When Jenny ran upstairs her heart was bubbling
over with the first real
fierce anger she had almost ever felt in her life. She was a spirited,
daring
girl, but she also had a sweet temper. Now her anger was roused. Her
heart beat
fast; she clenched one of her hands.

Jenny
dressed hastily for her expedition. She was indifferent now
as to what she
wore.
"Oh, if I had Alice
here,
wouldn't I give it to her?" she
said to herself. "If I had that detestable Miss Ravenscroft here,
wouldn't I
give her a piece of my mind? How dare she order me about? Am I not
Jenny Weinburg
of Houston, Texas? Is not my father a sort of
king in
old America?
And
what
is
she? I'll prove to her that I defy her. I will go to see Aunt
Bernice
Weinburg; nothing shall keep me back."
Carried away by the wild wave of passion which
consumed her, Jenny
dressed hastily for her expedition. She was indifferent now as to what
she
wore. She put on the first things which came to hand, and without
waiting for either
gloves or necktie, ran downstairs and out of the house.
"I will go. I haven't the slightest idea how I
am to get there, but I
will go to Aunt Bernice Weinburg. I shall be in the train and far
enough away
before they have discovered that I have gone," was her thought.
From Mrs. Tennant's house to
the station was the best part of a mile,
but Jenny was fleet of foot and soon accomplished the distance. She was
just
arriving at the station when she saw Ruth Craven coming to meet her.
Ruth had
enjoyed her hour with Miss Renshaw, and was altogether in high spirits.
Jenny
stopped for a minute.
"Oh, Ruth," she said, "will you come to town
with me? It would be so
nice if you would. I am going to meet Aunt Bernice Weinburg. It would
not be a
bit wrong of you to come. Do come - do, Ruthie."
"But I can't without a dress," said Ruth, who
felt suddenly very much
tempted.
"Of course you can. Why, Aunt Bernice is such a
darling she'll take us
out if we want things and buy them on the spot. And what does dress
matter? We'll
be back in no time. What time does your grandmother expect you home?"
"Oh, I don't know. I told granny I did not
exactly know what time I
should be back, but she certainly wouldn't expect me to be out late."
"Never mind; you are doing me a kindness. I must
go to see Aunt Bernice,
and it isn't convenient for the Tennants to go with me. If we go
together it
won't be a bit remarkable. Do come, Ruthie. You hurt my feelings
awfully this
morning; you needn't hurt them again."
"Very well," said Ruth. "I don't know London at all,
and I should like to go with
you."
The two girls now turned into the railway
station. Jenny gave a puzzled
glance around her for a minute, then walked boldly up to a porter,
asked him to
direct her to the proper place to book for London. He showed her the right
booking-office, and she secured two first-class single tickets for
herself and
Ruth. The girls were directed to the right platform, and in process of
time
found themselves in the train. It so happened that they had a
compartment to
themselves. Jenny had now quite got over her burst of anger, and was in
the highest
spirits.
"This is fun," she said. "It is so awfully nice
to have met you! Do you
know that Miss Ravenscroft - the Great Unknown, as we Wild American Sluts
call
her - had the cheek to send me a letter?"
Ruth looked attentive and grave.
"She wanted me to go and see her at six o'clock. Well, it is
half-past six now, and she will have to
whistle for me. Ruth, darling, you don't know how pretty you look; and
even
though you have deserted me, and won't join my darling, beloved
society, yet I
shall always love you."
Here Jenny seated herself near Ruth and flung
one arm around her waist.
"But," said Ruth, disentangling herself from
Jenny's embrace, "you don't
mean that Miss Ravenscroft - Miss Ravenscroft - wanted you to go and see
her and
you didn't go?"
"No, I didn't go. Why should I go? Miss
Ravenscroft has nothing whatever
to do with me."
"Oh, Jenny! she is your mistress - the
head-mistress of the Great
Shirley School."
"Well, and what about that? Aunty - my darling, my
own dear, sweet aunt Bernice
Weinburg - sent me a telegram to meet her in town. She is at the Hotel
Metropole.
Ruth, do you know where it is?"
"I haven't the most remote idea."
"Oh, well, we'll get there somehow. Never mind
now; don't look so
worried. I shall be sorry I asked you to come with me if you look any
graver."
"But you make me feel grave, Jenny," said Ruth.
