondering about you. The angriest looking red-headed man we've
ever seen was just here demanding to see Miss Sherwood."

"He was near-sighted and slightly hunch-backed," Laura continued. "He
lifted his shoulders, puckered his brows, and peered at Rhoda as though
she was either hiding you in this cabin or lying when she said that she
didn't know where you were."

"He looked slowly around," Grace contributed, "as though you must surely
be here. I thought for a moment that he was going to open the cabinet.
But he hesitated and just stared at it. I'm sure he looked right through
those doors and saw that you weren't there." She shuddered as she
remembered the man's expression.

"Yes, and when Rhoda advanced toward that doorway, easing him gently
out, you know," Amelia too looked frightened, "his face got so red that
I thought he was going to die of apoplexy."

"Then all of a sudden he changed," Rhoda took up the story again. "He
begged our pardon, said there was some confusion about baggage, and went
away to find a steward."

Nan turned to the steward at her side. "Is that the man whose baggage
you are enquiring about?" she asked.

"Answers the description perfectly, Miss." He was all politeness. "If
you will pardon me now, I would like to see your luggage."

The other girls moved to one side and attempted to get their scattered
belongings out of the way. The cabin was small, and they had not yet
finished unpacking. Laura and Amelia, whose cabin was across the
corridor left--reluctantly.

The steward stepped over the other bags in the room and went directly to
Nan's trunk. He looked at it carefully, turned it over, and examined the
tag. Finally, he looked up. "I'm sorry, Miss Sherwood," he said, "The
porters have made a mistake. This luggage was meant for room 846 instead
of 648. See."

Nan stepped over the luggage, as he had done, and looked at the tag.
"No," she said, more puzzled than ever, "that isn't my luggage. I can
see now that it isn't quite the same color, though it is the same size
and shape."

"But where is yours?" Bess asked the question that was on the tip of
Nan's tongue.

"I'll bring it presently." The steward picked up the bag and walked out.

"Has the great mystery been solved," Laura asked as she and Amelia came
back into the cabin.

"Well, partly," Nan said slowly, for she was still puzzled. "I don't
see how Papa made such a mistake. I don't understand this yet."

"You would understand it even less, if you have seen the villain in the
piece," Laura volunteered. She liked mysteries. "If I were in your
shoes," she continued, "I wouldn't venture out of this cabin at any time
during the crossing and I wouldn't let a morsel of food cross my lips
until some one had tasted it. At night, I'd lock that porthole and bar
the door, and I'd never stay alone for a second. You're in danger,
lass." She shook her head sadly. "There's a deep, deep plot," she added,
as she saw that Bess seemed to be believing every single word of what
she was saying, "to do away with you. Only the utmost caution will ever
get you over this Atlantic Ocean alive." Her voice was deep and husky as
she finished the sentence, and her eyes stared ahead as though she could
see into the future.

"Oh, Laura, be still," Nan laughed at her friend. "You have Bess
believing you now, and if you are not careful, she'll be seeing
hunch-backed men disappearing into every cabin along that corridor."

Bess said nothing. Her busy mind was remembering Papa Sherwood's
warning just before he left the boat. "There are those at Emberon," he
had said, "that might want to do you harm. Be careful!" Again, as then,
she had a vague feeling that there was something that had happened in
the past, something strange and mysterious, that she ought to remember.
Again, it eluded her.

She shook herself, partly in annoyance, partly to bring herself back to
the present and cabin 648. "He's awfully slow in bringing that baggage,
isn't he?" she asked.

Amelia looked at her watch. "Yes, he's been gone fifteen minutes," she
answered. "Maybe you had better ring for another steward, Nan. There is
something queer about all of this."

"Yes, do!" Grace urged. "I feel rather frightened."

"Now there is no sense in getting all worked up over nothing." Nan was
the only one who really appeared calm. "Baggage often gets mixed in the
boats."

"Nan, will you please stop being calm, and do something?" Bess was
working herself up into a real frenzy. "Maybe someone has stolen your
luggage."

"Then you'll have to wear my clothes and will you ever be a sight!" This
from Amelia who was fully two inches taller than Nan and much, much
thinner.

"Or mine," This for Laura who was shorter than Nan, and plumper.

"I thank you all, but I guess I'll wear my own." Nan stepped toward the
doorway as a steward knocked.

"Miss Sherwood?" he asked. Nan opened the door.

"Why-y-y, yes," she answered, hesitantly, for it was not the same
steward who had taken the other bag away.

"Your bag, I believe," he half questioned as he dropped it inside the
doorway and left.

The girls could hardly wait until they had examined it. The number on
the tag was wrong just as the mysterious visitor had said, and the bag
did look much like the other.

"Nan, get your keys!" It was Laura speaking. "It looks to me as though
this lock has been meddled with."

"Right here," Nan opened her purse.

The six girls all stooped over the bag, as Laura tried the key. "Oh,
that isn't the right one." She was impatient at the delay.

Nan handed her another.

"Please, will you all move round so I have more light?" Laura asked.
"This doesn't seem to fit, either."

They stood up and watched her.

"Something is wrong, Nan." Laura moved to one side. "Here, you try."

Nan took the key, fussed with the lock a second, pushing and pulling,
until finally the case flew open.




CHAPTER XI

BESS HOLDS HER TEMPER


Nan said nothing, but sat staring at the contents, a puzzled expression
on her face. The girls looked from the trunk to Nan and back to the
trunk again.

"Everything is all right, isn't it?" Bess asked the question.

"I--don't----know." Nan answered slowly and doubtfully. "Everything
seems to be as I left it. Yet somehow it's all changed too."

"What do you mean?" Grace questioned timidly.

Nan looked up from her place on the floor into the anxious faces of the
girls around her. "I'm as baffled as you are," she admitted. "I can't
really tell whether anyone has touched the things in my trunk or not.
The underwear--slips--stockings--blouses" she touched each pile of
things as she named it,--"pajamas, and even the dresses, are folded the
same and in the same places as they were when I packed. I'm sure of
that.

"Still, when that case flew open, I had a peculiar feeling that someone
besides myself had been through it and touched everything there."

"Ugh." Bess shuddered. "Don't say things like that, Nan. They give me
the creeps."

"Me too," Grace was really pale. "Especially when I remember the
expression on that hunchback's face when he asked for you."

"What are you going to do about it?" Rhoda inquired. Generally calm,
Rhoda was seriously worried now. The red-headed man had looked mean.

"Yes, what are you going to do?" Bess repeated the question. She was
more troubled than any of the rest, because she had more reason than
they to be suspicious.

"Come, Nan," Amelia urged, as Nan sat, silently considering. "You've got
to do something."

"Oh, girls, I don't know what to do," Nan finally burst forth. "It can't
be reported. The whole thing would sound silly. The purser would
probably pat us on the back, tell us to be good, and warn us not to read
so many detective stories. I'm afraid that there is just nothing to do
but keep quiet and see what happens next, if anything. After all, it
might have been a very innocent mistake."

Laura snickered. "I only hope no innocent mistakes come walking into my
cabin," she said. Then she grew serious. "Really, Nan, I'm not generally
a fraidy-cat, but if I were you, I would be careful and watch out for
red-headed men. I can't for the life of me see why anyone in the world
would be after you, but strange things do happen."

"I will be careful," Nan agreed. "Now, I wonder what that gong was I
heard a few minutes ago."

"Girls, girls, girls!" It was Dr. Prescott at the doorway. "What have
you been doing? Don't you know that the second gong for dinner has rung
and that if you don't hurry you won't get anything to eat."

"Nothing to eat! And me so starved after the whiffs I've been getting of
the fresh salt air." Laura was up and out of the room before she had
finished the sentence. Amelia followed after. Ten minutes later the
girls were headed down the corridor to the ship's dining room.

"Have you got your ticket?" Nan asked as she held up a little red card
that resembled the seat stubs in a theatre.

"Ticket, what ticket?" Laura stopped short.

"The ticket for your place in the dining room." Bess was proud of this
bit of knowledge.

"Why, I never had one," Laura declared. "They never even gave me one."

"Oh, yes they did," Bess assured her. "Remember, after the purser
looked at our passports when we came aboard ship, he sent us to a window
where the dining room steward was sitting. The steward had a plan of the
dining room before him, with all the tables pictured on it. He looked at
us and at our passports and then gave us this little stub. Remember?"

Laura looked perfectly blank. "What will I do now?" she asked.

"Here, you take mine," Bess was feeling generous. "Since I know just
where to go, I'll go up and get another. You all start eating, though.
Don't wait for me." With this she was off to the purser's office.

"Come on, Laura." Nan took Laura's arm as the girl hesitated wondering
whether, if, after all, she shouldn't get her own ticket.

"Yes, or we won't get anything to eat." Amelia was slightly impatient.
"Come, let's hurry. There doesn't seem to be anybody else around at all.
Do you know where the dining room is?" she turned to Nan with the
question.

"I do," Laura answered. "It's up on Deck B. I looked in when I first
came down to our cabin. Just follow me."

There was music as the girls hurried up the stairway and in through wide
double doors. "Looks like a hotel dining room," Grace whispered as the
chief steward came toward them.

"Your stubs, please?" he asked and then escorted them to a big round
table in the center of the room, a table all their own, perfectly set
for seven people.

There was a low bowl of flowers in the center and a card which read,

                    "To Nan Sherwood,
                        S. S. Lincoln,
                            c/o Chief Steward.

"May each day of your journey be more exciting and more pleasant than the
one past."

"Who is it from, Nan?" Even Dr. Prescott was eager to know. She had been
sitting at the table waiting for the girls to appear.

Nan turned the card over. "Why, how nice!" she exclaimed, "and how
thoughtful!" Then she looked up at Dr. Prescott and the girls waiting at
their places. "It is from a famous movie actress," she said rather
shyly, and her face was all aglow, "whom I met once in Chicago. She's a
perfectly grand person." Nan was silent as the details of that meeting
rushed through her mind, as she remembered how an unfortunate encounter
with Linda had brought it about. As she sat down, she wondered idly
whether the summer holidays that were before her would be as exciting as
those winter holidays, spent in Chicago at Grace's home, had been.

"What's happened to Elizabeth?" Dr. Prescott asked as she picked up her
menu. "Not sea-sick already, I hope?"

"Far from it," Nan laughed. "Bess is too busy being an ocean traveller
to even have time to think of such a thing. Really, Dr. Prescott," Nan
leaned across the table and said earnestly, "you can't imagine what a
kick we are getting out of all of this. It's like something girls do in
story books."

"And the journey has just begun." Dr. Prescott smiled at her young
charges. "It all brings my first trip--I was a little older than you are
now--back to me most vividly. Now, what will we have to eat?"

"Oh-h-h, will you look at this menu," Laura spoke up now. "Not much like
one of Mrs. Cupp's--" she stopped suddenly and blushed. It was hard to
remember that Dr. Prescott, the head of Lakeview Hall, was present.
Laura looked up over the top of her menu, ready to apologize. But Dr.
Prescott seemed not to have heard. She seemed wholly occupied in
choosing the mid-day meal. "What a brick she is!" Laura thought to
herself as she, too, turned to the business at hand.

"Just one warning," Dr. Prescott cautioned before the girls turned to
the table steward to give him their orders. "You eat about six times a
day on the boat--" She paused as the girls gasped. "You have a big
breakfast, bouillon and wafers in the middle of the morning, lunch, tea
and cakes in the afternoon, dinner, and then before you go to bed, there
are sandwiches and perhaps something warm to drink. If you are going to
eat each time," she went on, "you'll have to be careful. Otherwise
you'll be spending the hours in your stateroom. There," she finished,
"that is my only lecture for the day. Now, do as you will."

So they chose--carefully, except Laura, who could not resist having both
French pastry and ice-cream for desert. "Bess will never forgive me,"
she spoke up after she had ordered, "if she doesn't get here in time for
this first meal on the boat."

"She ought to be here any time now," Amelia looked at her watch. "It
doesn't take long to get your table card. You don't suppose they lock
the dining room doors when everyone is in and that they won't let her
through now?" she directed the question to Dr. Prescott.

"Why, I hardly think so." Dr. Prescott smiled. "People are coming and
going all the time, you see."

"Bess will get here. Never fear." Nan spoke up confidently. "Let's eat.
She told us not to wait." As the lunch progressed, however, from soup
through a dainty salad and slices of cold chicken to dessert, Nan grew
uneasy.

"It is strange that she doesn't appear," she finally admitted, and was
about to leave the dining room and go in search of her when Bess was
ushered to the table.

"I'm sorry to be so late," Bess murmured as she sat down and unfolded
her napkin, "but I couldn't help it." Her face was flushed. She looked
confused and angry.

"Please don't say anything now," she begged as Nan was about to speak.
"I'm afraid I'll make a scene, if you do, but if ever I see that girl
again--"

She stopped short as the steward presented her with a menu.




CHAPTER XII

A SCORE TO EVEN UP


"Now tell us what happened!" The Lakeview girls were reclining in deck
chairs on the sun deck in the late afternoon. Dr. Prescott was in her
stateroom, making it more presentable, she said, so it was the first
opportunity to talk over Bess' experience.

Bess raised herself up and tucked the steamer rug more securely around
her legs. The April breezes were fresh, and rather chilly.

"It still makes me mad," she fumed as she yanked the rug around further.
"You can't go anyplace, not even across the ocean, but what that girl
turns up."

"What girl?" Laura feigned innocence.

"Linda Riggs, of course." Bess was utterly disgusted. "When I left you
down in the corridor, I went straight up to the steward's window. I took
my place in line with others, paying no attention to anyone. All I cared
about was getting my ticket and getting down to the dining room. I moved
along in line like the others and was just about ready to show the
steward my passport, when someone gave me a shove.

"Well, I wasn't going to stand for that, so I stood my ground."

"You mean," Nan interpreted, "that you shoved right back."

"Well, if you want to call a little push that, yes," Bess admitted. "But
if I'd known who it was, I would have knocked her down."

"Why, Bess!" Nan was horrified and amused. "You little beast! I'm
surprised at you."

"She's always getting us into trouble." Bess was indignant all over
again. "There I was, minding my own business, thinking nice thoughts,
and having quite a perfect time. No one was farther from my concern than
she. And what happens? She walks right into me, pushes me aside, never
begs my pardon, and presents her passport first."

"Then what did you do?" Laura asked. She was as amused as Nan.

"What could I do?" Bess inquired sharply. "I couldn't fight with her
there in front of all those people. She had the advantage and knew it.
She's the most unfair person I've ever come across. I hate her!"

"Was that all that happened?" Laura was reluctant to let the subject
drop.

"All! Wasn't that enough?" Bess exploded again.

"Well--yes." Laura admitted. "But don't you know anything more about
her. Did you leave right away?"

"Of course not!" Bess answered resentfully. "How could I? I didn't even
have my check yet for the table. There wasn't anything to do," she added
regretfully, "except to take a place behind her in line and listen to
her make her demands of the steward."

"Now we are getting someplace," Laura leaned forward as Bess let drop
this piece of information. "What did you find out about her?"

Nan shook her head at this line of conversation. She did not approve of
eavesdropping. But no one paid any attention to her.

"Oh, it makes me angry all over again to think of it," Bess jerked at
the steamer rug again. "As I said before, she didn't pay any attention
to me. I might have been just anyone."

"She gave the steward her passport, stepped back slightly, almost
treading on my feet, and looked at him through a lorget--"

"You mean lorgnette," Laura interrupted, "but it doesn't matter. Go
ahead."

"Lorgnette, then," Bess corrected. "Anyway, she looked at the steward
through it as though he had been put there just to do as she ordered, as
though he was a puppet that she could dangle as she wished.

"You know how she does it in that stuck-up way of hers. Why, if I had
been him, I would have thrown the plans right in her face. But he was
just as meek as I am before Mrs. Cupp, the fool!"

"Bess, do be careful," Nan put a restraining hand over her mouth, "other
people will hear you."

Bess lowered her voice as she went on. "She told him that he had made a
mistake, a perfectly dreadful mistake. Devastating, I think, was the
word she used--whatever that means. At any rate, he had given her a stub
for a table down here in Tourist Class."

"And, my dears, Linda Riggs," Bess mimicked Linda's voice as she
continued, "the daughter of the great railway magnate, never has
anything but the best, the very best, when she travels."

At this Nan hooted. She was remembering her own encounter with Linda at
the travel agent's a few weeks previously.

"And then--" Laura wanted more about this exciting encounter.

"Then he begged her pardon. Can you imagine that?" Bess looked at her
friends for an answer. There was none. "Gave her a new stub, asked her
if there was anything else he could do for her, and all but personally
escorted her back to First Class.

"She didn't even thank him for his trouble. She just turned, looked some
of the people up and down as though they were curiosities in a zoo, and
swept over to the elevator."

"What? She didn't walk on you again," Laura was purposely baiting Bess
now.

"I should say not!" Bess answered emphatically. "Before she turned, I
stepped way back so that there wasn't any more danger of that."

"Good for you, Bess," Rhoda now spoke up for the first time.

"It seems to me," Nan grinned impishly as she thought about it, "That
one or two of us made a New Year's resolution about Linda Riggs.
Remember Bess?"

"Remember, why should I remember?" Bess asked. "I never in all this wide
world made a resolution about Linda, unless it was to get even with her
for the times she has embarrassed us."

"Oh, but Bess," Nan pursued her train of thought, "You remember how,
after the New Year's Eve party at Grace's, we went up to our room and
made resolutions?"

"You did." Bess corrected her abruptly and very positively. "You and
Grace said that for one month you would be nice to Linda, no matter what
happened. Then Linda never did come back to school, so it didn't count."

"Anyway," Nan attempted to dismiss the unpleasant subject, "There's no
reason why she should bother us. She's up in First Class."

"Yes, and we're down here in Tourist." It was a sore point with Bess,
who was always irritated when Linda was able to show her superiority in
money matters. Bess wanted most intensely to be able to look down on
Linda. She wanted to have something so much better than Linda that the
arrogant girl would envy her.

"Even so," Nan resolved as she rose from her deck chair, "I'm not going
to let her spoil my trip. Come," she half coaxed, "Come, Bess, let's all
take a turn about deck."

"Yes, let's," Grace encouraged, "I'd like to walk once, clear around the
boat."

"But you can't," Laura supplied the information, as she looked at Bess,
"You can walk only so far and then there's a gate that separates you
from first class."

"Please, forget it!" Nan looked reprovingly at Laura. "Come with me,"
she invited again. "I know a place where you can stoop under some
rigging and come out on a little part of the deck that's almost like a
balcony with the ocean below it and nothing but the sky above."

"And I know a place," Rhoda contributed, "where you can get way up
front, so that you are at the prow of the boat. When you stand there,
you feel as though you yourself are cutting through the water."

"A mermaid at large." Laura laughed. "I know that place, too. I found it
right after lunch and thought, until now, that it was my private
property."

"But I know a place that's even better than that," Grace boasted. "It's
a large room with portholes all along both ends. There are tables in
it--"

"And tea and cakes for all who come," Laura finished. "Let's go there."

