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[Italics are indicatedby underscores James Rusk,
[email protected].]
[Etext version by James Rusk,
[email protected]. Italics are
indicated by underscores.]
"I SAY NO."
by WILKIE COLLINS
BOOK THE FIRST--AT SCHOOL.
CHAPTER I.
THE SMUGGLED SUPPER.
Outside the bedroom the night was black and still.
The small rain fell too softly to be heard in the garden; not a leaf stirred
in the airless calm; the watch-dog was asleep, the cats were indoors; far
or near, under the murky heaven, not a sound was stirring.
Inside the bedroom the night was black and still.
Miss Ladd knew her business as a schoolmistress too well to allow
night-lights; and Miss Ladd's young ladies were supposed to be fast
asleep, in accordance with the rules of the house. Only at intervals the
silence was faintly disturbed, when the restless turning of one of the
girls in her bed betrayed itself by a gentle rustling between the sheets.
In the long intervals of stillness, not even the softly audible breathing
of young creatures asleep was to be heard.
The first sound that told of life and movement revealed the mechanical
movement of the clock. Speaking from the lower regions, the tongue of
Father Time told the hour before midnight.
A soft voice rose wearily near the door of the room. It counted the
strokes of the clock--and reminded one of the girls of the lapse of time.
"Emily! eleven o'clock."
There was no reply. After an interval the weary voice tried again, in
louder tones:
"Emily!"
A girl, whose bed was at the inner end of the room, sighed under the
heavy heat of the night--and said, in peremptory tones, "Is that
Cecilia?"
"Yes."
"What do you want?"
"I'm getting hungry, Emily. Is the new girl asleep?"
The new girl answered promptly and spitefully, "No, she isn't."
Having a private object of their own in view, the five wise virgins of
Miss Ladd's first class had waited an hour, in wakeful anticipation of
the falling asleep of the stranger--and it had ended in this way! A ripple
of laughter ran round the room. The new girl, mortified and offended,
entered her protest in plain words.
"You are treating me shamefully! You all distrust me, because I am a
stranger."
"Say we don't understand you," Emily answered, speaking for her
schoolfellows; "and you will be nearer the truth."
"Who expected you to understand me, when I only came here to-day? I
have told you already my name is Francine de Sor. If want to know
more, I'm nineteen years old, and I come from the West Indies."
Emily still took the lead. "Why do you come here?" she asked. "Who
ever heard of a girl joining a new school just before the holidays? You
are nineteen years old, are you? I'm a year younger than you--and I
have finished my education. The next big girl in the room is a year
younger than me--and she has finished her education. What can you
possibly have left to learn at your age?"
"Everything!" cried the stranger from the West Indies, with an outburst
of tears. "I'm a poor ignorant creature. Your education ought to have
taught you to pity me instead of making fun of me. I hate you all. For
shame, for shame!"
Some of the girls laughed. One of them--the hungry girl who had
counted the strokes of the clock--took Francine's part.
"Never mind their laughing, Miss de Sor. You are quite right, you have
good reason to complain of us."
Miss de Sor dried her eyes. "Thank you--whoever you are," she
answered briskly.
"My name is Cecilia Wyvil," the other proceeded. "It was not, perhaps,
quite nice of you to say you hated us all. At the same time we have
forgotten our good breeding--and the least we can do is to beg your
pardon."