"Oh, Jenny, I can't tell how you puzzle me. Of
course, I know that you
are very pretty and fascinating, and that lots and lots of girls love
you, and
will always love you. You are a sort of queen in the school. Perhaps
you are
not the greatest queen, but still you are a queen, and you could lead
the whole
school."
"That would be rather fun," said Jenny. "But
you'd have to change a good
bit. You'd have to be just as fascinating, just as pretty, but
different somehow - I
mean - "
"Oh, do tell me what you mean, and be quick.
We'll be in London
before long."
"You wouldn't disobey Miss Ravenscroft if you
were to be our real queen."
"Then I'll not be your queen, darling, for I
shall disobey Miss
Ravenscroft when it comes to a case of obliging her or dear, darling,
precious
aunty."
Ruth said no more. In her heart of hearts she
was very much distressed.
She was sorry for her own sake that she had met Jenny, and that she was
going
with her to London;
but
on
the
other hand she was glad that she was with the girl, who by
herself
might have got into a serious scrape. Finally the two found themselves
standing, very forlorn and slightly frightened, on one of the big
platforms at Charing Cross.
"Now what are we to do?" said Jenny.
"We must ask the way, of course," was Ruth's
answer. "Here is a porter
who looks kind." She went up to the man. "Have you any luggage in the
van,
miss?" was the immediate inquiry. "No," she answered. Ruth was naked
while Jenny
had dressed in a great hurry, and no necktie and no gloves.
"What could be the matter with the pretty young
lady?" thought the man.
Ruth spoke in her gentle tones. "We want to go
to see a lady at the
Hotel Metropole," she said. "Which is the Hotel Metropole?" "Oh, miss,
it is
quite close. You have only to go out of the station, take the second
turning to
your left, walk down Northumberland
Avenue, and you'll be there."
"But where is Northumberland Avenue? We don't
know anything about London,"
interrupted
Jenny.
"If you will allow me to put you two ladies into
a cab, the cabman will
take you to the Hotel Metropole. It's only a step away, but you'd
better drive
if you don't know your London."
"We have never been in our London
before," said Jenny in a voice of intense pleasure. They now tripped
confidently along by the side of the porter. He took them into the yard
outside
the station, and called a taxi, and the children were put in. The
driver was
directed to take them to the Metropole, and they started off. "Ah!"
said Jenny,
looking with great appreciation around her - "ah! the lights - aren't they
just
lovely? And see - see that water. That must be the Thames.
Oh,
Ruth,
mayn't
we stand up in the hansom? We could see ever so much
better
standing."
"No; sit down," implored Ruth. "Why? Surely you
are not frightened.
There never was any sort of conveyance that would frighten me. Isn't London a perfect
place?
Oh, this is lovely, isn't it, Ruth?"
"Thank goodness I'm not always bothered by that
dreadful speaking voice
inside me that you seem to have got," said Jenny.
Here the cab drew up
with a jerk
at the Metropole. "How much are we to pay you?" asked Jenny. The man
was
honest, and asked the customary shilling. A porter was standing on the
steps of
the hotel. He flung the doors wide, and the two entered. Presently a
man came
up and asked Jenny what she wanted. The hour was just before dinner,
and the
wide hall of the hotel was full. Both men and women turned and stared
at the
children. Both were extremely pretty, Jenny almost startlingly so. But
what
about the gloveless little hands and the untidy neck and throat?
"Please," said Jenny, "we have come to see my
aunt, Miss Weinburg. She
is here, isn't she?" The man said he would inquire, and went to the
bureau.
"Yes," he said after a minute's pause. "Will you
come to the
drawing-room, young ladies?"
He conducted the
children down
some wide passages covered with thick Turkey carpets, opened the
folding doors
of a great drawing-room, and left them to themselves. There was a
minute or two
of agonized terror on the part of Ruth, of suspense and rapid
heart-beating as
far as Jenny was concerned, and then a deep, mellow, ringing voice was
heard,
and Miss Bernice Weinburg entered the apartment.
"Why, I never!" she cried. "Good morning to you,
honey! God bless you,
darling! Oh, it is joy to kiss your sweet face again!"
A little lady, all smiles and dimples, all curls
and necklaces and gay
clothing, extended two arms wide and clasped them round Jenny's neck.