They went, but neither tea nor cakes could make Bess forget that she
had a score to even up with Linda.




CHAPTER XIII

FRIENDS ABOARD SHIP


"Hello, down there!" Nan stretched her head over the edge of her berth
and looked down to the bunk below where Bess was still sleeping. "Hello,
I say," she repeated a little louder when the first call brought no
response. Then she waited. She could feel the vibration of the great
ship as it forged ahead and hear faintly the steady throb of its
engines. It was nice to be getting someplace, she thought, even while
you were asleep.

"Hello!" Nan called again. "You awake?"

Bess rubbed her eyes and leaned out so she could see Nan above. "Of
course I am," she declared. "How long have you been awake?"

"Oh, for hours and hours," Nan responded. "I heard the first gong for
breakfast and then the second. After that I went back to sleep."

"You didn't either!" Bess was really awake now. "But if you did," she
continued half hopefully, "it's too late to get breakfast in the
dining-room, so we'll just have to ring that bell over there by the door
and ask the stewardess to bring our breakfast to the cabin. Just think
of being able to order anything you want and having it brought to you on
a big tray!"

Bess stretched luxuriously and then turned over on her side. "You know,"
she said, "I feel like a movie queen. My pajamas are of satin and fine
lace. My robe is long and trailing with marabou around the neck. These
bed covers are made of silk and down, and your bunk up there is not
really a bunk. It's the canopy of my bed."

Nan looked over the side. "I beg your pardon?" she asked as though she
hadn't heard.

Bess started to repeat, "Your bunk is the canopy"--but didn't finish,
for Nan was up and on her way down the ladder which stretched from the
floor to her upper berth.

"I can't sleep any longer on this canopy," she laughed. "Moreover, I'm
starved and a tray would never hold all I'm going to eat this morning.
You may stay here, my movie queen, and eat daintily from a tray while
your back is propped comfortably against pillows. I want bacon and
eggs," she finished, as she opened the wardrobe at the end of the berths
and took out a skirt and bright sweater.

"You may spend your morning in the cabin," she went on, washing and
dressing the while, "but I'm going out on the deck and see what's
doing." She combed her hair before the mirror over the washstands and
sat down at a small dressing table while she tied a three-cornered scarf
around her head. With a small hand mirror, she looked at it from all
sides, and then pulled a wisp of hair out at the front and looked again.
Satisfied, she put the mirror down, blew a kiss to her lazy chum, and
was off.

Not waiting for the elevator, she walked up the stairs, opened a door,
and stepped out. The morning sun was already high above the horizon, and
the deck was bright with its light. Nan squinted her eyes. Then, as she
became accustomed to the dazzle and opened them wide, she saw
approaching her a merry looking, pleasant person, the ship's hostess.

"You are--" the stranger paused and smiled at Nan.

"Nan Sherwood." With this Nan was introduced to a group of young people
her own age.

First, there was Hetty Warren, a young English girl whom Nan liked
right away. She had blond hair and blue eyes and a complexion even
fairer than that of most English girls. She had, she told Nan a little
wistfully, just left her parents in Washington, where her father was a
member of the English Embassy. Her grandmother was taking her back to
London to witness an event which she said, no grandchild of hers would
ever miss, the crowning of the new King and Queen.

Then, there was Jeanie MacFarland, a brown-eyed Scotch lass whose
father, she said proudly, was on the Edinburgh committee to buy a gift
for the king. And Maureen O'Grady, Irish as her name, headed first for
home and then for London. Her mother was helping to make the lace for
the Queen's train.

Oh, they all had stories, these girls. One had lived once in far away
India, in Bombay. Another, in the British colony in Shanghai. The father
of one was a caretaker at the King's favorite castle and the brother of
another, a lieutenant in His Majesty's Fleet stationed at Gibraltar.

They were coming from all corners of the world, Nan found, to be in
England in May, to see the King and Queen parade in a golden coach from
Buckingham Palace to Westminster Cathedral, to attend the balls and the
garden parties and the Colonial fairs, to see the King review the
British fleet at Spithead and hear the crowds cheer the pretty little
princess at her party for the English school children. Everyone, young
and old, Hetty's grandmother said, was to have a part in the joyous
week.

School children throughout the Empire were to have seven days of
vacation. "Boy Scouts from Australia and India and British South Africa
are even now," she told Nan, "coming on boats to act as a special guard
for the little prince. Others, in England and Scotland have charge of
the tremendously big bonfires that will be lighted on each hilltop the
night after the king and queen are crowned. These beacon fires will
proclaim to everyone that a new King and Queen have come to the throne.
And, with the lighting of the fires, the people all over the British
Empire will sing 'God Save the King.'"

"Yes, and the Girl Scouts," Hetty went on, "are having a big party in
the gardens of Buckingham Palace. The little princess will be there and
the Queen too. A thousand poor children have been invited and the
princess has a gift for each one. They have a gift for the princess too,
and one for the Queen. Oh, I can hardly wait until the big day arrives."

"And," Jeanie contributed, "All over Scotland, the wee lassies and
laddies have each given a tuppence piece to their school teachers. When
the King and Queen come to Edinburgh after the golden crowns have been
put on their heads, all this money will be put in a golden bag and
presented to the Queen. Her Majesty will use it to help the children
whose fathers were killed in the wars. An orphan from one of Her
Majesty's orphanages will present it at a banquet which the Lord Mayor
will give."

"Will you be there?" Nan was wide-eyed,

"If I only could." Jeanie's voice was full of longing.

"If we only could," Hetty echoed the statement and included everybody.

"But it's not for the likes of us," Maureen shook her head as everyone
fell silent. "It's for the great ladies, they who live up in the castles
on the hills and in the palaces in the cities. They were born to such
things. No, it's not for the likes of us," she repeated.

"Don't, Maureen," Hetty said earnestly. "Don't say that. Don't say it
isn't for the likes of us!"

Hetty's grandmother smiled at the seriousness of her grand-daughter.
"Hetty is remembering," she said, "the time the Queen stopped at our
country cottage."

"Were you there?" The girls all looked at Hetty.

"No, it was before she was born," the bright-eyed old lady went on. "It
was back in the days of the good Queen Victoria before people drove
around in gasoline buggies." She stopped as though she had finished, but
Nan saw a twinkle in her eye.

"Please go on," she begged. "Please tell us all about it."

"Now, Grandmother," Hetty laughed, "you know you want to."

The old lady ruffled her grand-daughter's hair playfully, as she
continued, "We were sitting in the kitchen, my mother and I. She, like
the model housewife she was, God bless her soul, was scouring pots and
pans and giving me a few instructions on the proper behavior of a young
lady.

"'Mind what I say about your curiosity,' she was telling me, when a
crash outside interrupted. She dropped everything, making such a clatter
as I've never heard since and nearly fell over me in her anxiety to get
to the window.

"'Glory be!' I heard her exclaim and ran after her. There, in front of
the house a big coach had broken down. Two coachmen had climbed down
from their high seats and were helping three ladies out the door and up
the path to our house.

"My mother whisked off her blue checked apron, smoothed down her hair
and opened the door. I stood back--afrighted, as the three grand ladies
came into the front parlor. Then I disappeared back into the kitchen.
Mother made tea and gave them shortbread and was so a-flutter herself
that she broke one of her company dishes.

"They wanted to pay for it, but she wouldn't let them. She said it was
nothing at all. After they went, I saw her wiping a tear out of her eye
and she scoured the pans harder than she ever scoured them before. That
night she told my father that she was never going to pay any attention
to any big coaches again.

"But weeks later when another big coach stopped in front of the house,
she was at the door again. This time a man came and left a big box.
Mother said it wasn't for her, but he insisted it was. Finally, she
accepted it, and he had hardly driven away, before she and I were
opening it." The old lady paused here to enjoy the eager faces of the
young girls around her. Then she cleared her throat and went on.

"Inside we found a dozen dainty cups and saucers and a card. Our
visitors had been two princesses and Her Majesty, Queen Victoria!"

"And great-grandmother always said," Hetty added, "that the great Queen
herself painted the cups. So, Maureen," she ended triumphantly, "you
don't know, really, what there is for the likes of us."

"No, you don't," her grandmother agreed, "so make the most of today.
Now, begone with you all, and gather up the news of the ship and bring
it all back to me. There are many strange people aboard," she ended,
closing her eyes and so dismissing the girls.




CHAPTER XIV

A STORM AT SEA


"How strange the sky looks!" Nan exclaimed. She and her Lakeview Hall
companions were standing on deck watching the sun drop below the
horizon.

"How cold!" Grace added, as she pulled her coat around her, held it in
place with her hand, and then huddled closer to Nan as if for
protection.

"A-a-and the wind!" Rhoda supplied, with difficulty. "It's l-l-lashing
at me so that I can't--get--my breath."

"Nor--me----either." Amelia gasped. "I--I--I guess the Captain was right
after all. He said, there was going to be a heavy gale tonight. Come,
let's go in."

"Oh, stay just a minute longer," Nan pleaded. "I like to see it roll.
Look, see how the fish are jumping the waves! They are coming in higher
and higher all the time. I wonder how this boat behaves when there is a
real storm at sea."

"One of the sailors told me this morning," Laura volunteered, "that
'she's a trusty old tub', if that will comfort you any."

"Oh, I don't need comforting," Nan replied. "I'm not afraid."

"You mean to say you wouldn't be afraid in a storm?" Grace asked
incredulously.

"Of course not." Nan answered. "Would you?"

"I'll tell you the answer to that later," Grace threw over her shoulder
as she made for the doors to go in. "Just now I'd rather watch this from
the windows in the lounge where it's warm."

"We'll be in, in a second," Amelia called after her, "Save a place for
us. Have you people seen the ship's log?" She went on, turning to Nan.
"It's posted inside, near the elevators. There is a map of the United
States, the Atlantic Ocean, and Europe with the course of our voyage
marked in little lines on it. Each day the purser sticks a flag,
representing our ship on this line, so that it shows where we are and
how far we have traveled during the day. Underneath, there is a little
weather chart telling how fast the wind is going, what the temperature
is, whether or not the sea is rolling, and what might be expected for
the next twenty-four hours."

"What does it say for today," Nan asked.

"The temperature is dropping--"

"We know that," Laura interrupted. "What else does it say?"

"That the sea is slightly rolling."

"We can feel that," Laura put in again, for the ship was rolling with
the waves.

"That we are headed into a storm. There, Miss Smarty, you didn't know
that," Amelia laughed.

"Did too," Laura retorted. "My creaking bones told me. Now, I'm going in
before I get rheumatism." So saying, she followed Grace. The others,
except Nan, whom not even Bess could persuade to come in as yet,
followed her.

Alone on the dark deck, Nan stood for a while at the rail, watching the
white foam of the waves, listening to the roar of the wind, and glancing
now and then at the clouds, swiftly gathering overhead. Save for a pale
moon, the only light was the ship's beacon which every few seconds,
passed in its circle, over Nan's head.

Once, Nan was tempted to follow her friends. She could hear voices,
singing and laughter, and the sound of a piano inside. She even started
toward the door, but then a dark passageway at her right tempted her and
she went exploring.

Hugging the side of the boat closely, she followed around through the
passageway between the ship's riggings, and then on down the deck until
she came to the barrier between first and second class that Laura had
taunted Bess about. She examined it carefully. It was impossible to get
by. There was no moving it. She tried sliding it and pushing it. It
wouldn't budge.

She turned and retraced her steps, going back to some narrow iron stairs
that went up. The "Keep Off" sign, which she couldn't read in the dark,
she shoved aside. She was determined now to make a complete circle of
the boat. She went up the stairs, around another deck, and down some
steps again.

This was becoming a real adventure and Nan was enjoying every minute of
it. If her conscience troubled her at all, she paid no heed. Others on
the boat had told her of going out of bounds, and she could see no real
harm in it.

She walked around deckchairs piled high against the side of the boat,
caught a glimpse of some phosphorescent fish in the ocean, and walked
over to the rail. How pretty they looked in the deep black of the water!
She stood for a while watching the colors at play and then went on. It
was almost as though she was motivated by some force outside herself.

She heard no sounds from people in the boat now, for she had passed the
lounges and the recreation rooms. She felt almost alone on the boat, and
laughed a little to herself as she thought how timid Grace would be in
such a situation. However, Nan liked it.

It brought back to her mind nights at Pine Camp. How far away all that
seemed now! How far away it was! Northern Michigan was in another world.
The people there, Aunt Kate, Injun Pete, Toby Vanderwiller, and Gedney
Raffer, all of them, were like people she had dreamed about. She shook
herself impatiently, driving away some eerie thoughts, and then went on
until she came to the very back of the vessel, the stern.

Here she stopped, and looked back over the ocean which the boat was
putting behind it. The wake, the white foamy path of the boat stretched
out as far as she could see. The waters, which made it, rolled aside in
big white waves leaving the center black and deep.

How much colder it was getting! And how much rougher! Nan clung to the
rail, and held her head high as the wind whipped her hair back so that
it stung the sides of her cheeks. She watched the waves coming, each one
higher than the last and angrier. She counted them, "One, two, three,"
someone had told her once that the seventh was always the highest,
"four, five." She could feel the spray on her face and the air was full
of mist. "Six, seven--why the seventh wasn't any bigger than any of the
rest! And--eight." It was the eighth that was the biggest of all! It
climbed up the boat, over the rail, and across the deck, taking Nan off
her feet!

She lost her balance completely, wrenched her arm as she fell, and was
afraid for a second that she would go over with the wash of the wave.
But she held on, and as the boat righted itself after the inundation,
Nan rose to her feet, half dazed.

She rubbed her hair out of her eyes, winced with the pain in her arm,
and being very careful now, started toward the door. She stopped short.

Was that a cry she had heard? She raised her head, listening attentively
for some sound other than the roaring of the waves. There wasn't any.
She must have imagined it. She went on across the deck, now shiny after
its bath with sea water. There was something white at her feet. She
stooped to pick it up--a handkerchief. Again, she thought she heard a
low moan and stopped dead still.

Yes, there it was again. Nan hesitated, deciding whether to investigate
herself or call for help. The crash of the waves drowned out everything
and decided Nan. She could hear them coming, one, two--what direction
had the sound come from?--three, four, five. There it was again, over at
her right. She started toward it and lost her balance, grabbed hold of a
flagpole, and then crept forward. Six--seven--it was the seventh that
was the biggest this time, but before it had struck with its full force
Nan's hand reached out and grabbed the coat of someone lying on the
deck. With her other, as the wave struck, she held fast to the pole.

There it was, the wave! It came up and over the two, tugged at them,
first their hips, and then their feet, and finally reluctantly, went on
over the side without them.

Nan screamed, again and again. The form at her hand seemed to have no
life. There was no answer to her call. She, herself, was weaker, much
weaker than she thought.

She got up slowly and painfully and tried to pull her burden after her.
She couldn't budge it. She could hear, as from some far off land, the
waves coming again. She shook her head, aware now that her senses had
been dulled. Now, she could count them again, one, two--the second one
splashed lightly over the deck. They were getting higher all the time.
Three, four--Nan reached down with her strained arm, put it under the
limp form, and half dragged, half carried it to the door, a partial
shelter, as the fifth wave swept like a fury over the deck.

Nan reached up to open the door. It was locked. In a frenzy, she beat
upon it. It was double locked against the storm! She knocked it again,
screamed, and then, for the first time in her life, fainted dead away.




CHAPTER XV

IN THE SHIP'S HOSPITAL


"I hope she dies of pneumonia!" Bess was frankly crying as she walked
down the corridor toward the ship's hospital. "I'd like nothing better
than to witness a funeral at sea, if it was Linda Riggs'," she stated
most emphatically, and then wiped her eyes.

"She's a cat, that's what she is or she would have died long ago.
Remember," she recalled, "when we planned that surprise party on Nan
back in Lakeview and that black cat came into the room. That was the
soul of Linda Riggs," Bess vowed. "She's a cat and a witch."

Grace looked impressed, but Laura snickered.

"See here, Bess," Rhoda stopped and put a restraining hand on Bess's
arm. "You're not going into that hospital room and talk like that before
Nan. She needs rest and quiet. The doctor said so. Now, are you going to
curb your anger, or aren't you?"

"Oh, I will," Bess answered. "Just give me a couple of seconds to
cool off. Every time I think of Nan risking her life to save that
good-for-nothing, it riles me clear through. Nan's so good to everyone,
and Linda, well, she tramps all over everybody."

"There, Bess, take it easy," Laura for once tried to placate the girl.
"We won't have any more trouble from her this trip. The nurse told me
Linda has to stay in bed until the boat docks. If Nan is careful, she'll
be down in her own cabin tomorrow."

"So remember, Bess," Amelia implored, "not to say anything about Linda
or about that other either."

"What other?" Bess asked, and then remembered. "Oh, you mean the cabin?"
she supplied the answer herself.

"Yes, just keep still about everything unpleasant," Rhoda warned. "We
want Nan out of here as soon as possible." With this, she pushed open
the white door of the ship's hospital and a nurse came forward.

"You've came to see Miss Sherwood," she smiled.

"Yes," Rhoda was spokesman for the group. "Is it all right for us all to
go in together?"

The nurse looked doubtful a moment, noting the marks of tears that were
still on Bess's cheeks. Bess felt her glance and blushed. "Oh, I'm all
right now," she reassured the nurse. "I promise to be good," and she
smiled so winningly that the nurse gave in.

"Well, you may go in," she said, as she looked professionally at her
watch, "for half an hour. But remember, you are not to disturb the
patient." With this she opened the door to a private room, and the girls
went in.

There, lying in a white hospital bed, looking pale and very wan, was
Nan. She smiled at their entrance. "I'm all right," she said. "Don't
look so scared. Come in and sit down."

They did, and it was a few seconds, a few awkward seconds, before anyone
could think of anything to say. Twice Bess opened her mouth to speak,
but when her friends looked at her warningly, she closed it again.

Finally, Rhoda found her voice. "Why, Nan," she asked, and her glance,
like that of the other girls was riveted on a big bouquet of red roses,
"where in the world did you get those flowers?"

The color came back into Nan's cheeks. "Can't you guess?" She grinned
rather defiantly at them. "They aren't from anyone on the boat."

"But how could anyone on shore know?" Bess already had her suspicions as
to the person.

"And if he did," Grace was very positive about the "He," "How could He
send them?"

"Come, Nan, spill it," Laura was as curious as the rest. "Heroines
can't have secrets, you know. Their lives are public property."

"That's just what I am afraid of." Nan nodded from her place among the
pillows. "However, I couldn't keep it to myself if I wanted to. They're
from Walter!"

"But how--" Bess just couldn't wait.

"He sent them from shore when the boat was in dock and asked the steward
to keep them until we were in mid-ocean. They brought them up here this
morning and when I opened my eyes--there they were." Nan's eyes were
shining and her cheeks were almost as red as the roses.

"They are just gorgeous," Rhoda stooped over to smell them, "so red, and
fragrant, and fresh."

"Aren't they though?" Nan reached out and touched them softly. "But tell
me now," she looked up. "What's new?"

"You should know," Laura answered. "You are the news around here.
Everyone's talking about you. There are at least a dozen different
versions of what happened last night making the rounds of this ship. One
has it that Linda actually went over the side of the boat and that you
leaped in and saved her from drowning. Then you caught hold of a rope,
and a sailor, out to see that everything was shipshape, heard your
cries, and hauled the two of you in."

"Another," Amelia said further, as Nan laughed, "has you in a fight with
Linda. Oh, I mean," she corrected herself when Nan looked worried, "that
Linda is supposed to have become so frightened that she didn't know what
she was doing. She tore at your hair and scratched you. (Here Nan ran
her hand over her face. It was perfectly whole.) Finally, when you
realized that she was beyond reason, you are supposed to have hit her
over the head so hard that you knocked her out!"

"And another--" Laura began.

"Oh, don't tell me any more," Nan shook her head. "I don't know how I'm
ever going to go out of here and face all those people. It scares me to
think of it."

"You needn't worry, Nan," Rhoda took her friend's hand in hers. "We'll
all rally round. Everybody, really, is just being grand. I didn't know
there were so many nice people in the world."

"Isn't it so?" Nan forgot her embarrassment. "Look at that pile of
cards and notes and books and magazines. Why, I believe all the
passengers on the ship have stopped in to ask about me and one little
boy"--she stopped and giggled before she went on--"wanted my autograph!
Can you imagine anything so silly? But tell me, what did happen? I
fainted, didn't I? I don't remember a thing after I found those doors
were locked."

"Oh, Nan," Bess couldn't restrain herself any longer. "Maybe you were
there for hours, we don't know. We only know this: after we left you out
there on deck we all went into the lounge and talked and played games
for a long time."

"We wondered where you were, didn't we?" She looked at the others for
confirmation. They nodded their heads as Bess went on, "but we thought
that you were probably off somewheres with that English girl, what is
her name?"

"You mean Hetty Warren?" Nan supplied.

"Yes, that's it. Well, we thought you were with her and her grandmother
until about ten o'clock when we went down to the cabin and met Hetty.
She was bringing a travel book about England to you. She said she hadn't
seen you all evening.

"We were worried then, and she went with us to see whether you were
with either Jeanie or Maureen. They said they hadn't seen you, either.
We didn't know what to do then, so finally we went to Dr. Beulah. She
had been in her cabin all evening, because she wasn't feeling very well.
She called a steward and he said he would hunt you up. He was gone for
hours, while we sat in her cabin and talked and wondered and worried.

"When he finally came back, he didn't have any news! Dr. Beulah got up
and dressed then and called the Captain. He told us all to come up to
his office. We went at once, and he asked a million questions about you.
Then he got busy on the phone and started a boat-wide search.

"It wasn't any time at all after that when they called Dr. Beulah and
told her to come to the hospital right away." Here Bess started to cry
again, for she remembered so vividly how frightened they had all been at
that call.

"Oh, Bess," It was Nan speaking. "Come here, I'm so sorry I caused you
all that trouble."

"Anyway," Bess grinned through her tears. "Dr. Beulah went up and the
first person she saw there was Linda Riggs. I guess she was pretty
disgusted herself for once, though she would never say it. Then the
nurse took her in to see you."

"Oh, I remember from then on," Nan continued. "I came to when they were
carrying me here, so that when Dr. Beulah came up I knew what it was all
about. I was only scared for fear she would give me the scolding I
deserved for going off that way by myself. But she didn't. She just took
me in her arms and kissed me and then went off and talked to the nurse
and doctor. I don't know what she said or did to them, but they have
been fluttering around me all the time as though I was a Royal
Princess."

"Wait until you get up!" Laura exclaimed. "Then you'll find out who you
are." She looked both merry and mysterious as she said this last. Nan
looked questioningly at her.

But there was no opportunity for any more talk. The nurse came in, felt
Nan's pulse and smiled at the girls.

"I'm sorry," she said, nodding toward the door. So they got up and
left, leaving Nan looking wistfully after them.




CHAPTER XVI

THE HUNCH-BACK AGAIN


"But this isn't where our cabin is!" Nan exclaimed the next morning as
Bess and Rhoda, one on each side of her, walked her slowly from the
hospital back to the stateroom.

"Yes, it is, Nan," Rhoda maintained.

"But ours was number 648. It was an outside cabin." Nan continued to
protest. "Or have I gone completely batty?"

"I wouldn't say that," Rhoda teased, "though you do do some pretty
strange things sometimes. However, this is your cabin now and it's not
an outside one. There just wasn't another outside one free."

"But why did I need another? What was wrong with the one I had? What
happened? Please tell me," she pleaded. The questions tumbled one after
another out of Nan's mouth, for she was impatient, still somewhat shaken
after her frightening experience during the storm.

"Oh, Nan, it's nothing at all," Bess comforted. "That is, I hope it
isn't, because it's all my fault," she added very contritely. "It was so
warm here the night of the storm that I opened the porthole when I came
down to leave my heavy coat. Amelia called me and told me to hurry and,
rattle-brained as I am, I ran after her completely forgetting about the
storm and the porthole. You can guess what happened. One of those big
waves that nearly did away with you plopped in and made a miniature
lake."

"Was anything ruined?" Nan asked.

"Nothing, except my own silk dress. Remember, I threw it down in disgust
that afternoon because the snaps had been pulled off the sleeves. Well,
you should see it now. It's a complete wreck. Serves me right to have to
get along without it. I only hope you don't feel too disappointed in the
new cabin." Bess looked genuinely troubled.

"Don't worry," Nan reassured her friend. "I don't care what kind of a
cabin I have," she said lightly, for such things really didn't matter to
her.

But the words were hardly out of her mouth when Bess pushed the door
open and revealed to Nan a big stateroom with twin beds, a chaise
longue, two big easy chairs, dainty dressing tables, a large wardrobe,
and a little private sitting room!

Nan gasped. "This isn't ours," she exclaimed incredulously.

Rhoda and Bess looked from Nan to the stateroom and back again to Nan.
"It is," they cried. "It's yours."

Nan stepped into the room and looked around. The sitting room had big
windows overlooking the deck and the sea. There were books and
magazines, a victrola, comfortable chairs and a rug. Over it all the
morning sun was streaming.

"But why?" Nan's eyes were wide open in amazement.

"Captain's orders," Rhoda answered.

"Why?" Nan persisted.

"I told you why," Bess smiled. "It's because our cabin was inundated by
the recent flood."

"I still don't believe that's the truth," Nan asserted. "But I love this
place just the same."

"Do we walk right in?" It was Laura at the door. "Or do we have to send
cards first?"

"Oh, Laura!" Nan exclaimed. "Come here. Have you seen this?" She moved
the dial of a small radio.

"Have I seen that? Why, darling, I moved your things in," Laura laughed.
"And what's more, I was here when the Captain came."

"The Captain!" They all exclaimed at once.

"Yes, he came down in all his glory. He has a stern looking face
complete with a Vandyke beard, and he wore a uniform with epaulettes and
much fancy braid. He carried a cap in his hand. He came 'to see if Miss
Sherwood's stateroom was satisfactory.'" Laura tried to clip the
sentence off as the Captain had.

"You should hear his accent!" she exclaimed. "It's Oxford or Cambridge
or something equally as exclusive, I'm sure. I'm quite in love with the
man! He's perfectly darling!" she finished.

"I beg your pardon." The girls jumped and looked up, startled, for it
was a man's voice. They recognized at once the uniform, the cap, and the
Vandyke beard. It was the Captain! He must have heard them!

He looked sternly down on their confusion. "Miss Sherwood?"

"Yes, Captain." Nan answered meekly and started to get up.

"No, no," he motioned her to remain seated.

Nan sat down again. The voice was one that was accustomed to being
obeyed.

"I merely wanted to make certain that everything was satisfactory." He
looked critically about the room.

"Oh, it is! It is!" Nan exclaimed. "It's just perfect!" Not even her
confusion could keep the note of sincerity out of her voice.

The Captain seemed preoccupied with his inspection of the stateroom.
"Your baggage has been moved." It was more a statement than a question.
"You are feeling--well."

"Yes, thank you, sir," Nan hastened to reply. Had she felt otherwise she
wouldn't have dared to admit it in the face of his assurance.

"You want for nothing?"

"No--no, sir. Nothing at all." Nan was annoyed at her own inability to
be at ease. If only he had come at another time!

Then his glance seemed to take in Laura for the first time.

"And Miss Polk, I trust that you are comfortable too." Again, it was a
statement and Laura gulped, not knowing whether she was supposed to
answer or not.

"I thank you, ladies." With this he turned and went out.

Even before his measured tread was entirely out of earshot, Laura was
lamenting. "If only I had kept my mouth shut!" she exclaimed. "'Oxford
or Cambridge accent.'" She sounded completely disgusted. "'I'm in love
with the man! He's perfectly darling.' And then he walks in on me! What
can I do? You can't walk up to a man and apologize for anything like
that." She looked hopelessly at her friends.

Nan was laughing so hard she was holding both her sides and so was
Bess. Rhoda was stuffing a handkerchief into her mouth. "Oh, I never saw
anything so funny in my life," she said.

"Funny!" Laura was indignant. "I'd like to know what was funny about
that! Funny!" she muttered.

"Oh, Laura," Nan was wiping the tears out of her eyes. "If you could
have seen the expression on your face when he asked whether you were
comfortable, you would laugh too."

Laura grinned with them at this. "The old meany," she said. "He heard
every word of what I said, and he was just rubbing it in. And I thought
he was a chivalrous old duck! I wish he would come back now. I'd tell
him what was what."

"Don't, don't say that." Rhoda raised a protesting hand. "You'll meet
him soon enough as it is."

"Oh, no, I won't," Laura denied. "I'm not going to stir out of my cabin
from now until the time the boat docks. I just couldn't face that man
again." She turned as though to leave, but stopped as Grace came into
the room.

"What man?" Grace asked. "Did you see him too?" Her face was pale and
scared looking.

"What are you talking about?" Rhoda rushed over and closed the door
behind Grace.

"That man, that red-headed hunchback. Oh, the one that went through
Nan's bags. Surely, you haven't forgotten him. Did you see him, too?"
She directed the question at Laura again.

"Why, Gracie, no, I haven't seen him." Laura was very serious now. "Have
you?"

"Oh, yes." Grace was pale and frightened. "He's out there. I think he
followed me down the hall." She was almost hysterical.

Laura moved toward the door and reached out as if to open it.

"Don't do that!" Grace's voice was a command. "He followed me. I tell
you he followed me!" She almost shrieked the last.

Nan got up, went over to the girl, and put a reassuring arm around her.
"Grace, please," she begged. "Get hold of yourself. You'll be making us
all panicky. There, now, calm down." She wiped the girl's eyes.

"Oh, you're treating me like a baby!" Grace shook herself out of Nan's
arms. "I tell you--" She paused and, for a second, the room was in
complete silence.

Through it came the sound of a knock at the door. The girls looked
questioningly at one another, but no one moved. Then, they heard it
again, faintly.

Laura stirred. "I'm going to open it," she whispered. Nan nodded her
head. But before Laura could, they heard Amelia's voice. Everyone
breathed a sigh of relief.

Nan herself walked to the door and threw it wide open. "Come in,
Amelia," she said, and then closed the door after her friend.

"What's up?" Amelia sensed the tenseness in the room right away.

"Did you see anyone at all in the corridor?"

Nan answered the question with another.

"Why, no." Amelia looked puzzled. "No one, that is, except the
stewardess. She's sitting out there on a stool, knitting."

"You didn't see the red-headed hunchback?" Grace couldn't believe it.
"You didn't see him standing right out there watching this room?"

"Are you sure, Amelia," Nan asked the question, "that you didn't see
anyone besides the stewardess?"

"Positive," she answered. "I know, because as I came down the corridor I
looked for people."

"Why?" Nan questioned her again.

"Say, what is this?" Amelia asked. "The third degree or something? I
looked simply because I've been wondering what kind of people lived down
in this end of heaven. Evidently they are all queer." She looked
significantly at the people around her.

"Well, you'd be queer, too," Grace asserted, "if you'd seen and heard
what I did. I was coming down the corridor alone thinking of Nan and the
new cabin when I heard someone say in a mean rasping voice, 'Well, you
find out the answer pretty soon, or you'll never live to see Scotland
again.'

"I was scared and would have run, but the cabin door opened. As it did,
I ducked into another and waited. Oh, it seemed as though I was there
for hours in some strange person's cabin, afraid to stay and afraid to
go. Finally, I couldn't stand it any longer, so I opened the door
quietly and looked out. There was no one in sight. I tiptoed down the
corridor, and was just about to come in here, when I saw that awful
looking hunchback standing out there.

"I'm sure he was watching this cabin. I would have turned and run or
gone right past him, but I saw his eyes." Grace shuddered.

"They're terrible eyes. I couldn't go on. I had to come in here." Grace
looked up at Nan as though asking for approval for what she had done.

"Of course you did, Grace," Nan said quietly and soothingly. "Of course,
you had to come in. But tell me," she questioned further. "Why did you
say he followed you?"

"Did I say that?" Grace looked puzzled.

They all nodded.

"Oh, I don't know," Grace shook herself as though she had difficulty in
remembering clearly. "I guess I was just afraid he was, and I knew that
his eyes were on me. Why should he watch this cabin?" She looked up at
Nan. The others followed her glance. They too felt, somehow, that Nan
knew the answer.

Nan sat silently considering.

Should she tell them what she knew or shouldn't she? Could she trust
them? She looked around at their faces, at Rhoda's and Amelia's, and was
tempted to tell. Both of these girls seemed to be calm in all the
excitement. "They might be able to offer some help if needed," Nan
thought. Then she heard Grace stifle a sob and saw again how frightened
and worried the girl looked. She hesitated. She looked up at Bess, her
closest friend, and was tempted again.

There was a noise outside. Bess jumped nervously. She was scared, too.
Then Laura spoke, and Nan gave up all thought of revealing, at the
present at least, what little she knew about the things that were
happening.




CHAPTER XVII

NAN PUZZLES OVER HER SECRET


"I wonder if your hunchback is the mysterious passenger everyone is
talking about," Laura said thoughtfully, when she was convinced that Nan
was not going to speak.

"I never thought of that!" This from Rhoda. "But it all fits together
perfectly. They say he never appears at the table for his meals and that
he has his own servants to take care of him."

"Yes," Bess contributed, "a steward told the stewardess and the
stewardess told me that no one of the ship's crew has been in that cabin
since the boat left dock."

"It must have been the same stewardess," Laura picked up the story, "who
told me that nothing has gone right in this end of the ship since he
came in. She says there has been trouble, trouble all the while. She's a
superstitious old soul. She thinks he has cast a spell over everything
around here." Laura's voice was a half whisper as she imparted her
information.

"Well, you'd think so too, if you had seen him," Grace whispered too.
"I don't see why in the world they ever let him get a passport and get
on the ship."

"Oh, I heard somebody say today," Amelia supplied, as Grace's statement
recalled the conversation to her mind, "that he came up the gang-plank
in New York behind the queerest looking outfit he'd ever seen in all the
times he has crossed the ocean.

"He said the man was all swathed up to the eyes in an overcoat and a
heavy scarf of Scotch plaid. His collar was turned up and his cap pulled
down so that none of his face was visible. He said nothing to anyone,
refused to let a porter take a small black valise he was carrying, and
went directly to his cabin.

"The man who was telling the story said his stateroom is close by, but
that he has never once met him in the halls. However, he did say, that
from time to time he has heard someone in that cabin speak in a strong
Scotch burr, ordering a servant around in no uncertain terms."

"Did the man that you heard," she looked at Grace, "speak like that?"

"Amelia, I didn't notice what kind of an accent he used!" Grace sounded
almost impatient. "I was too frightened to notice anything like that. I
only know what I've told you already."

"Did the man who came looking for me that first day we came on the boat
speak like that?" Nan hardly dared to ask the question. She wanted
information, but she didn't want to give any.

For a moment the girls sat thinking. Then Laura spoke up. "You would
think that we would have noticed that," she said, "but I can't honestly
say I did. It was all such a surprise and we were so excited anyway that
I only noticed what he looked like."

"Well, he didn't say very much," Rhoda added. "Remember. He spent most
of his time looking around the room and at us as though he wanted to be
sure to remember us always. Ooh, I don't like to think about it."

"Nor I either," Bess was most emphatic. "I haven't seen him at all, and
still I don't like to think about it. It's perfectly horrid to have him
bothering us at all, and if he ever follows me, I'm going to scream so
loud that everybody on this boat will come running. He has no business
at all annoying us this way. We haven't done anything to him.

"Nan didn't want his old baggage. It wasn't her fault that it was
brought to our cabin. Why, I'll bet he did it himself or ordered that
servant of his to do it. What for, I don't know, but if he's queer,
there is no accounting for what he does. I wish they would lock him up
or dump him overboard or something. We just get rid of Linda and then he
comes here to annoy us. Why can't people leave us alone?" Bess was
thoroughly incensed. "We only have a couple of more days on boat--"

"Oh, come let's forget it all," Nan interrupted. She was more than
anxious to put the problem aside for the time being. "Let's talk of
something else. Or even better than that, let's go upstairs and see the
pictures the ship's photographer has been taking."

"What photographer? What pictures?" Amelia looked puzzled.

"You mean to say you haven't seen the photographer at all!" Bess was
incredulous. "Why, he's always around with that camera of his. It's
almost impossible to sit or stand any place on deck without his taking
your picture!"

"Old Procrastination Boggs," Laura teased, "has been so busy trying to
figure out the time so as to keep her clocks straight that she hasn't
known what was going on around her. Have you decided yet," she asked,
"whether you set the clock ahead or back when you are traveling east?

"I went into Amelia's cabin last night," she explained to the others,
"and there she was sitting on the floor with her clocks all around her.
She looked just as she did the night we first saw her in her room at
Lakeview. This time, however, she had a pencil and paper in her hand. At
first, I thought she had lost her mind, for there were little marks like
chicken scratches on the paper."

"Oh, it didn't look like that at all," Amelia protested. "You just don't
recognize a good sketch when you see one. That round mark was the sun.
The long straight one was the path it takes as it moves from the east to
the west."

"But the sun doesn't move," Rhoda interrupted. "The earth does."

"Well, anyway," Laura continued her teasing, "there she was on the floor
with her clocks. Each one was set at a different time and Amelia was
drawing pictures. I heard her muttering to herself, 'Now, if the sun
rises in the east and sets in the west and the ship travels east, then
we lose no, we gain time. No, we lose time.' She couldn't make up her
mind, so she began all over again, 'if the sun rises in the west, I mean
the east, and we travel west, no east'--Say, which way are we
traveling?" Laura had confused herself.

"East." Nan laughed. "And don't go any further or you'll have us all
confused. Upstairs, near the Purser's window, there's a blackboard. On
it, it says, 'Ship's passengers please note: set your watches ahead 40
minutes each night at 9, if you wish them to agree with ship's time.'"