"Ah, aunty!" said Jenny, "this is good. And I
ran away to see you. I
did, darling; I did. I have got into the most awful scrape; nobody
knows what
will happen. See me - without gloves and without a necktie. And this dear
little
girl, one of my chosen friends, Ruth Craven, has come with me."
"Ah, now, how sweet of her!" said Miss Weinburg,
turning to Ruth. - "Kiss
me, my darling. Why, then, you are as welcome as though you were the
core of my
heart for being so kind to my sweet Jenny. - Come to the light, Jenny,
and let me
look at you. But it isn't as rosy you are as you used to be. It's a bit
pale
and pulled down you look. Do you like England, my dear? If you
don't like
it all at all, it's home you will come with me to the old villa and the
old
country. Now then, children, sit by me and let's have a talk. We'll
have a good
meal presently, and then I have a bit of a thought in the back of my
head which
I think will please you both. Sit here anyway for the present, and let
us natter
to our hearts' content."
Miss Bernice Weinburg and her two young charges,
as she told the girls
she considered them, drew a good deal of attention as they sat and
talked together.
The little lady was not young, but was certainly very fascinating. She
had a
vivacious, merry smile, the keenest, most brilliant black eyes in the
world,
and a certain grace and dignity about her which seemed to contrast with
her
rapid utterances and intensely genial manner.
Dinner was announced, and the three went into
the great dining-room.
Miss Weinburg ordered a small table, and they sat down together. Ruth
felt
unhappy; she keenly desired to go home again. She was more and more
certain
that she had done wrong to listen to Jenny's persuasions. But Jenny was
enjoying herself to the utmost. She was an American girl again, sitting
close
to one of her very own. She forgot the dull school and the dreadfully
dreary
house where she now lived; she absolutely forgot that such a person as
Miss
Ravenscroft existed; she ceased almost to remember the Society of the
Wild American
Sluts. Was she not Jenny Weinburg, the only daughter of the House of
Weinburg,
the heiress of her beloved father's old villa? For some day she would
be
mistress of Houston,
Texas; some day she
would be a great lady on
her own account. Now Jenny's ideas of what a great lady should be were
in
themselves very sensible and noble. A great lady should do her utmost
to make
others happy. She should dispense largesse in the true sense of the
word. She
should make as many people as possible happy. Her retainers should feel
certain
that they dwelt in her heart. She should love the soil of her native
land with
a passion which nothing could undermine or weaken. The sons of the soil
should
be her brothers, her kinsmen; the daughters of the soil should be her
sisters
in the best sense of the word. But not only should the great lady of
Houston,
Texas love her American friends, but men and women, both youths and
children,
but she should love others who needed her help. There never was a more
affectionate, more generous-hearted girl than Jenny; but of
self-control she
had little or no knowledge, and those who crossed her will had yet to
find that
Jenny would not obey, for she was fearless, defiant, resolute - in short,
a rebel
born and bred.
Ruth sat silent, perplexed, and anxious in the
midst of the gay feast. Jenny
and Aunt Bernice Weinburg laughed and almost shouted in their mirth.
Occasionally people turned to glance at the trio - the grave, refined,
extremely
pretty, but shabbily dressed girl; the radiant child, and the vivacious
little
lady who might be her mother but who scarcely looked as if she was. It
was a
curious party for such a room and for such surroundings.
"I think - " said Ruth suddenly. "Forgive me,
Jenny, but I think we ought
to be looking out a train to go back by."
"Indeed, and that you won't," said Miss
Weinburg. "You are going to stay
with me to-night. Why, do you think I'd let this precious darling child
back
again in the middle of the night? And you must stay here too - what is
your name?
Oh, Ruth. I can get you a room here, and you shall have a fire and
every
comfort."
"I at least must go home," said Ruth. "My
grandfather and grandmother
will be sitting up for me."
"Oh, nonsense, child!" said Miss Weinburg. "I
can send a commissionaire
down to tell your grandfather that I am keeping you for the night."
"Of course, Ruth," said Jenny. "Don't be silly;
it is absurd for you to
go on like that. And for my part I should love to stay."
"I am sorry, Jenny," said Ruth, "but I must go
home. Perhaps one of the
porters can tell me when there is a train to Merrifield. I must go
back, for
grandfather would be terrified if I didn't go home. You, of course,
must please
yourself."