"I know that now," Amelia laughed, ruefully. "I saw it the morning after
I'd had such a time. And you needn't act so superior," she looked at
Laura, "because you sat down on the floor with me and tried to figure it
out too!"

The picture that this brought to mind caused all the girls to laugh.

"Let's go up and see those photographs, right now," Laura changed the
subject.

"Yes, let's," Amelia agreed. So, walking and talking the six friends
left the cabin and went to an upper deck.

"Bess Harley," Nan exclaimed as they stood around the pictures. "How did
you ever manage to get yours taken so many times?"

Bess blushed. She had contrived to have her picture taken more than
anyone else. Now, as she thought of the number of times she had
purposely posed, hoping that the photographer would see her, she felt
guilty. There were pictures of her in the deck chair, posed against a
life preserver, and standing at the rail. There was one of her in a
bathing suit on the morning she had gone swimming, another of her in
slacks when she was headed for the ship's gymnasium, and another in
leather jacket and skirt when the wind was blowing so hard that her hair
was standing on end.

"Anyhow, they are all cute," Nan comforted, "and I'm as jealous as
anything, because there aren't any of me."

"Oh, yes, there is, Nan. Look!" Rhoda pointed her finger to a picture of
Nan posted right in the center of the board. The photographer had caught
her when she was totally unaware of the rest of the world. He had made a
silhouette of her on the ship's rail, in the place she called her
balcony, looking out over the sea.

"Oh, how nice!" Nan herself was pleased. "I'll have to send one home to
Momsy." Then a sad look flashed across her face. She was lonesome
sometimes amid all the new strange things for her mother, her father,
and the little cottage on Amity street. There were times when she wished
most earnestly that she could consult with her father or have the bright
hopefulness of her mother's comfort to encourage her.

Her thoughts flashed back to her father's warning and then to the
letter she had received at Lakeview Hall, the letter she had concealed
from Bess. Was this hunchback who seemed to be watching her connected in
any way with either of the two? Was he the one her father was warning
her against? Had he had anything to do with the letter? Nan resolved to
get it from the purser with whom she had left her valuables, look at it
again, and see whether it contained any undiscovered clues.

"What's the matter, Nan," Bess brought her thoughts back to the present.
"Your mind seems miles away. We've all ordered our pictures, and you
haven't had a word to say for the last ten minutes."

Nan started guiltily, laughed with them at her own absent-mindedness,
bought photographs of herself and her friends for her memory book, and
then, with them, went into the ship's store to buy souvenirs for friends
back home.

So, in spite of Grace's frightening experience, the morning was a gay
one for the Lakeview Hall crowd and the afternoon brought a surprise
that even Bess, in her wildest dreams of the nice things that might
happen to them on the boat, had never imagined.




CHAPTER XVIII

THE CAPTAIN'S DINNER


"Oh, Nan, I wonder if all the girls received them! I hope they did!"
Bess was waving a small white envelope in her hand. "Look, it has the
boat's flag engraved on it and the United States flag too. Isn't it just
too perfect for words!

"Nan," Bess hugged her friend, "I'm sure, as sure as I am of anything,
that it's because of your saving Linda the way you did, that we got
them."

Nan's face was alight too. "Oh, Bess, it isn't either," she contradicted.
"It's because Dr. Beulah is the person she is. The Captain was going to
invite her and he thought he had to invite us too, or we would get into
trouble. He doesn't trust us since the night of the storm."

"You old silly," Bess was not to be gainsaid. "You are just being
modest. But go on. I don't care what the Captain thinks anyway as long
as he continues to do things in the grand manner. This cabin," she
looked around it proudly--already she had sent many letters home telling
friends and relatives about every little detail of its luxuriousness,
"and now these invitations. Why, we are practically the belles of the
boat, even if Dr. Beulah," she said dolefully, "does try to make us
remember that we are still children."

"Oh, Bess, she doesn't either." Nan sprang to the defense of their
preceptor. "You know she doesn't. You know she had been just as nice as
she could possibly be on this trip. She couldn't let you wear that dress
you wanted to the other night. It wouldn't have looked right. It was,
just as she said, too formal for a young person to wear. It makes you
look old. She was really very pleasant about it."

"Of course she was," Bess calmed Nan's ruffled feelings. "I was only
fooling. She was just as sweet as she could be. Now, come, let's go up
and see if the others have received cards, too."

"Oh, we have, we have!" Grace exclaimed excitedly when Nan and Bess
finally located the others. "We all have invitations to the Captain's
table for dinner tonight! Dr. Beulah says we are to go, that we may wear
our very best dresses, and that we may stay up tonight for the costume
ball. It's to be the very nicest night on board ship, for tomorrow
morning, early, we sight land and some of the passengers will be
leaving." Grace was breathless as she finished the end of the sentence.

"But where's Laura?" Nan looked in vain for the red-headed girl.

"Yes, where is she?" Bess echoed, and then added, "Surely, she received
one too. The Captain didn't leave her out, did he?" Bess looked worried,
for she remembered suddenly Laura's unfortunate encounter with the
commander of the boat.

"She received one all right," Rhoda responded, "and she's down in her
cabin practically crying her eyes out."

"Why?" Nan and Bess chorused.

"She says she can't possibly go to that dinner and face him. She
knows he will laugh at her. She says she has never been in such an
embarrassing position before. She almost wishes she hadn't come on this
trip at all. You go, Nan, and see what you can do with her. The more I
say, the harder she cries. I have never seen her in such a state."

"All right. You people stay here and I'll see if I can persuade her to
come up." Nan started off, but then changed her mind and came back for
the rest of the girls. "Come, let's all go down," she suggested. "I
think, after all, that that would be better." So they went.

They found Laura lying across her bunk with her face buried in the
pillow. Her shoulders were heaving and she was sobbing.

"Oh, Laura, don't take it so seriously," Nan stooped over the sobbing
girl and gently pulled her around so that she faced her friends. Her
eyes were red and swollen with crying, and her red hair was tousled. She
put a wadded, tear-wet handkerchief up to her eyes and wiped them.

"I--I----I guess you would take it seriously too," she wept, "if you
couldn't go to the Captain's dinner, if you had to send regrets, saying
you were ill."

"Laura, you haven't done that, have you?" The girls all gasped.

"N--N--Not yet!" Laura sobbed some more. "But it's not because I didn't
try to write it. I've got to ask Dr. Beulah how to address it," she
sniffled. "I guess I'll go up and ask her now." She sat up on the bunk.
"Then it will be all over with."

"Laura," Nan took her friend firmly by the shoulders. "Don't you know
that you can't refuse. An invitation from the Captain is practically the
same as a command."

"Well, I guess I can't go if I have scarlet fever." Laura was still
crying.

"Yes, but if you have scarlet fever, we can't go either," Bess was
troubled. "I don't care what you tell him, but you can't tell him that."
A look from Nan silenced Bess.

"See here, Laura," Nan shook her friend. "You've got to come to your
senses. You simply have to go. You might just as well make up your mind
to do it now, because you are going if we have to dress you and drag you
there." Nan tried to look very serious, but somehow she couldn't
suppress a twinkle that came to her eyes. Already the other girls were
smiling. They knew that Laura would have to give in. The situation
seemed amusing now.

"You wouldn't go either," Laura continued, "if you had said the things I
did and he had heard you. The next time I'm going to keep my mouth
shut."

"Of course you will," Nan sounded full of conviction. "And this time
you'll go, and he will shake your hand, and you'll smile up at him, and
then everything will be all right."

"Do you really think so?" Laura was already more than half willing to be
convinced.

"I haven't a doubt in the world but what it will," Nan sounded very
positive.

"Then I'll go," Laura gave in at last, "if you'll all promise on your
word of honor to stick by me and come to my rescue if anything
embarrassing happens."

"We will, Laura, we will." Grace was almost jumping up and down with
joy. She grabbed Nan's hand. Nan took Laura's. Laura took Bess's. Amelia
and Rhoda were drawn into the circle and they all danced around the
cabin until they fell breathless to the floor.

"Oh, such fun!" Bess wiped the tears of excitement out of her eyes, as
they all proceeded to the business of deciding what to wear to the
Captain's dinner and how to dress for the costume ball.

That night was unforgettable.

Laura and the Captain were friends just as Nan had said they would be.
Bess was a triumph in a pretty silk dress. Amelia and Rhoda were almost
speechless when they were seated between two tall handsome army officers
enroute to London to take part in the coronation, but they forgot
themselves and had the time of their lives as the dinner progressed.
Grace, in her place next to a foreign diplomat was equally well taken
care of.

And Nan, well, as the reader has already guessed, the dinner invitation
was in her honor. She was seated in the place of honor next to the
Captain and never was a young girl more praised and honored in an
evening than she.

It was all very grand and lovely. Bess had her moment of supreme
rejoicing when she saw out of the corner of her eye that Linda had
recovered and had been allowed to come down for dinner. There she was,
across the dining room from the Captain's table, watching with envious
eyes her former schoolmates at Lakeview Hall. Bess might be forgiven,
if, when paper caps and toy horns were passed out, she blew her horn
extra loud--a blast of triumph in Linda's direction.




CHAPTER XIX

LAND IS SIGHTED


The next morning all the cabins on the boat looked as though a cyclone
had struck them. The cabins belonging to the girls from Lakeview Hall
were no exception.

"Bess, if we go on collecting things at this rate," Nan protested to her
friend, "we'll have to buy new luggage. Nothing short of a huge trunk
will hold everything."

"I know it," Bess laughed. "And it's so hard to throw anything away."
She was holding favors from the costume ball of the night before in her
hand. "I simply can't part with these."

The two girls were packing. It was very early in the morning, but the
boat was due to make its first stop shortly, and they wanted to be on
deck when land was sighted. "I can't part with these either," Nan held
up the limp bags of a half dozen balloons. "A handsome army officer got
them for me last night, by climbing up on a chair and pulling them by
their strings down from the ceiling."

"Wasn't the ballroom lovely, though?" Bess paused in her packing, while
she remembered the lights and the palms and the balloons and the other
decorations. Then she recalled all the people in fancy costume marching
around, dancing and singing.

"The nicest thing of all," Nan paused in her packing too, "was that
glass promenade through which you could see the stars and the sky
overhead. The moon was so big and full that no other lights were needed.
I shall never forget it--nor that quartet of sailors that sang all those
funny old sea ballads and then danced the hornpipe."

The girls laughed together at the recollection, and then busied
themselves in earnest. Nan kept the balloons for a couple of children
back in Tillbury whose idol she was. Bess kept the favors, because she
couldn't bear to throw them away.

Again and again, the ship's foghorn blasted the early morning quietness.
"I'm sure we must be almost in sight of land." Bess hurried faster.

"But the steward promised," Nan protested, "that he would tell us so
that we would be up on deck when land was sighted."

"You don't suppose he has forgotten?" Bess questioned.

"I don't think so," Nan was a little worried too. "But let's hurry and
get out of here. I wouldn't miss seeing Maureen off for anything."

"Oh, is she getting off here?" Bess took one last look around the cabin
to see whether she had all her belongings.

"Sure an' she's headed right for Dublin." Nan tried to give an Irish
turn to her sentence.

"You'll never see her again?" Bess was wide-eyed as it suddenly dawned
on her that they were saying good-by, perhaps forever, to their
shipboard acquaintances.

"Never say that," Nan unconsciously interpreted the lesson Hetty's
grandmother had taught so sweetly several days before. "You never know
when or where you will meet these people again. Have you kept many
addresses?"

"Oh, just dozens," Bess answered. "If I ever hear from a third of them
again, I'll be happy."

"I feel the same way," Nan agreed. "Only Maureen, Hetty and Jeanie have
all agreed to have tea with us in London. I knew you would all approve."
She looked up at Bess.

"Approve? Of course," Bess agreed. "Tea in London with Maureen, Hetty,
and Jeanie. Oh, I hope they won't forget."

"They won't," Nan said confidently, as she got up from her place on the
floor by her bags. "There, I'm all packed and ready for the steward to
come and put the tags on them. Are you?"

"Just a second--yes, I'm all ready, too, now." Bess closed hers. "Let's
go up on deck." So they went up and out, and saw, for the first time
while on the boat, the sunrise. The sky was full of promise for a bright
day.

Even as they watched the light breaking brighter and brighter, the
ship's whistle gave three loud blasts. There were three more from shore,
and Nan clutched Bess's arm. "See, there it is--Ireland, the coast of
Ireland. See the lights?"

"Sure an' 'tis me home," Maureen had come up behind them, "the grandest
place in all the world."

"What county is that?" Nan looked to Maureen for information.

"I'm not so certain," Maureen replied, "but I'm after thinking that
that's the coast of Donegal, and a lovelier spot you'll not find for
many miles. Beyond lies Londonderry and after that you'll be seeing
Portrush and then at last Belfast! It's beauty, beauty all the way.

"Your America, it's fine and grand with all its tall buildings and great
cities, but me heart is warm for Ireland. There me mother and father and
little brothers and sisters will be waiting. Oh, it's good to be back."
Maureen wiped tears from her eyes.

"Come, Maureen," Nan and Bess were close to tears too, for her pang of
homesickness had turned their own thoughts back to America. "Come, let's
go down into the dining room. Let's see if we can find one big table so
that we can all have this last breakfast together." As she finished
speaking, Nan tucked Maureen's arm through hers and started.

It was a merry breakfast and a sad one in the weird light of the dining
room, half daylight, half electricity. There were people glad to be home
and people sad to be parting from newfound friends. Breakfast was eaten
hastily, so that everyone was up on deck waving goodbyes, calling last
minute messages, urging care, and trying to joke, all in one breath, as
the great steamer settled to anchor and a small tender nestled up to it.

Maureen's dad, a burly looking Irishman with eyes of the deepest blue
and lashes long and heavy, came aboard and took her in his arms. "Sure
and 'tis good to have me baby home agin," he said. "And it's mighty fine
you're looking in that perky new bonnet." He pushed her straw hat up and
looked into her eyes. "And it's not changed a bit you are after all that
long journey," he added.

He turned to her friends, "And you'll not be comin' to Ireland this
trip?" He sounded genuinely disappointed. "But you'll be comin' back."
He smiled kindly down upon them all. "And then you'll be stoppin' here
and we'll be meetin' you and you'll be off to Dublin Town with the likes
of us."

Nan liked Maureen's father. So did her friends. As he and Maureen went
across the gang-plank to the tender, they all hung over the rail and
waved. "We'll be seeing you in London," Nan called.

"Don't forget," Bess followed suit, "it's tea in London in coronation
week."




CHAPTER XX

BE CAREFUL, NAN!


"Are your passports all stamped for landing? Is your baggage tagged for
Glasgow? Are you sure you have everything?" Dr. Beulah smiled down at
the excited brood of young girls under her charge. "Have each of you a
supply of English pounds and shillings? In short, are you ready to leave
this boat and step your foot on foreign soil?"

They were all standing together on the boat's deck watching the
maneuverings as the ship came to rest in its dock just outside Glasgow.
There had been no end to the excitement since the girls waved Maureen
off at Belfast and the ship steamed across the North Channel to the
Firth of Clyde, passing countless fishing boats along the way.

Bess had turned from waving Maureen off and started back to the cabin.
Midway, she had a strange presentiment that something was vitally wrong.
She walked gingerly down the hallway, looking to the right and left at
the narrow corridors between groups of staterooms. When she came to that
from which Grace had said the Scotch hunchback had come forth several
mornings before, she walked very quietly and listened attentively. She
neither heard nor saw anything. It was as if the cabin was empty.

That in itself was strange, for the doors of all the cabins along the
way were open. In each, baggage awaited porters who were even now busy
in front cabins labeling it and carting it to an upper deck. "Maybe the
mystery has taken his baggage and walked out on us," Bess thought as she
continued down the corridor intent on making one more check of the
stateroom to make certain that nothing was being forgotten.

The thought relieved her, and she was even humming a little tune when
she turned into her own stateroom. She stopped short. There, kneeling in
front of Nan's baggage, was the red-headed hunchback!

He turned and looked at her. She would have screamed, but in a flash he
was at her side and his hand was clamped over her mouth. He looked at
her very intently with strange piercing eyes.

But his voice was almost gentle as he spoke. "'T would be weel, ver-r-ry
weel," he said in a strong Scotch burr, "if ye didna speak. These things
ha' no par-r-t of ye." With this, he turned and left the room.

Bess sank into a chair, full of conflicting emotions and was there
thinking, when Nan came into the stateroom after her.

"Bess, why Bess," Nan exclaimed, "what is the matter with you? You
looked scared to death."

Bess whimpered softly, "I am." This sounded strange coming from Bess,
and was strange in the face of her avowal of a few days before that if
she ever came upon him alone she would scream so loud that everybody on
the boat would come running. It was strange too, because Bess,
generally, when upset at all, responded with a torrent of words. Now,
she looked wilted as though every ounce of energy had been squeezed out
of her.

Nan got her a glass of water and held it as she sipped slowly. Then she
smiled wanly and sat silent, for a while, collecting her thoughts.

"Nan, it's that red-headed hunchback again," she said, finally. "You've
got to tell me what you know about him. I came upon him just now in our
cabin. He was over there," her voice grew stronger as she spoke, but
sounded sharp and nervous, "by your baggage."

Nan went over and carefully examined her locked baggage. It hadn't been
tampered with. She felt this instinctively just as soon as she put her
hands on it. What had the hunchback intended to do before Bess
discovered him?

"What did he say to you?" She turned to Bess.

Bess considered before answering. Were the deformed little man's words a
warning? Had he meant that she shouldn't repeat what he had said? Had he
meant that she shouldn't tell of his presence at all? Bess was startled
as this latter thought came to her, startled and frightened.

"I--I----don't remember what he said," Bess began.

"Elizabeth Harley," Nan looked down at her sternly, "You know very well
that you remember what he said. Come, now, tell me. I have to know."

"_You_ have to know!" Bess was angry now. "Nan, I'd like to know, too,
what all this is about. This man has been watching you ever since we
boarded the steamer in New York. You know it, and I know it, too.
Moreover, your father warned you, just before he left, to be careful. I
thought at the time that it meant nothing more than the warning my
mother gave me, to take care of my luggage and myself. Now I think
differently. Somehow, his voice sounded more earnest than that of the
rest of our parents. I think he meant more.

"Then there's something else, some other clue that I can't quite
remember, that makes me certain things are all wrong. Nan, please
explain what it's all about," Bess pleaded. But before Nan had a chance
to say anything, Bess went on untangling the confused jumble in her own
mind.

"There's this I can't understand either," she said, "Grace couldn't
remember whether he had a Scotch accent or not. I think it's something
you couldn't possibly overlook."

Nan made a mental note and kept quiet, hoping, that Bess would go on
revealing what she had found out.

"Besides," Bess continued, all unaware that she was doing just what Nan
wanted her to do, "Grace was scared to death and kept talking about his
piercing eyes that looked right through you and made you do what he
wanted you to. The other girls spoke about them too, after he confronted
them in the cabin that first morning. His eyes are strange, but when he
spoke to me, his voice was as gentle as it could possibly be. Why, he
all but patted me on the shoulder." Bess herself was surprised that the
thought didn't bring any feeling of revolt.

Nan looked at her. "Why, I'd almost say you liked the mysterious old
Scotchman," she said in a surprised tone.

"No, not that," Bess responded thoughtfully, "but I did feel almost
sorry for him. He looked meek and gentle, but withal very frightened as
he left this room.

"When he said, referring to the mysteries hereabouts, 'that these things
didna ha' no part of me,' he really sounded very kindly."

"Did he say that?" The question was out before Nan thought. She had been
worried for fear the plot that involved her would draw her friends into
its net.

With Nan's question, Bess suddenly realized that she had revealed all
she knew without learning a thing. "Why, you double-dyed deceiver," she
said in a surprised tone, "I've told you everything I know, and you
haven't said a thing."

Nan looked confused. "I couldn't help it, Bess," she confessed. "I had
to know what had happened, and there seemed no other way of finding out.
Now, let's forget it all for the time being."

"Just tell me one thing," Bess begged, when she saw that Nan was not
going to reveal all that she knew. "Do you know who the red-headed
Scotchman is?"

Nan considered the question. "I'm not certain," she said as though to
herself.

"But you think--" Bess spoke quietly, hoping that Nan would finish her
deliberations aloud. She was trying Nan's own tactics now.

"That it is some distant member of my mother's family," Nan said
slowly. "I saw the names and stateroom numbers, on a bulletin outside,
of those who are disembarking at Glasgow. The man in cabin 846 is Robert
Hugh Blake! 'Hugh' is an old family name on my mother's side and 'Blake'
is her maiden name.

"You remember the passenger list that was given us at the Captain's
dinner?"

Bess nodded her head. Hers was among the things she was saving for
souvenirs.

"His name is on that, too. And it has his home listed as 'Glasgow.'"

"You don't know anything more about him. You've never heard your mother
or anyone speak of him?" Bess followed up Nan's revelation, hoping to
hear more.

Nan ignored the first question. "Momsy never did speak very much of her
people in Scotland," she said in answer to the second. "She was very
fond of her great uncle, Hugh Blake, the one whose estate she inherited,
but I don't think she ever saw him. She liked him, because her father
did. She loved everything that he loved. Since this great uncle is the
only one he ever talked much about, he is the only one I know of.

"Oh, she has mentioned others, vaguely, from time to time, but I don't
remember their names. However, I don't think I've ever heard the name of
this particular person."

"Do you know at all why he should be camping on your doorstep?" Bess
questioned further.

But Nan was not revealing any more now. Certain that her friend had
recovered from her shock, she ignored the question, took one more look
at her baggage, and called a steward. He came promptly, and before Nan
and Bess left their stateroom again, all the baggage had been taken
upstairs.

"There, I guess that fixes that," Nan observed as they left the
stateroom for the last time. "The steward will have charge of the
baggage now until we land."

"What I can't understand," Bess began as though there was only one
question left in her mind, "is why Mr. Robert Hugh Blake is so
determined to get into your baggage. What have you that's so valuable?"

"Nothing, lassie, nothing," Nan answered. "Only a lot of dresses that
wouldn't become him, even if he could get them on."

Bess giggled at this. Nan took her by the arm. "Please," she said
earnestly and quickly, "don't say anything to anyone about what has
happened today. I'm sure it wouldn't do any good."

Bess remembered a similar promise, given at a time of other trouble in
Florida, just as those readers who have read "Nan Sherwood at Palm
Beach" will remember. "Of course I won't," she reassured her friend.

Nan looked her thanks. As the sound of the skirling of bagpipes reached
them, they hastened their steps and joined Dr. Beulah Prescott and the
rest of their Lakeview Hall friends on deck, and so were in the group
when Dr. Prescott asked the question, "Are you ready to leave this boat
and step your foot on foreign soil?"




CHAPTER XXI

WELCOME, LASSIES, TO SCOTLAND


Dr. Beulah's question went unanswered. The clank of the chain as
deckhands dropped the gang-plank from ship to shore attracted the
attention of the girls even as she asked it. Now they moved forward
slowly, with the rest of the passengers.

"We're almost there! We're almost there!" Bess could hardly contain
herself. "Now we are getting nearer and nearer and nearer. One more
step. Two more steps. We made it!" she exclaimed triumphantly as she
stepped her foot on the gangplank and carefully walked its length. Nan
was at her heels. Then one by one the others disentangled themselves
from the crowded deck and joined those on shore, until they all stood
together, "like a group of lost baffled children," Dr. Prescott said, as
she joined them and herded them through a door and into a long shed-like
station.

There, everything seemed in confusion. "It's like the Grand Central
Station in New York and the dock where we boarded the ship all rolled
into one," Laura whispered into Nan's ear.

"Yes, only you don't see kilted highlanders and bagpipes and English
officers in either of those places," Nan returned, waving and smiling
across the top of somebody's bags to Hetty, who had attracted her
attention from the distance.

"Welcome, lassies, to Scotland." A voice from behind them caused them to
turn and there was Jeanie. "Ha' ye learned your way aboot yet?" she
grinned at her American friends.

"We're no so guid as that." Nan recalled as best she could her own
mother's Scotch dialect, but let it go again as she called after Jeanie,
"Remember, it's tea in London during coronation week."

"Aye, and I'll not be forgettin'," Jeanie flung over her shoulder before
she was lost in the crowd of English, Irish and Scotch people.

"Porter, porter, porter." "Taxi, taxi." "Car for Royal Scott Hotel." The
calls were all around them in more variations of the English tongue than
they ever knew existed.

"Here, girls, this way," Dr. Prescott beckoned them to follow her.
"Here's the baggage."

Bess turned and followed her. Rhoda, Amelia, Grace, and Laura were
already at her side. Nan started too, but a small child, tears streaming
down its face, halted her.

She stooped down, pulled its grimy fists out of its eyes, pushed its
blond hair back, and comforted, "There, child, there. Don't cry. What
has happened?"

"I didna ken." The child cried harder than ever.

"Are you lost?"

"I didna ken," the answer was the same, but he grabbed hold of her coat
and pulled her along after him.

She glanced back toward her friends, but could catch no one's attention.
She stopped. The small force below her tugged hard at her coat.

"Ye canna stop noo." He was a persistent little Scotsman.

"No, I canna," Nan thought to herself and followed, wondering what it
was all about. He led her past the baggage, the train, and a small
window where men were busy changing American dollars to English pounds.
They passed lunch carts, magazine racks, and an information tower. Once
Nan stopped, but the little urchin's eyes filled so quickly with tears
that she gave up completely and resolved to find out what was wrong.

Finally, they came to a high iron fence through the gates of which no
one could go without a passport or permit. The small boy shied away from
this public entrance, followed the fence around to its joining with the
wall. There, stuffed between fence and concrete floor, was a bagpipe
almost as big as the child himself. He stooped over and tugged at it. It
wouldn't budge.

Nan knelt down and tugged, too. Between the two of them, after much
twisting and turning, pushing and pulling, the bagpipe was pulled
through. The child swung a strap over his shoulder, looked up at her
brightly now, and with a "thank ye, thank ye" ran along ahead of her
playing "On the Bonnie Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond."

She saw him once again before she left the station. It was just before
the train pulled out. He stood beneath her compartment window and played
the same tune again. This time tourists were throwing pennies and
ha'pennies at his feet and he was smiling broadly.

He waved up at Nan and called, "Noo ane for ye." She laughed and nodded,
as he swung into the tune a third time. At the end, Nan tossed him a
coin. He fingered it carefully, his Scotch thrift fighting with his
feeling of gratitude, but finally the better man won and he threw it
back up to her.

The sound of his playing was still in her ears as the train pulled out
for Emberon. Though she could not have known it then, the single tune
that he knew was to be a kind of theme song playing itself most
unexpectedly through her Emberon experience.

The ride from Glasgow, Great Britain's second largest city, to Emberon,
a small village on the coast of one of Scotland's many fjords took only
a few hours.

"It was a short ride," Nan wrote later to her mother, "from Glasgow to
Emberon, but such fun! The trains were queer, like those you see
sometimes in the movie with a corridor the whole length of each car. The
passengers all sit in little compartments that have two seats facing one
another. We all sat together, of course. Laura, Bess, and Dr. Beulah
were on one side and Grace, Rhoda, Amelia, and myself on the other. When
we ate, as we did soon after we were outside the city, the steward
pulled a little table down between us so that we were really quite snug
and cozy.

"It was nice, eating Scotch broth (and how good it was!) while a Scotch
landscape unwound itself at your side. I say this now, but, really, we
were so excited that we hardly knew at all what was happening. Oh,
mother, we are seeing so many strange new things all the time that my
tongue can hardly keep up with my eyes! When I get home I'm going to
talk and talk and talk until you feel as though you had taken the trip
yourself, but then you and Papa know all about it, because you were here
not long ago.

"You'd be surprised how many people I meet who remember you. The old
coachman who met us at the station, the people in the village, oh,
everyone here, tells me what a nice mother and father I have, until
sometimes I grow very lonesome to see you. I got your cable at Glasgow.
I am being very careful, truly, and I will write you all about
everything when I get to Edinburgh where I am hoping there will be some
letters from you. Until then--

                                                         My love,
                                                              Nan."

"Until then"--the words were simple, but how much was to happen "until
then."

Nan had been told what Emberon was like and had told her friends, but
even then it came as a surprise. She had known that it was a gray and
dreary looking place high up on a hill some distance from the village,
but how dreary she never could have imagined.

It was dusk when they drove up the steep rough road that was the only
entrance to the ancient estate. The high old-fashioned carriage that
they had climbed up into at the station rocked precariously from side to
side as the horses, almost as ancient as the carriage itself, pulled it
along.

In the half light, the girls looked at one another and at Dr. Beulah.
"It's almost spooky," Grace huddled closer to Laura as she spoke, "isn't
it?"

"These old estates," Dr. Beulah explained, "were almost all fortresses
at one time. They are built high up on hills so that they have a natural
means of defense against the surrounding country. The original owners
were lords who were almost kings in their own right. They fought, now
against one another, now against England, holding princes and
princesses, kings and queens as pawns. No man knew for sure who was his
friend and who his enemy.

"The stakes were high in those days. Each man thought that Scotland was
his for the fighting. So, when he got himself some land and built
himself his castle, he went out to conquer the surrounding country. It
was fight, fight, fight all the time, one Scottish clan against another.

"Then it was Scotland against England and the Scottish world was full of
spies. That very song the lad back in the station played over and over
again 'On the Bonnie Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond,' is the story of a
Scotsman who was captured by the English. The lake itself is not very
far from here."

"I believe," she went on, as she saw that she had the attention of all
the girls, "that the hero of that song belonged to one of the Highland
clans and was captured by the English at the battle of Culloden. He was
taken to Carlisle where he was tried for treason and condemned to be
executed.

"But as a special favor," she paused and waited while the carriage went
around a sharp bend in the road, and then continued, "the night before
his execution, he was allowed to receive a visit from his betrothed. In
bidding her goodby--and she is supposed to have been a very beautiful
Scotch girl--his heart turned homeward to the scenes of other, happy
days. He told her that his spirit would be there before she arrived,
that he would meet her at their former trysting place."

    "We'll meet where we parted in yon shady glen,
    By the steep, steep side of Ben Lomond."

Nan was humming the words over to herself even as the carriage came to
a stop before the gates of the ancient estate. The driver climbed down
from his high seat in front and pulled a rope. A bell rang in the
distance, the gates opened, and now, almost proudly, the horses pulled
the carriage up a short driveway and stopped. A proud dignified old
gentleman came out to greet them.




CHAPTER XXII

EMBERON


"Welcome, thrice welcome to Emberon," he greeted. "And you, my dear," he
continued as they walked in through big doors to a high old hall, "you,
I'm sure, are Nancy Sherwood." His voice was soft and low as he spoke to
her. He placed his hand on her head. "A Blake through and through," he
went on, smiling down at her surprise at his instant recognition.

"The same clear eyes, determined little chin, and proud carriage. Your
mother has it too, when she is well. And her father before her, Randolph
Hugh Blake--he was a wee lad when he first visited his uncle here--he
had those eyes. You are all cut from the same pattern as Hugh Blake, the
well-beloved steward of Emberon for nigh on to sixty years.

"We are glad to see you, little mistress," he said quaintly, as he rang
a bell for a servant.

Nan looked up, startled, at the term "mistress." Was it right to
address her so? A wave of shyness came over her. She looked about at the
ancient hall with its obsolete firearms hanging on the walls, its big
soft rug, tapestries, and the armor of a knight long dead standing in
the corner. So this was Emberon! This was the estate her mother had
inherited! This was the place her mother and father had visited a year,
two years before, while she had been in Pine Camp and then at Lakeview
Hall. Nan drew a deep breath, trying hard to realize it all.

For a few moments, they all stood around telling the venerable old
gentleman, James Blake, who was a distant relative of Mrs. Sherwood's,
of their journey. Then, as the servant he had summoned appeared, he
spoke again to Nan with the utmost deference.

"Your apartments are ready upstairs," he said. "Go quickly, for it is
late and some in the village have prepared an entertainment for the
lassies from America. It is quite necessary that you go down, for most
of them down there are people who know the Blake story from beginning
to end. Hugh Blake was an idol in these parts.

"He treated those who were under him with such kindness and
thoughtfulness that they looked upon him almost as a father. He
took care of them when they were sick, watched over them when they
were in trouble, comforted them when their young folks went off to the
cities or to America. He saw that none went hungry. He helped them
whenever he could, and when he died, they mourned as though he was one
of theirs. Now they are anxious to see his youngest descendant.

"Though I know you are tired," he chuckled as they all shook their
heads, "you must make the most of your short stay here. Upstairs, my
sister has everything in readiness. Now, begone with you." He dismissed
them and turned toward the big fireplace to warm his hands.

"Why, Nan Sherwood!" Bess exclaimed as soon as they left the reception
hall, "it's a castle! And you are the princess!" Although Bess was
fooling, she was very much impressed at all she had seen.

"You are my subjects and you had better behave," Nan laughed as they
were ushered into a group of big bedrooms with high canopied beds, huge
chests, heavy rugs, thick damask drapes, everything dark and faded, the
luxuries of ages gone by.

"Yes, princess of Emberon," Laura made a brief curtsey. "We are at your
command. Your ladies in waiting await your orders." She took Nan's hand
and led her to a high-backed oaken chair where Nan seated herself for a
moment.

"Your subjects, madame," Laura waved her hand toward the others, and
then added, "They don't amount to much, but they are the best we have to
offer at present."

"That's treason!" Amelia exclaimed, "treason! We're loyal subjects and
true. We are daughters of Scotland and defenders of the Blake clan."

The girls were acting. It was their own version of a scene from a class
play they had once acted in at Lakeview. The room's setting had brought
it all back to mind. But in acting they were prophesying too,
prophesying something even more romantic than the scene the present
brought to mind.

"Defenders of the Blake clan! Ah, how it needs you! Come, rally round!"
Nan pretended to sound the call to battle as she left her regal seat and
plunged into the job of unpacking.

The others followed suit. The stern faces of the ancient lairds of
Emberon that looked down on them from heavy gilt frames on the wall
never saw six more industrious girls than those in the Lakeview crowd as
they unpacked and dressed.

Once Laura looked up at them. "I must say," she said then to Nan, "that
this isn't a very cheerful looking bunch of ancestors that is watching
us."

Nan paused in her work to look, too. "They aren't, are they?" she
agreed, walking around the room and looking intently at each of their
faces. "These are portraits, I think, of the first of the lairds of
Emberon. A fighting lot they were and as straight-laced as the best of
the Scotsmen."

"They look it," Laura answered. "I, personally, feel as though they
disapprove of every single dress I'm taking out of this bag."

"Let's see, how should they be made to satisfy those crusty old
gentlemen?" She held one up to herself. "It should be tighter in the
bodice, have a ruff around the neck, and the skirt," she looked down at
the trim pleats in her own, "oh, that's all wrong! It should be long and
full, just touching the floor. No wonder they disapprove. I am disgusted
myself," she added, looking up at one of the solemn faces and winking.

"Why, Laura Polk," Rhoda had been watching and listening to the little
by-play, "You had better be more respectful to your hosts," she nodded
toward the portraits, "or tonight, at the parade of the ghosts, you will
be taught a well-deserved lesson."

"Parade of the ghosts!" The exclamation was Grace's.

"Why, of course, I had forgotten completely about that," Laura looked
very serious. "At the stroke of midnight in these ancient castles, all
of the skeletons come out of the closets and the dungeons and the secret
stairways and the cellars and the attics, walk through the halls, rattle
around a bit, clank a few chains and then do some fancy haunting. If
they are healthy ghosts, they groan. If they are weaklings, they just
whistle round a bit. Oh, there is no end to the excitement in these
hoary places.

"Besides the ghosts and skeletons, there are always a few dissatisfied
retainers who welcome the first opportunity to polish off the living
owners. They hang around," Laura was entirely oblivious to the fact that
she had, for once in her life, startled Nan, "in caves, abandoned
buildings, and sometimes behind sliding doors, and appear on the
slightest pretext.

"But never fear, my lassies," her voice came from the depths of her
case, as she searched around the bottom for a small gold bracelet, "the
line of the lairds of Emberon has died out, the Princess tells me, and
so there's no one here to be polished off. We have nothing to worry
about," she ended as she found the bracelet and clasped it around her
wrist, "except ghosts and skeletons."

"And old Mr. Blake who is waiting downstairs for us, I am sure," Nan
added as she moved toward the doorway.

"He wouldn't harm a hair of anyone's head," Rhoda joined Nan. "Are all
the Blakes so nice?"

Nan didn't answer. Both Laura and Rhoda had brought to mind one of the
Blakes whom she was trying hard to forget--Robert Hugh Blake, the
hunchback. She remembered suddenly that she had forgotten completely to
reread the letter that had come to mind again those last days on the
boat. Now, there was no time as together they went out, joined Dr.
Prescott, and descended to the Great Hall where old James Blake was
awaiting them.

"Are you all quite comfortable?" He smiled at the excited faces. It was
good to have voices and laughter ringing through the rooms again. It
reminded him of the old days when people were always about. In his
mind's eye he saw men returning from the hunt, couples dancing, great
tables groaning with food, excited groups discussing politics, Christmas
parties for the young folk, feasts for everyone, servants and all, on
the master's birthday.

Then, in a flash, for he was a religious soul, the vision changed, and
it was Sunday morning. The Laird himself was at the head of the room,
there near one of the two great fireplaces. The Bible was open before
him, and he was reading to the household of Emberon, kneeling in the
Great Hall before him.

Those had been the good days. James Blake wiped an involuntary tear out
of his eye. He was an old man and tears came easily.