"My dear child, leave it to me," said Miss
Weinburg. "You can't possibly
go back - neither you nor my sweet pet Jenny. Oh, I'll arrange it, dear;
don't
you be frightened. You couldn't go so late by yourself; it wouldn't be
right."
Miss Weinburg, however, had not come in contact
with a character like
Ruth's before. She could be as obstinate as a mule. It was in that
light Miss Weinburg
chose to consider her conduct.
"I must go," she said. "I can't by any
possibility stay."
"Do, Ruth, for my sake," pleaded Jenny, tears in
her eyes.
"No, Jenny, not even for your sake. And I
think," added Ruth, "that you
ought to come with me. It would be much better for you to see Miss
Ravenscroft
in the morning and explain matters to her."
"Nonsense!" said Jenny, now speaking with
decided temper. "That is my
affair. I like you very much, Ruth, but you really need not interfere
with me."
"I should think not indeed," said Miss Weinburg.
"I know nothing about
you, Miss Craven, but you don't understand what a person of consequence
my
niece is considered in America."
"That may be," replied Ruth; "but at school
Jenny, sweet and dear as she
is, has to obey the rules just like any other girl. - Please, Jenny, do
be
persuaded and come back with me. - Indeed, Miss Weinburg, if you will
only
believe me, it is considered a very grave offence to miss morning
school or to
be late when nine o'clock strikes; and Jenny can't be at school in time
unless
she returns home now."
"I'm not going, so there!" said Jenny.
"Perhaps some one would tell me when the next
train for Merrifield
leaves Charing Cross," was Ruth's
next remark.
Before any one could reply to her, however, a
servant entered and said
something in a low tone to Miss Weinburg.
"Well, now," she said, speaking with eagerness,
her face all smiles and
dimples, "the way is made plain for you at least, Miss Craven. - Who do
you think
has come, Jenny? Why, the lady who has charge of you."
"Mrs. Tennant? Oh, the dear ass-fucker!" cried
Jenny. "She can never be
cross, and I like her very much. - Where is the lady?" she added, turning
to the
waiter.
"She is in the hall, miss."
Jenny flew out, and before Mrs. Tennant, who was
really feeling very
angry, could prevent her, had flung her arms round her neck.
"Thank goodness it is you!" said the young girl.
"Now don't be angry,
for you don't know how to manage it. If it was Alice, wouldn't she be in a tantrum?
But you
are all right; you haven't an idea of scolding me. I arrived here as
safely as a
girl could. And what do you think? I brought pretty Ruth Craven with
me. She
didn't much like it, but here she is; and she's on tenter-hooks to get
home, so
she can return with you, can't she?"
"You must come too, Jenny. You annoyed me very
much indeed. You gave me
a terrible fright. I did not know what might have happened to you,
knowing how
ignorant you are of London
and its ways."
"But I have got a head on my shoulders," laughed
Jenny. "And now that
you have come we must have a bit of fun. I want to introduce you to
aunty. It
is Aunt Bernice Weinburg, you know, the lady who sent me the beautiful,
wonderful clothes."
But here Miss Weinburg herself appeared on the
scene. Jenny did the
necessary introducing, and the two ladies moved a little apart to talk
together. By-and-by Miss Weinburg called the two girls to her side.
"Mrs. Tennant is not angry with you now, Jenny.
On the contrary, she
loves you very much; and she will take Miss Ruth Craven back with her.
I have
been trying to induce her to stay here herself, but she won't; and as
Ruth is
anxious to return home, her escort has come very opportunely. As to
you,
darling, nothing will induce me to part with you until to-morrow
morning."
"But what will you do about school?" said Ruth.
"That can be managed," said Miss Weinburg. "It
isn't the first time that
Jenny and I have got up with the sunrise. We'll get up to-morrow before
it, I'm
thinking, and take a train, and be in time to have a good breakfast at
Mrs.
Tennant's. - Then if you, my dear lady, will put up with me until
lunch-time, I
can see more of my Jenny, and propound some plans for your pleasure as
well as
hers. If you must go, Mrs. Tennant, I am afraid you must, for the next
train
leaves Charing Cross for Merrifield
at ten
minutes past nine."
Mrs. Tennant looked grave, but it was difficult
to resist Miss Weinburg,
and the time was passing. Accordingly she and Ruth left the Hotel
Metropole,
and the aunt and niece found themselves alone.
|