"Come, come," he said gruffly as he nodded to the girls, "the carriage
is waiting and already we are late." He led the way out of the room to a
side entrance. Soon the dull sound of the horses' hoofs beating against
the road was echoing back through the night to the castle, as the
carriage wound its way down the road to the lighted village.




CHAPTER XXIII

SCOTTISH GAMES AND SCOTTISH TUNES


It was a gala scene that met their eyes as they drove into the village.

There, around a game field lighted by myriads of small electric bulbs,
the whole population of the town was collected. Everyone was in holiday
mood. All eyes were riveted on a brass band of kilted Highlanders
marching up and down the field when Nan and her friends made their
appearance. At a signal, the band struck up a happy welcoming tune as
the girls were ushered directly to a group of seats opposite the very
center of the field. Everyone stood up and clapped.

"Seems almost like the good old high school days at Tillbury," Bess
whispered to Nan, "I half expect a cheerleader to appear."

"Sh!" The warning was Nan's, for after the girls acknowledged the
greeting by bowing and smiling and had seated themselves, the contests
began.

First, there was the bagpipe competition. At opposite ends of the field
on wooden platforms, raised so that everyone could see, the Angus
MacPhersons, Donald MacDonalds, and James Mackenzies of the village
marched very slowly around and around playing jigs and reels and all
sorts of Scottish Highland tunes.

How weird the music seemed to the ears of the American girl! It wasn't
gay enough for Bess who liked only the jazz music that she could hear at
home. She grew restless. But Nan and Laura, always interested in strange
new things, sat on the very edge of their seats, anxious not to miss any
detail of what was happening.

"How I'd like to awaken Mrs. Cupp some drizzly dark morning with bagpipe
music!" Laura's eyes danced merrily at the thought.

"You'd be expelled as sure as anything," Nan whispered back. "Will you
look at that?" She almost fell off the edge of the seat in her
excitement.

The Highlanders had retired for a while and, racing across the field
now, were teams of two men each, one pushing a wheelbarrow and the other
in it. When they missed the goal, as they generally did, a bucket,
suspended from a beam above the goal line, tipped and drenched the two
with water, to the great amusement of the crowd.

"Oh, what fun!" Laura exclaimed. "Look! There goes another bucket over.
He got it right in the face!"

"And look at the next one," Bess was interested too, now. "Is he going
to get by safely? No, look, Nan!" She grabbed her friend's arm. "The
wheelbarrow and everything is going to go over now! Are they hurt?" She
closed her eyes and looked the other way.

"Oh, Bess, they're not hurt, they're just half drowned," Nan was
laughing heartily. This was fun to watch, better than any circus. The
crowd cheered and laughed and clapped and laughed again. "Tilting the
Bucket" was one of the favorite Scottish games.

Next came the highpoint of the evening--the dancing of the Highland
Fling and the Sword Dance. Such dancing! The tall, straight, skirted
Highlanders with their white jackets and green kilts went from movement
to movement, swinging rhythmically and gracefully, leaving the girls
breathless at the end. The crowd applauded, long and loudly.

The dancers came back and did the Highland Fling over again. The crowd
wouldn't let them leave. They cheered and whistled. The dancers repeated
again and again, each time doing it better than the last.

The group of three that finally won the evening's prize, a five pound
note, climaxed their conquest of the crowd by donating the money to the
village coronation fund! The winner of the bagpipe contest followed suit
and then the Broad Jump champion, the winner of the Mile Run and the
Hurdle Races joined in. Before the crowd really realized what it was
doing, everyone was throwing coins toward the center of the field. The
band started to play "God Save the King!" Everyone stood up. They sang,
first the English National Anthem and then Scotch song after Scotch
song.

Finally the lights blinked. The band played "God Save the King" again
and everyone moved slowly away. It had been a grand evening with some
fifty pounds added to the village fund for a stupendous celebration on
the day of the crowning of the King and Queen.

Nan and her friends shook hands with the committee that had planned the
evening's entertainment. Villager after villager stopped to talk with
this young descendant of Hugh Blake who had come from far away America
to see the old estate. They were simple folk, straightforward and honest
in their appraisal of the brown-eyed American, but they found nothing to
criticize. Somehow, Nan was able to make them feel that she was one of
them, and as they went away gossiping about Old Hugh and young Nan, they
all agreed that she was a "bonnie, bonnie lassie."

The committee, escorting the visitors back to the carriage, urged them
to stay in Emberon for the coronation celebration.

"Aye, and it will be a gr-r-r-and day here," William MacDonald, the
chairman, urged. "In London, noo, I'll gr-r-r-ant ye, it will be
ver-r-ry guid too, but mind ye, ye cudna find no better celebration than
the one here at Emberon. It's ver-r-ry proud we are of his Royal
Highness and her Ladyship. They pass here ver-r-ry often on their way to
the North. Aye, and even once they stopped to watch the games. That was
the time young MacDonald, my nephew, ye ken," he explained proudly,
"tossed the caber so high and over so cleanly, that the guid king
himself, mind ye, shook him by the hand. Aye, and that was a gr-r-r-and
day." The old man stopped while he thought it all over again,
remembering how he had stood right next to his nephew when the king
congratulated him.

"Will ye stay?" He repeated his invitation, as with an effort, he shook
the memory of that bygone day from his mind and came back to the present
and the young Blake lass.

"Noo, and she cudna," old James Blake stepped into the conversation.
"Ither, bigger things," he lapsed into the dialect of the villagers
about him, "are hers in London town."

Old MacDonald looked up. A flash of understanding passed between the
two.

"Ye're right, Jamie," he said, "and she's a right bonnie lass to carry
on."

With this, Nan and her friends were hurried along by James Blake toward
the carriage, and in the moonlight, they drove up the steep hill toward
the gray castle on the summit.




CHAPTER XXIV

AN ACCIDENT NEAR THE CASTLE


What a ride! Earlier in the evening, Grace had called it spooky. Now she
said nothing, but just sat thinking, watching the tall old trees through
the carriage window as the equipage rumbled along.

She thought of her mother and father and Walter and of the coming
meeting in London. She thought of Nan and her brother and smiled. She
thought--but the thought winged away, as the carriage swayed far over to
the right, and James Blake stuck his head out and shouted to the driver,
"Be careful there!" The carriage slowed down. Grace breathed easier.
Then the warning was forgotten and the whole thing forged ahead again,
bumping over stones and rocks and ruts.

The horses seemed possessed. The old carriage creaked and groaned under
the strain. Momentarily, the passengers felt that the whole thing would
topple over, or that the carriage, like the one-hoss shay, would
collapse into a thousand pieces. Grace now was visibly frightened. Nan
looked at her anxiously and gave a warning look to Bess whom, she was
afraid, would break out in a tirade against the carelessness of the
driver. Finally, they rounded the sharp turn in the road which Nan
remembered as just preceding the castle gates.

They all breathed easier. They could see the castle now, beyond the
gates and beyond the drive. But just as they looked reassuringly at one
another, just as old James Blake murmured, "Home again," the carriage
gave a sharp lurch. The horses stopped suddenly, stumbled, regained
their balance, and then stood, shaking their heads vigorously. The
carriage gave one mighty shake, shivered, and settled down to silence on
its ancient springs.

Inside, the occupants were jolted one on top of the other. The girls
unscrambled quickly. Young and hardy, the jolt did not hurt them, but
old James Blake had toppled over so that he was lying senseless against
the door.

Nan knelt down beside him. She pulled out a handkerchief and pushed his
tousled hair back from his face. There was an ugly gash in his forehead.
Dr. Prescott felt his pulse. It was faint. Together, they raised him to
the seat.

They called for the coachman. There was no answer. They exchanged
significant glances. "Do you suppose he was hurt, too?" Grace could
hardly speak she was so frightened.

Laura made a move to get out, but as she did so old James Blake stirred.
"Dinna go out there," he murmured as he slowly opened his eyes. He
looked around. His eyes found Nan and he reached out and touched her. "I
dinna ken what it's all aboot," he said weakly and seemed about to drop
off again. He caught himself.

He raised his hand and tried to push the door open. It was stuck. He
knocked at it weakly with his fist. Then he kicked at it and it flew
open.

"Hey, up there," he called to the coachman.

There was no answer. He got out, slowly and painfully. Nan followed and
took his arm. He patted hers reassuringly.

"Better take care, lass," he murmured, half stumbling, half walking
around to the front of the coach. Nan shook herself impatiently as an
eerie feeling came over her. Nevertheless, it was comforting to hear
someone descend from the coach at her back.

"Be careful, Nan." Dr. Prescott's voice came through the darkness.

"Can I help you?" It was Laura's tone, low and confident.

"We're all right," Nan called back. She stood now, next to James Blake
looking up at the coachman's seat. It was empty!

What had happened? A number of possibilities flashed through Nan's mind
as she moved closer to James Blake. Had the driver been hurt and fallen
down the other side? Had he jumped down and run away after the carriage
stopped so suddenly? Had--had he been in the carriage at all during the
wild drive up the hill?

She followed James Blake as he picked his way carefully around the
whinnying horses. Was this all a part of the strange series of events
that had seemed to pursue her ever since she knew for certain that she
was to make this trip?

Nan stepped up beside the old Scotsman when he paused to examine the
feet of one of the horses in passing. What did he know about all of
this? She determined to ask him when they were alone again. Now, she
took comfort in noting the kindly expression on his face as he rubbed
the head of one of the horses that seemed to be hurt. The animal nuzzled
his nose in the master's hand.

"Easy now," he encouraged and almost at once the animals stopped the
impatient shaking of their heads.

They reached the other side of the coachman's seat and fearfully looked
around. There was nothing there. They walked back over the road for
several yards. Still they found no signs of the missing person.

James Blake scratched his head reflectively. "Come, now," he took Nan's
hand firmly in his, "come, stay close to me and we'll clear this mystery
up." His voice sounded confident, but inside he was sure, as sure as he
was of anything that this was no mere accident.

He felt the warmness of Nan's hand in his. He noted her apparent
fearlessness. "The lass should never have been allowed to come to
Emberon," he thought and was annoyed that his own desire to see her had
allowed him, in the early months of the year, to persuade himself that
it would be all right.

Why hadn't he allowed the Edinburgh solicitors who had handled the
estate carry out the final terms of the will of old Hugh without his
meddling? Ah, but it was too late to think of that now. She was here and
had to stay, at least for the night. Perhaps tomorrow he could send her
on to Edinburgh. But now, now it was best to get her mind off
this--accident. It was best to get her back in her apartment at Emberon.
He could guard her there.

"Come, lass," he spoke, as he turned from his search along the side of
the road, "these things are not for young ladies. You and your friends
must go back to the house. We'll let someone from there make the
necessary inquiry."

"But what if the coachman is lying along the road, hurt?" Nan
protested. "If we wait, it might be too late to help him. Please, let me
look down the road a way further." She almost wrenched her hand free
from his as she spoke.

"That's a brave lass," he complimented her. Nevertheless he didn't let
her go. He turned abruptly and started back toward the carriage. Against
her will, she went along with him.

"Did you find him?" Laura was waiting beside the door of the carriage as
they came up to it again.

Nan shook her head. What was this all about? Why had old James Blake
stopped the search for the missing coachman so suddenly? Exhausted from
the day's events, the landing at Glasgow, the trip to Emberon, the
excitement over the Scotch games, and then this mystery, she felt
impatient with the old gentleman. She was still afraid that the coachman
lay out there in the dark somewhere, injured.

Her feeling of impatience continued as James hustled the girls into the
carriage, closed the door after them, and then walked alone to the big
gate and pulled three times on the big bell rope.

In the stillness of the night, the girls, huddled in the carriage,
could hear very faintly the sound of the bell up at the big house. Then
they heard, or thought they heard, the sound of a door, footsteps, and
at long last, there was someone at the gate. Though they couldn't see
anyone, they knew that James Blake was in whispered consultation.

Finally, there was the grating noise of the gates swinging back on rusty
hinges. James Blake sent a man from the house to drive the carriage the
rest of the way. The girls were glad to hear the slapping sound of the
reins as the new driver put them in place over the horses' backs.

The carriage pulled out of a rut, lunged forward and then came to a stop
again.

"Careful!" The voice was that of the old steward. The driver tried
again. This time a horse stumbled.

"Whoa, there," James Blake ordered, "we canna drive them. The poor
beastie is hurt."

So it happened that at sometime after midnight, six Lakeview Hall girls
and Dr. Prescott got out of a carriage and walked along the lonely
entrance road to Emberon Castle.




CHAPTER XXV

JAMES BLAKE DOES SOME EXPLAINING


They were all wary as they picked their way over the dry rutted road,
but Nan more so than any of them. Even as James Blake felt responsible
for her, so she felt responsible for her friends. There was small
comfort now, in this lonely place, in the memory that the hunchback had
told Bess that "these things had no part of her." The accident, if such
it might be called, on the hill just now, might very well have killed
them all. Nan shuddered as she thought of how serious it might have
been.

She peered this way and that into the tangle of bushes, grass, and
thistles along the way, not knowing what she was looking for, but
suspicious of every dark shadow.

Once, she looked gratefully up at the sky, the big moon, and the bright
stars. She stumbled.

"No star gazing tonight," Laura steadied her as she almost fell. "And
what a moon, and what a sky, and what a shadow." Laura pointed off to
the right. "Look," she whispered, half in fun, half in seriousness,
"look, it's like a man carrying something long in his hand."

Nan's glance followed Laura's. The shadow--was it a man's? She watched
it. Was it moving? Then she breathed a deep sigh.

"Oh, Laura," she chided her friend, "it's only a tree! Will you stop
teasing?"

"What was a tree?" Grace was on edge too, anxious to get inside, anxious
to get away from this castle that had seemed so wonderful and so grand
only a few hours ago.

"Nothing, Grace." Nan tried to keep her own voice from seeming worried
as she spoke. "Laura's seeing things in the dark."

Grace didn't answer, because she had been seeing things too. In the face
of Nan's quietness and calmness, it did seem silly. With this thought,
she felt encouraged and looked more bravely around her. An owl hooted.
She jumped. All the girls jumped. It was Dr. Prescott's voice this time
that calmed them down.

"Almost there, girls!" her voice actually sounded cheery in the night.

"Aye, and safely too." Old James Blake had been particularly silent
since they left the carriage. Now, he spoke with a great sense of
relief. Already he could see that a door was open and inside there was
light and security.

He stepped his foot on the first of the broad stone steps and stood
there as the girls walked on up through the door and into the light of
the great hall. After watching them disappear, he turned, gave one last
penetrating glance into the night, but saw nothing to disturb him
further. He listened then for the sound of the horses, heard one whinny.
It was a rather pleasant, comforting sound. He was satisfied that they
were being properly cared for, so he too walked up the steps, conscious
now for the first time that the wound in his forehead ached and that his
head hurt.

The pain angered him. Again he turned away from the light. This time, he
shook his fist at the unseen forces out there in the dark.

"Ye'll not do her harm," he said, "as long as James Blake can fight."
With this, he set his chin firmly and followed the American lassies into
the castle.

Already, at Dr. Prescott's insistence they had found their way to their
rooms. She lingered in the apartment until they had undressed and were
safely in bed. Then she herself carefully closed their doors before she
returned to the Hall where James Blake was sitting before the big open
fireplace, puzzling over the whole situation.

"Your head, is it injured badly?" There was a real note of concern in
her voice as she spoke. She liked this old Scotsman, even if she
couldn't understand the ways of his household.

"It's nothing at all," he waived all consideration of himself. "Are the
lassies all right?" He nodded his head in the direction of the stairs.

Dr. Prescott knew by his tone that his entire thought was for them.
"Quite all right at present," she answered as she sat down in the chair
he had pulled out for her with a quaint courtly sort of grace. "Now,
tell me," she entreated, "what is this all about? What happened down on
the hill?"

He didn't answer at once, but sat thinking. Should he tell as much of
the story as he knew? Would it help or hinder this woman to know? For a
moment he sat appraising her. She looked capable enough, he decided, but
then, there was no telling about women. He shook his head and winced,
without thinking, at the pain. After all, he decided finally, this
pleasant looking woman was Nan's guardian in the absence of her mother
and father. It was only fair that she know everything that he did. Then,
too, if things worked out rightly, she would have to be Nan's sponsor in
the whole London business.

Dr. Prescott, though she couldn't read his thoughts exactly, knew, from
her long experience with people, approximately what was going on in his
mind. She sat silent while she saw him coming to his decision.

Eventually, he spoke. "You know, of course," he said, "the story of Mrs.
Sherwood's inheritance?" Dr. Prescott nodded her head. "And why Nancy is
here?" he continued.

Dr. Prescott was a little puzzled at this question. "Why--yes," she
agreed slowly, "to see the estate."

"Yes, in part." James Blake seemed to be feeling his way along now.
"That is the reason that was given, at least, for our anxiety to have
her come, that and the fact that we wanted to see her. An old man's
whim, you know, that is what Nan's mother, bless her heart, thought. But
actually, there is more behind this than appears on the surface.

"Old Hugh Blake was more of a power in this section of Scotland than
most people of this generation realize," he went on. "The Blake family,
in the beginning of Scotland's history, was, if you will pardon my
saying so, for I, too, am one of his descendants, because of its wealth
and intelligence, very close to the royal family. However, the old line
gradually died out. This explains how it happened Mrs. Sherwood
inherited the estate.

"But in the old days, when the clans hereabouts practically ruled the
country, the Blakes of Emberon were frequently called to London to
advise the king's ministers. At such times they were generally rewarded
in one way or another. Sometimes it was with land, sometimes with
important foreign posts, sometimes with court privileges that were
highly prized in those days. Yes, and highly respected," he added, as
the thought of the day's happenings again crossed his mind.

"So it happened that Hugh Blake the fourth, the original Laird of
Emberon--it was he who built this Hall we are sitting in--back in the
sixteenth century performed a service to the King that won for him an
ambassadorship to France. It was a particularly ticklish post then, for
France and Scotland and England were continually having trouble.

"Well, Hugh Blake, he is supposed to have been a very charming young man
at the time, gifted and well-educated, became a favorite at the French
court, and well-beloved of the French king. So it was, that once, in the
tangled history of the time, he succeeded in getting some concessions
from the French that were most advantageous to the English.

"London and the court there was so pleased with young Hugh that they
bestowed on him and his descendants forever the privilege of assisting
at the coronation of English kings." His voice was excited and nervous
as he finished the sentence.

"You understand what I am saying?" The old man looked at Dr. Prescott
intently. Then he shook his head.

"Perhaps I don't make myself quite clear," he added. "The simple fact
is," he explained further, "that Mrs. Sherwood's inheritance carried
with it the right to assist at the present coronation! Moreover, her
great uncle, Hugh Blake, who got his name from the old line, specified
to those of us who were his friends, that young Nan, if she seemed to us
to be worthy, should be the one to carry on! That is why we wanted her
to come. That is why the villagers were so anxious to see her. And that
is why," he lowered his voice now, "I was fearful of her safety out
there this night."

"You mean there is some opposition?" Dr. Prescott asked when she found
her voice after this amazing story had been told.

"Yes, on the part of one or two," the old man admitted, "who think, and
wrongly so, that if some means can be found to prevent Nan's taking part
at the crowning this spring, they will be able to prove their right to
carry on when the court of claims, where such things are argued before
the king's representatives, meets a few days hence in London."

"Does Mrs. Sherwood know of all of this?" Dr. Prescott asked further.

"Not yet. This portion of the inheritance was bestowed under the terms
of another will which was put in my keeping by Hugh Blake. The Edinburgh
solicitors who handled the estate for Mrs. Sherwood when she and her
husband were here, know this story I have told you, however. Even now,
they are awaiting word from me as to how to proceed. They are anxious,
too, for Nan to come. Tonight, with your consent," he continued, "I will
send off a cable to America, explaining the circumstances. We will not
proceed until we hear from Nancy's parents."

Somewhere in the large rooms of the old castle a clock now chimed
slowly, one, two, three.

Dr. Prescott looked at her watch. "Will you be so kind," she said as she
arose from her chair, "as to wait and send that cable in the morning?
What you have told me here tonight has come so unexpectedly that I'd
like an hour or two to think it over before communicating with Nan's
parents."

"You don't object," James Blake seemed startled at the mere thought, "to
Nan's taking part in the coronation?"

"None whatsoever," Dr. Prescott hastened to assure him. "It will be a
great privilege and honor indeed, doubly so, because she is an American
girl."

"Aye, that has been some of the cause for trouble," he said, "with the
people hereabouts. They didn't want the honor to go across the seas. But
Nancy's mother, when she came over to take possession of the estate
quite won the heart of everyone. Now Nancy has done the same. There will
be no more trouble of that sort," he promised, "and no more trouble of
any kind, if I can help it." He finished the sentence belligerently.

His own fighting mood brought back to Dr. Prescott's mind the accident
in the carriage.

"Do you know at all what happened tonight?" she asked.

"You mean what caused the accident?" he parried, for here was something
he did not want to talk about as yet.

"Yes."

"I am not certain as yet," he admitted half the truth, "but if you will
have faith in an old man and leave your question rest for a few hours,"
he was very serious as he spoke, "I will answer it later. There is no
need for you to worry," he concluded. With this he walked with her over
to the stairway and watched her as she went up.

Alone in the hall now, he rang a bell and called for the servant who
had been left with the carriage.




CHAPTER XXVI

NAN'S DISAPPEARANCE


Somewhere on the estate a cock crowed.

Nan stirred sleepily and turned over. The cock crowed triumphantly
again. Nan turned once more and saw that the morning sun was filtering
in through the heavy drapes at the windows. She rubbed her eyes and
stretched. She looked around. Where was she? Then she spied the
ancestral portraits frowning down upon her and she remembered
everything.

So she had slept after all! She remembered vaguely an urge the night
before to stay awake and watch to see that nothing happened. Why, it was
music that had lulled her to sleep! She remembered it now, the faint far
away sound of a bagpipe playing. It had been like a dream, for with the
wind around the castle and the creaking of the old floors, she had been
completely unable to follow the thread of the tune. It had come, died
away, and come again. In trying to follow it, she had fallen asleep at
last.

Now she lay listening. There were no sounds at all to be heard in the
old castle. She got up quietly, slipped into her robe and slippers, and
walked softly over to the windows, careful all the while not to disturb
anyone. She pulled the curtains back and stood looking down on the
castle grounds, seeing them in the daylight for the first time.

The big gray stone building she was in, she could see now, was built on
a pinnacle so that on all sides there were valleys below. She remembered
what Dr. Beulah had said the night before about the old castles. Now she
saw in imagination the leaders of clans in days gone by standing where
she was, watching the approach of the enemy below.

She peopled the towers that she could see with beautiful princesses, the
crumbling walls of the older unused parts of the castle with knights in
armor, singing, talking, laughing, and fighting. She imagined all sorts
of plots and counterplots, and now in the valleys there was grain
growing and cattle grazing! How pretty it looked in the early morning
sunshine! So different than it had seemed the night before!

Now she thought again of the accident on the hill. What had caused it?
Could she learn more by daylight than she had been able to by night? A
bird sang cheerily outside. Another flew across her line of vision.
Everything seemed to be beckoning her to come out and explore. She
turned from the window and dressed hastily. Perhaps she could solve last
night's mystery by going down the hill. Perhaps she could solve it and
set everyone's mind at rest!

She opened the door carefully and walked slowly down the big staircase
into the Great Hall. There James Blake was asleep before the big
fireplace where the embers of last night's fire were still burning. She
saw that his head was bandaged and that he looked tired and worried,
even in sleep. She couldn't know that he had dropped off only a half
hour before from sheer exhaustion. He had spent the few hours remaining
after his talk with Dr. Prescott and his servant in personally watching
to see that nothing further happened.

Now, as he slept, she walked quietly past his back. He stirred and
muttered something. She stopped. He sank back into quiet sleep and she
went on and out, opening the door carefully and closing it the same.

James Blake stirred again and awakened then with a start. He looked
around. "Auld fool!" he muttered. "Sleeping, when ye'd set yourself to
watch those lassies." He got up and walked around the room. Everything
seemed to be all right. Stiff from his night in the chair he stretched,
threw a knotted log of wood on the fire, and then rang for a servant.

"The young lassies upstairs are tired," he said. "See that everything is
kept quiet so they will sleep until late. Before the day is over, they
will be off to Edinburgh." So it was not until hours after she had
slipped through the door, walked down the road past the bushes that had
seemed such a menace the night before, and passed through the gate, that
Nan's disappearance was discovered.

It was Bess who missed her first. Awakening much later than Nan, she lay
for some time enjoying the luxury of the room in which she slept. She
noted every detail of the furnishings and determined that when she
returned to school in the fall, nothing of all this would be lost in the
telling. She half hoped that she would have the opportunity to tell
Linda Riggs. In her mind's eye, she picked out one or two others that
she would like to impress. No one that she knew, she thought with
satisfaction, had ever even seen such a place as this old castle, much
less stayed in one.

The more she thought of it, the grander it seemed. A little feeling of
envy came over her. Why was it that the nice things that happened to Nan
never happened to her? Why couldn't her father or mother have a place
like this? Bess was a thoughtless unappreciative little person at times.
Though her father and mother gave her everything within their means, she
was still dissatisfied. Her hand touched the satin cover that was over
her. As quickly as the feeling of envy had come, it went. She listened
for sounds. Was Nan awake in the next room?

She got up and stuck her head in through the door. The bed was empty!
Was everyone except herself up? She went across the hall to Laura's
room, and found her still sleeping. She looked in the big double room
where Amelia and Grace were. They were sleeping too. So was Rhoda. She
debated once as to whether or not she should look into Dr. Prescott's
apartment. "I don't dare to do that," she decided, "Nan's probably
downstairs waiting for us. Maybe she will come up, if I stay here."

She went back into her own room, and because she was cold, she crawled
back into bed. But then her curiosity as to Nan's whereabouts got the
better of her. Maybe Nan was out exploring! It would be fun to walk
around the castle grounds!

She dressed almost as quickly as Nan had, slipped out quietly too, and
went downstairs.

"Weel, lassie," James Blake greeted her as she entered the big hall.
"Ye're up bright and early this morning."

"But I'm not the first," Bess smiled back, "Where's Nan?"

"Why, the lass is still asleep," he began heartily, and then noting the
puzzled expression on Bess's face, he added, "Isn't she?" A world of
possibilities came to his mind as he asked the question and he repeated
it before Bess could answer. "Tell me quickly, isn't she upstairs? Isn't
she with her other friends, with the school mistress? Isn't she about up
there some place?"

Bess was frightened too now and turned. "I'll ask Dr. Prescott," she
called over her shoulder as she went up the stairs. "Shall I?"

"Aye, lass, and be quick!" Old James Blake followed her half way up the
stairs.

But Dr. Prescott, awake herself in her apartment, heard their voices,
and came out on the landing. "Is there anything wrong?" Before the
question was answered, she knew the response. "Nan's missing!" For a
moment the two older people stood with Bess between them looking
hopelessly into one another's faces. Then they all got busy.

A hurried check of Nan's room showed that what they feared most had not
happened. The young girl had left the apartment of her own accord. She
had not been kidnapped, at least not while in her room. "She's probably
just gone exploring." Bess took the whole thing calmly at first, for she
knew Nan's habits.

"Aye, maybe so," old James Blake agreed, "but 'tis better to have her
here with us. We'll all do our exploring together." With this, he called
the servants and tried to check on Nan's movements. No one had seen her.

A search was organized. Everyone was sent to a different part of the
estate. Old James Blake himself climbed to the top of the highest tower
and looked out over the grounds. He came down sadly.

There was no Nan to be seen or found anyplace.




CHAPTER XXVII

BESS HAS HER SAY


"I just can't believe things won't turn out all right!" Bess exclaimed,
as she and her other Lakeview Hall friends sat together in Nan's room in
the great castle. "And I hate having to stay here! I don't see why they
can't let us help too! After all, Nan's our friend and if she is in
trouble, we ought to be allowed to help her get out of it."

"But Bess," Rhoda spoke softly, "they told us to stay here so that we
would be handy in case we were needed. I'm sure that if there was
anything at all in the world that we could do, Dr. Prescott would call
us."

"I'm not so sure of that," Bess answered. "She treats us most of the
time as though we were babies. It happens this time," she continued with
some satisfaction, "that we know more than anyone about what has been
going on."

"What do you mean?" Laura spoke up now.

"Well, for one thing," Bess began, "we know about the hunchback and
nobody else does."

"Do you think he has anything to do with this?" Laura looked at Bess
intently. "After all, you know, no one is certain but what Nan has just
gone out and lost herself. You all know how she likes to wander around
strange places by herself."

"I said that downstairs, myself," Bess answered, "but I don't believe it
at all. Nan wouldn't worry us like this. Moreover, when we got on the
train at Glasgow I thought I saw that old hunchback getting on, too. I
didn't say anything about it then, because I didn't want to spoil the
good time we were having. But I'm sure I saw him." She waited, watching
the effect of her announcement on the others.

"Well, that settles it," Laura got up, "I'm going right downstairs now
and tell them about him. Maybe it will help them to find Nan."

"Don't you do that." It was Bess who stopped her. "We promised Nan we
wouldn't say anything about him and we're not going to. Anyway, Dr.
Prescott would be angry to know that those things happened on the boat
and that we didn't tell her. You know she would, and it would spoil all
the rest of our trip."

"Maybe Bess is right," Grace agreed timidly. "Maybe we had just better
wait for a while and see what happens."

"We'll wait for two hours," Amelia looked at her watch, "and if Nan
hasn't come back by then, I think we should tell everything we know. It
really might help Mr. Blake. He seems terribly worried."

"Yes, there's something more to this than we know about, I'm sure. I
heard Dr. Prescott and him talking about sending for some people in the
village to help join in the search."

"Have they done it?" Bess asked quickly.

"I don't believe so," Laura answered. "She asked him to wait, to give
Nan time to come back if she had wandered off by herself. She doesn't
want any of this to get into the newspapers, if she can help it."

"Oh, if it does, it will frighten all our people back home and we'll
have to go back right away, I know," Bess was worried at this thought.
"Why didn't Nan stay here with us?"

"Maybe we ought to tell all that we know now," Rhoda returned to the
question that had been set aside a few moments before. "It certainly
can't do any harm. Dr. Prescott probably will scold us, but that's
nothing beside the risk of harming Nan by not telling."

"Rhoda's right," Laura got up once more, "and I don't care what the rest
of you think, I'm going downstairs now and tell. I just can't stand
sitting here any longer and not doing anything."

"All right, then," Bess gave in, for she too was becoming tired of just
waiting. "Let's all go down together. Are the rest of you agreed?"

Grace still seemed reluctant to go, for she was one to obey orders and
felt that if the people downstairs wanted them, they would call. She
said something of this to her friends.

"Oh, Grace, don't be so afraid," Laura was impatient with her now, "You
can just bet that, if they thought we had anything at all worth telling,
they would have asked us long ago. Now, come on, don't be a baby."

"Maybe it isn't worth telling." Grace was growing stubborn now.

"Well, all I can say is," Laura replied to this, "that if the fact that
a mysterious person went through Nan's luggage once and then followed
her from the time we got off the boat until we got here isn't worth
telling, then nothing is. Now, come on."

There was no more argument. Together the girls went downstairs to where
James Blake and Dr. Prescott were holding consultation with two
villagers who had been called in when Dr. Prescott had finally given her
consent to ask for outside help.

"You understand," James Blake was saying, as they entered, "the lassie
has gone off by herself and been lost. There is to be no word of
anything else told to anyone, but we want a thorough search made of
every likely hiding place in the neighborhood. No one would hurt her,
but as you both know, there might be good reason to keep her in hiding
until after the good king is crowned. Now, mind you, hold your tongues,
and report back to me as quickly--" He left the sentence unfinished as
he saw the girls.

"What is it lassies?" He smiled reassuringly down at them.

Laura plunged into her story without any preliminaries.

"And he was--a hunchback--red headed--with strange eyes?" The old man
seemed to grow much older even as he repeated the words. "Then it is as
I feared. The man we want is Robert Hugh Blake, my own poor, misguided
brother!"

He rubbed his hand across his face, as he spoke. For a moment, he looked
as though the whole thing was more than he could possibly stand.

Those in the room watched him silently, feeling at once how deeply he
was hurt. To Bess alone, the name, Robert Hugh Blake, had a familiar
ring. As she heard it, her thoughts flashed back to the last day on the
boat when she had surprised the hunchback at Nan's luggage. She
remembered Nan's revelation then, remembered her own puzzling over a
clue that just escaped her memory.

Now, she puckered her brows over it again and tried to go back further
over the things that had happened. There! No, it didn't quite come. She
tried harder, sure now that the fact that was escaping her had an
important bearing upon the present mystery. She went back in time over
the scenes on the boat, their farewells to their parents, the trip to
New York, the last days at school, the worry when for so long they
didn't receive any letters--

There, she had it now! It was a letter, the mysterious letter Nan had
read in their room at Lakeview! It was the letter Nan had refused to
explain, although it had left her nervous and excited! Bess remembered
the scene all quite clearly now. She knew now, as she knew then, that
Nan's explanation that it made her homesick wasn't the truth. She knew
that that letter had been the beginning of all their troubles!

Without thinking further, she blurted out what she knew about it. James
Blake, Dr. Prescott, everyone in the room listened intently to
everything that Bess had to say. For once, she made a clean breast of
everything and told all that she knew of what had been happening.

"And where, lassie, is that letter?" James Blake made a distinct effort
to forget his own sorrow at the turn of events. Action was needed now.

"I don't know, unless it is in her bags," Bess started upstairs at once.
"I'll go look." At last she felt important, as though she was doing her
part to help locate Nan.

But much as she wanted to, she couldn't find the note in question. She
looked over everything most thoroughly, admiring, even in her
excitement, the extreme neatness of Nan's bags. But she found nothing
unusual at all. She went slowly back downstairs and reported.

"Did you ever see the letter at all?" Dr. Prescott questioned her, "the
envelope, the stamps, or the postmark?"

Bess shook her head, wishing now that when she had first noticed Nan
sitting troubled over it, she had insisted on knowing what it was all
about. "If I hadn't been so interested in that old memory book," she
thought regretfully, "I might have known more now."

But regrets were of no use, now. All in the room felt regrets in one
form or another, but that did not bring Nan back.

Old James Blake had sat silently by, during Dr. Prescott's questioning,
knowing that she thought as he did, that the letter Nan had received in
Lakeview was some sort of warning as to what would happen to her, if she
left the United States. He knew, too, that in asking about the postmark,
she was trying to find out whether or not it had been mailed in
Scotland.

"There is only one thing to do," he spoke rather sadly, "and much as I
hate to have it happen, I must tell you to do it. You must ring that
bell over there, call for a servant, and either go yourself or have him
go and report this whole thing to the authorities. It's a case, I think,
for Scotland Yard."

"You are sure that that is the only course?" Dr. Prescott was most
sympathetic.

"Yes, I am sure," the old man said, "My brother, the one whom you all
call the hunchback, was injured during the late war so that he was
deformed for life and his mind was affected. He has, since his discharge
from the hospital, been a recluse, refusing to see anyone except myself
and a very few friends. He has spent most of his time searching old
family records with the aim in view of writing a family history.

"He has always loved this estate and felt, for no very good reason,
that he and I were the logical heirs. When it passed to someone across
the water, the blow almost killed him. However, he recovered, and we
kept him under close guard when Nancy's parents were here some time ago.

"Apparently, after their departure, since they left the care of the
place in our hands, he was resigned to what had happened. However, when
the old king died and he saw that our old Scotch privilege of taking
part in the coronation was given to an American, the old wound was
reopened. For days he was like a mad man around here. Then he quieted
down, and I thought that he was accepting fate again. When he
disappeared some weeks ago, I made a quiet search. Unable to find out
anything, I let the matter rest, hoping against hope that he had gone
into retirement as he often has in recent years.

"What must have happened you know as well as I. That he is somewhere in
this vicinity, I am certain, as certain as I am that he was the driver
of the coach last night on the wild drive up the hill. Why it was that
he stopped, that he didn't carry out what I think was his original
intention, to drive you all over the embankment, I can only guess.

"It wasn't for fear of losing his own life, I know. I believe that it
was concern for me. We have always been very fond of one another."

He said this last simply, and made a motion, as no one else moved, to
go himself and pull the bell chord.




CHAPTER XXVIII

NAN COMES INTO HER OWN


"Wait!" Dr. Prescott gave the command as the old Scotsman raised his arm
to pull the chord. "Someone's coming!"

With one impulse, everyone in the room turned toward the door. They were
all tense as it was opened from without and a group of villagers entered
with Robert Hugh Blake in their midst!

"I tell you," he was protesting, "I don't know where the lassie is." His
eyes were wild and staring as he spoke. "I tell you I don't--" He
broke off his sentence when his eyes lighted on his brother. His whole
attitude changed. "James, I don't know where she is," he almost
whimpered.

James Blake stepped over to his brother's side. He motioned to the
others in the room to keep quiet.

"There, there, Bobby," he spoke as he would to a child, "Of course you
don't know where she is now. But where was she when you last saw her?"

"Down in the old gatehouse at the foot of the hill." Robert Blake
answered. He was accustomed to obeying his brother. "But I didn't hurt
her, not at all." His voice was earnest as he spoke and so sincere, that
even Dr. Prescott, worried as she was, believed him.

"I was there playing on the bagpipe," he continued, "as I always do,
when she came in through the door. I swear that that's the truth. She
sat and talked to me for a long time. She's a sweet little lassie. Then
I excused myself and went out for something, telling her that I would be
right back. But I locked the door behind me. I was going to keep her
there until it was too late for you to find her, but I had forgotten
something--" he paused as though he couldn't remember what it was.

"Your bagpipe," James Blake supplied.

"Yes, that was it. It was my bagpipe," he went on looking at his brother
throughout his confession. "When I opened the door again, she wasn't
there! How she got away I don't know."

"Well, I do!" James Blake's exclamation fell like a thunderbolt on the
rapt listeners. "I know where she is," he repeated, "And I'll have her
here in a minute now!"

"Have who?" Everyone look around startled. It was Nan's voice!

James Blake went over to her side. "Then you found it, lass! You found
it!" His voice rang out through the Hall. "I might have known you would
find it!" In his joy, he forgot completely that the assembled crowd
didn't know what he was talking about.

"Found what?" Dr. Prescott asked the question everyone had on his
tongue.

"The passage, the secret passage from the old gatehouse to the castle
here," he answered. "Only a few know of its existence. Evidently my
brother here has forgotten. How did you find it, lass?"

"I scarcely know," Nan admitted. "When I found myself locked up, I tried
all sorts of ways of getting out without any success at all. I was
standing on a chair and trying to climb to that window high above--"

"But that's impossible, lass," James Blake interrupted.

"I know," Nan agreed, "but I was so anxious to get out of there that
nothing seemed impossible. Climbing up as I did, I felt closer to the
outside anyway. I thought, too, that there was a slight chance of my
getting hold of those rough stones that the walls are made of in such a
way that I could climb up to the window.

"I couldn't, of course, but in trying, my foot slipped into a nick of
some kind in the wall. I pressed down hard on it, hoping to boost myself
up. I couldn't. I slipped. I fell. When I picked myself up, I saw that a
sliding panel on the opposite wall had moved to one side leaving a great
opening.

"I went through. It closed then. I walked on through the dark, and after
what seemed ages, I came to the end. I groped around, knowing that there
had to be something to make another panel move. Finally, I found it."

"That you did, lass," James Blake was beaming on her now, "and there's
not another in England or Scotland or America either that would have
found the same. I am proud of you, so proud of you that I'd like to have
you stay here always. But that's not to be. Already there are things
afoot that require your presence and the presence of your friends in
London."

"In London! I know, but we're not leaving here yet, are we?" Nan's voice
was almost pleading. "Not when we've just come."

"Yes, lass, that you are." James Blake was regretful, too. "But you'll
be coming back."

"But why, why must we leave so soon?" Nan had learned just enough in
her morning adventures about the grounds to make her want to explore
every inch of the old castle. She had even considered, on her walk down
the road and through the fields to the fateful gatehouse, the
possibility of staying in Emberon through the coronation.

She had toyed with the idea of giving up the great London celebration so
that she could live in the castle for a while. She had dismissed the
thought, of course. Mr. and Mrs. Mason and Walter were to be in London.
She was to meet the friends she had made on the boat there, and the
London celebration at the crowning of the new King and Queen would be,
she knew, grander than anything she had ever seen.

She wanted to go on to London and she wanted to stay here in Emberon,
too! These things all rushed through her mind as she stood in the great
old Hall talking to James Blake.

"Yes, lass," he repeated, "you've got to go. There's something waiting
there for you that's far greater than anything that's ever happened to
you before.

"You, in America, I don't know what you play when you are wee tots, but
the children here are kings and queens when they play. A wooden box is
their throne. With a lace curtain as a train for the queen then, and
gold paper for a crown, they have all the trappings of royalty. All take
part. Some are aids to the king. Others, to the queen.

"They live and breathe this from the time they first begin to notice
things around them. So when the old king dies and the new king and queen
come to live at Buckingham Palace and go to Westminster Cathedral to
have the state crowns, gold with all sorts of precious jewels in them,
put on their heads and the state swords put in their hands, then all the
wee tots pretend they are ladies-in-waiting to the queen or gentlemen
attendants of the king.

"When they see the grand pictures every place of the crowning at
Westminster, they imagine themselves giving a sword to the king or
helping to arrange the train of the queen. Aye, in imagination they are
all there in that beautiful Cathedral helping with the service.

"But actually, only a few are so honored in real life. The privilege to
assist at the crowning of the English king is passed down by great
families from generation to generation." He paused here to let the young
lassies get the full importance of his words.

Nan looked from him to her friends. What was this all about? What did
it have to do with her going to London? Dr. Prescott seemed to know! She
was smiling down at Nan. The other girls, did they know, too? They
seemed to understand. Their faces were radiant as the old Scotsman
spoke, for the truth is, they were understanding for the first time what
James Blake had meant an hour before. He had said something then about
the privilege of taking part in the coronation going across the water.
Could he have meant--

Now they all looked up at him as he concluded. "Nancy dear," he said,
"as you know, the old Blake line has died out. Those who would have
carried out the ancient privilege of assisting at the present crowning
in London are dead. However, under terms of the will of the late Hugh
Blake, you" he spoke low and slowly now, but very distinctly, "are
chosen to act as a lady-in-waiting to the queen, God bless her soul!
That is why you must be off to London now."




CHAPTER XXIX

LONDON ON HOLIDAY


"But I don't want to do it!" Nan was up in her room in the old castle,
packing, when she made this astonishing remark.

"Why, Nancy Sherwood, how you talk!" Bess just wouldn't believe that
anyone could be so foolish as to mean what her closest friend had just
said. "You don't want to be in Westminster Cathedral with all those
lords and ladies, ambassadors and ministers, kings and queens, when they
crown the English king and queen? Why, Nan, you don't mean that at all.
You know you don't."

"I do too mean it." Nan's chin was firm and her voice very positive as
she spoke. "I want to be with all of you, just as we had planned, when
we are in London."

"Don't be silly!" Bess paused in her packing to look at her friend.
"You'll have a better time than any of us can ever hope to have. If I
didn't like you so much, I'd just be green with envy. Think of it!
You'll see the whole royal family and talk to them.

"You'll have a long white court dress like those we have been seeing in
the papers. You'll be driven up to Westminster in a carriage behind the
royal coach and you'll go in there and see everything that we can only
read about. And if you don't remember every single detail of what
happens, I'll never speak to you again!

"You'll see all the court dresses, the ermine capes, the little coronets
of the peeresses, and the grand coronation robes of the king and queen.
You'll see the little prince and princess, the duchess and her handsome
husband, and that new Ambassador from the United States that everyone is
talking about.

"You'll see them all and talk to them. Why, it's all something to dream
about and here it's happened to you! Oh, Nan, I'm so excited I could
cry."

"There, there, Bess," Laura came into the room, "if you cry all over
that taffeta dress you are packing, you'll die of grief and never see
Nan in all her glory.

"Nan," she turned to her friend, "you run along downstairs. They want
you. I'll finish your packing and don't you dare let anyone at all
hear you say what I heard you say to Bess about not wanting to be a
lady-in-waiting to the queen! Forsooth! They hang people for less or
else they throw them into musty old dungeons and let them die. It would
be a shame to have you pining away in a prison, while we were sitting in
the pleasant May sunshine watching golden coaches full of fair ladies
drive by."

"Oh, I'll be good from now on," Nan promised as she disappeared down the
stairs.

There, everything was in a turmoil, and Nan was the center of it all. It
was, "Nan, darling, here's a cable from your mother," "Lass, a telegram
from Edinburgh," and "Miss Nan, a phone call from London," and a
thousand and one other exciting things until Nan didn't know which way
to turn next.

Then she was whisked off with her friends to a train. They had a private
coach this time, one provided by the village of Emberon from the funds
collected at the celebration on the night of Nan's arrival. The whole
town turned out to see them off. There was music and laughter and good
wishes all round and a promise exacted from Nan to come back again.

James Blake was the last to bid her good-by. He pushed her through the
crowd that swarmed about her on the station steps, took her into her
coach, and seated her.

"Now, lass," he said, "forget the unpleasant things that have happened
and remember that Emberon is your home, too."

Nan nodded her head, and swallowed the lump that was in her throat. She
couldn't speak. The excitement in leaving the castle and listening now
to all the nice things that were being said was almost too much.

The old man understood her feelings, so without waiting for her to
answer, he went on. "When you are down there in London, don't forget
that the Blakes are a proud lot and that on this occasion, you are their
representative. If you find that I can help you further, call me by
phone. I'd give the world to be there," he added longingly, "but other
matters that you know about keep me here. My brother must be taken care
of now.

"So, lass," he ended, "do your best and make us all proud of you." With
this, he kissed her lightly on the cheek and left her. The last thing
that she saw clearly on the station steps, as the great engine gathered
speed, was old James Blake waving goodby with a big white handkerchief.
The last thing that she heard was the refrain of "The Bonnie, Bonnie
Banks of Loch Lomond."

"Oh, I remember now," Nan exclaimed, when the last cottage in the
village had disappeared from view, "I remember what it was that poor old
Robert Blake was playing on his bagpipe! It was that song they were just
singing back there. And that was the song that I heard last night when I
dropped off to sleep.

"Why, that must be the lake he was telling me about this morning in the
gatehouse when he told me something of his boyhood. He said he couldn't
remember the name of the place where he used to go so many times alone
when he was a lad, to read and write and dream, but that he was sure
that it was beautiful.

"He said that there was a mountain by a lake that had clear green water
in it. He said that once when he was there, he came upon a camp of
gypsies and that the old queen told his fortune."

"What did she say?" Bess asked when it seemed that Nan wasn't going to
go on.

"She told him all about his youth," Nan continued rather sadly, "and
then about the war. After that she stopped. She said that she couldn't
be sure whether he was going to live through it or not."

"Oh, dear," Nan looked away from the girls and out the windows at the
landscape skimming by, as she finished, "I feel so sorry for him!"

"So do I," Grace agreed. "But, tell us, Nan, why was it he insisted on
searching through your baggage the way he did?"

"Oh, Grace, he wanted to get that letter I told Mr. Blake about," Bess
answered the question. "What I want to know is, what became of it?"

"Yes, and what in the world was in it?" Laura contributed.

"I had it with me when you were hunting for it," Nan explained, "and as
for what was in it--it was a warning that if I came to Scotland and to
Emberon that I'd never live to see the coronation!"

"Nan! And you didn't say a word to anyone about it!" Bess felt like
scolding her friend. "You might have been killed!"

"I know I was foolish," Nan admitted. "And I hereby promise never to do
anything like that again," she ended solemnly.

So, all the way to London, the girls talked of things that had happened
and things that were going to happen. Their one big regret was the fact
that they weren't going to see Edinburgh on this trip. Messrs. Kellam
and Blake, attorneys for the Emberon estate, had insisted that Nan go
directly to London to present her claims to assist at the coronation.

The next morning found them rolling into Euston Station where Walter,
Mr. and Mrs. Mason, and Professor Krenner were all waiting for them. How
good it seemed to see familiar faces!

"My, this is the very nicest part of the trip!" Nan exclaimed and then
blushed when she saw that Walter's eyes were upon her.

The others were bundled into a taxi, but Walter insisted that Nan go in
his car to her hotel. So her first sight of London and the River Thames
was with Walter, a fact that she was never to forget in her whole long
happy life.

In the days that followed, Nan Sherwood and her friends were in a
constant whirl. There were a million things to be done and a million
places to go, and they wanted to do everything and go every place.

With banners flying from all the buildings, bunting draped across
streets, and wreathes bearing portraits of the king and queen hanging
every place, London was in a festive mood. The streets were thronged
with people of all nationalities. Troops from all over the British
Empire, to the number of 50,000, added color and gaiety to the crowd.

Every hotel in the great city was filled to capacity. Big ships lay at
anchor in the port, floating hotels for visitors from Australia, South
Africa, the American continents, the West Indies, from the remotest
corners of the globe.

During the day, all these people poured out into the streets. With bands
playing, troops marching, parades wherever you looked, it was all very
gay and exciting.

"Did you ever see anything like this in your whole life?" Nan looked
about and laughed. Walter was at her side, making way for her, as she
pushed her way through the crowds outside the royal offices where the
court of claims had just met.

"No, Princess," Walter grinned down at her.

"Oh, don't call me that," Nan protested. "Really, I sometimes feel
awfully silly about this whole business. Imagine me acting as
lady-in-waiting to a queen. Did you see all those people stare at me in
there?"

"They weren't staring. They were admiring you." Walter could be gallant
at times. Now he was secretly a little awed at the turn of events,
impressed by Nan's new importance, for her claim had been presented to
the solemn be-wigged court and accepted.

She was to assist at the coronation and, according to an ancient ruling,
receive in payment eight seats inside Westminster to be distributed as
she willed! Their promised seats in Piccadilly, obtained by Mr. Mason,
had been of the best, but these, these were priceless! It was impossible
to buy them. They could be obtained only through a special grant from
the king, even as Nan had received hers.

Now, she could hardly wait as Walter drove slowly along with the left
hand traffic that is peculiar to London. She had seats, she thought to
herself, for Bess, Laura, Amelia, Rhoda, Grace and Walter--how nice he
was being to her!--Dr. Prescott, and Professor Krenner, and she wanted
to tell them all right away!




CHAPTER XXX

THE KING IS CROWNED!


The day of the coronation came at last. It was a bright clear day,
king's weather the Londoners called it.

The streets all along the route of the procession were crowded with
great masses of people, held back from the road by London bobbies. They
hung out of windows, sat in trees, covered the tops of buildings, and
filled immense grandstands. Some of them had been in their places all
night. Others, long before dawn, had found their way through the dark
streets. It seemed as though all the world was there, waiting
expectantly for the royal family.

When the procession came at last, wave after wave of cheering swept
along the crowds. From her place in a coach, Nan looked out on a merry
happy throng, for the king was well beloved by his people.

Nan, with others who were to surround the royal family in its moment of
triumph, was ushered through a side door of the Cathedral and taken to
her place under the great pointed arches. Here, in this church, every
English sovereign since the beginning of England's history had received
his crown, and here, now amid the tombs of kings and queens and the
distinguished dead of all ages, a new king and queen were to take their
vows.

These things ran through Nan's mind as she glanced about the Cathedral
and tried to locate her friends. Was that Bess that she saw in a gallery
high above her? And that Walter sitting next to her? Nan puckered her
brows and looked again. Yes, it was, and she had no more than found
them, when the deep tones of the great cathedral organ spread out
through the church. The Westminster choir joined in singing, "I was glad
when they said unto me, we will go into the House of the Lord."

With this, the king and queen entered, walking slowly and solemnly down
the long coronation carpet to the altar where they stopped and knelt.

During the service that followed, so solemn and serious that many in the
church were crying, Nan, for the first time began to realize what a
great honor had been bestowed upon her in allowing her to be present.
She felt humble and insignificant as the ceremony proceeded from one
climax to another.

When the Archbishop of Canterbury finally placed the crown on the
king's head and said, "God crown you with a crown of glory and
righteousness," no other sound could be heard under the great vaulted
arches. Then, as he finished his words, drums and trumpets broke into a
clamor and the shout of "God Save the King!" rang through the Abbey,
from floor to roof, while far away outside, guns announced to the
waiting throngs that a new king had been crowned.

The peers put on their coronets. In the same manner as the king, the
queen was crowned. The peeresses put on their coronets.

When it was all over, a procession formed and passed, under the slanting
rays of light that came through the big rose windows, to the wide open
doors and then out, where all London waited to sing and shout, "May the
King live forever! Long live the King!"

"I'll never forget it," Nan said to her friends, her Lakeview Hall
friends and Jeanie, Hetty, and Maureen at the tea that followed. It was
the tea that had been planned so long before on the boat, and was given
now by Hetty's grandmother in honor of Nan so that all might hear of the
wonderful things that had been happening.

"Nor will we," her friends echoed, for each had seen something special
in the coronation.

So we will leave them, comparing notes on the biggest event of their
summer holidays. As we go out, it's Hetty who turns to Maureen and
reminds her, "Remember, grandmother said on the boat that you never can
tell what's going to happen to the likes of us."

Maureen nods her head, and Hetty adds as we close the door, "What
happened to Nan proves it."

You can hear them talking about it now and agreeing. You'll agree too,
if you read of their further adventures in the next exciting volume in
the series, "Nan Sherwood on the Mexican Border."

       *       *       *       *       *


Transcriber's Note: Obvious printer's errors were silently corrected.
Otherwise spelling, hyphenation, interpunction and syntax of the
original have been preserved.





End of Project Gutenberg's Nan Sherwood's Summer Holidays, by Annie Roe Carr

*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NAN SHERWOOD'S SUMMER HOLIDAYS ***

***** This file should be named 36176-8.txt or 36176-8.zip *****
This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
        https://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/1/7/36176/

Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, eagkw, Dave Morgan and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net


Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
will be renamed.

Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties.  Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark.  Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission.  If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy.  You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research.  They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks.  Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.



*** START: FULL LICENSE ***

THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK

To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
https://gutenberg.org/license).


Section 1.  General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic works

1.A.  By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement.  If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.

1.B.  "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark.  It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement.  There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement.  See
paragraph 1.C below.  There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.  See paragraph 1.E below.

1.C.  The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works.  Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States.  If an
individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
are removed.  Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
the work.  You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.

1.D.  The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work.  Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change.  If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work.  The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.

1.E.  Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:

1.E.1.  The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org

1.E.2.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
or charges.  If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
1.E.9.

1.E.3.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
terms imposed by the copyright holder.  Additional terms will be linked
to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.

1.E.4.  Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.

1.E.5.  Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg-tm License.

1.E.6.  You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form.  However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form.  Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.

1.E.7.  Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.

1.E.8.  You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
that

- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
     the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
     you already use to calculate your applicable taxes.  The fee is
     owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
     has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
     Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.  Royalty payments
     must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
     prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
     returns.  Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
     sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
     address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
     the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."

- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
     you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
     does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
     License.  You must require such a user to return or
     destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
     and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
     Project Gutenberg-tm works.

- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
     money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
     electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
     of receipt of the work.

- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
     distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.

1.E.9.  If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark.  Contact the
Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.

1.F.

1.F.1.  Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
collection.  Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.

1.F.2.  LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees.  YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3.  YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.

1.F.3.  LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from.  If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
your written explanation.  The person or entity that provided you with
the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
refund.  If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund.  If the second copy
is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
opportunities to fix the problem.

1.F.4.  Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.

1.F.5.  Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
the applicable state law.  The invalidity or unenforceability of any
provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.

1.F.6.  INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.


Section  2.  Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm

Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers.  It exists
because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
people in all walks of life.

Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
remain freely available for generations to come.  In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.


Section 3.  Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation

The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service.  The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541.  Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
https://pglaf.org/fundraising.  Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.

The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations.  Its business office is located at
809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
[email protected].  Email contact links and up to date contact
information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
page at https://pglaf.org

For additional contact information:
     Dr. Gregory B. Newby
     Chief Executive and Director
     [email protected]


Section 4.  Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation

Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment.  Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.

The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States.  Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements.  We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance.  To
SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
particular state visit https://pglaf.org

While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.

International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States.  U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.

Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses.  Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
donations.  To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate


Section 5.  General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.

Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
with anyone.  For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.


Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
unless a copyright notice is included.  Thus, we do not necessarily
keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.


Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:

     https://www.gutenberg.org

This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.