they
had never looked forward to her coming. As Sahwah remarked, she had
her appetite all fixed for Katherine, and nothing else would satisfy her.
The news about Katherine had only been one of a series of
disappointments.
Hinpoha had been called home the week before college closed
officially, to attend the funeral of Dr. Hoffman, Aunt Phoebe's husband,
whose strenuous work for his "boys" in the military camp during the
past year had been too much for his already failing strength, and Aunt
Phoebe, worn out with the strain of the last months, had announced her
intention of closing the house and going to spend the summer with a
girlhood friend on the Maine coast. Hinpoha had the choice of going
with her or spending the summer with Aunt Grace, who had a fractured
knee and was confined to an invalid's chair.
Migwan had come home from college with over-strained eyes and a
weak chest and had been peremptorily forbidden to spend the vacation
devouring volumes of Indian history as she had planned, and had a lost,
aimless feeling in consequence.
Sahwah, thanks to the unceasing patriotic activities of Mrs. Osgood
Harper during the previous winter, found herself unexpectedly in
possession of a two months' vacation while her energetic employer
recuperated from her season's labors in a famous sanatorium. As
Sahwah had not expected a vacation and had made no plans, she found
herself, as she expressed it, "all dressed up and no place to go."
For Gladys's father, head over heels in the manufacture of munitions,
there would be no such glorious camping trip as there was the summer
before, and Mrs. Evans refused to go away and leave him, so Gladys
had the prospect of a summer in town, the first that she could recollect.
"I can't decide which I shall do," sighed Hinpoha plaintively to the
other three, who had foregathered in the library of the Bradford home
one afternoon at the beginning of the summer. "I know Aunt Phoebe
would rather be alone with Miss Shirley, because her cottage is small,
and it would be dreadfully dull for me besides; but Aunt Grace will be
laid up all summer and she has a fright of a parrot that squawks from
morning until night. Oh, dear, why can't things be as they were last
year?"
Then had come Nyoda's letter:
DEAREST WINNEBAGOS:
Can't you take pity on me and relieve my loneliness? Here I am, in a
house that would make the ordinary hotel look like a bandbox, and
since Sherry has gone to France with the Engineers it's simply ghastly.
For various reasons I do not wish to leave the house, but I shall surely
go into a decline if I have to stay here alone. Can't you come and spend
your vacations with me, as many of you as have vacations? Please
come and amuse your lonesome old Guardian, whose house is bare and
dark and cold.
Sahwah tumbled out of her chair with a shout that startled poor Mr.
Bob from his slumbers at her feet and set him barking wildly with
excitement; Migwan and Gladys fell on each other's necks in silent
rapture, and Hinpoha began packing immediately. Just one week later
they boarded the train and started on their journey to Oakwood.
Sahwah sat and looked at the soldiers in the car with unconcealed envy.
Her ever-smouldering resentment against the fact that she was not a
boy had since the war kindled into red rage at the unkindness of fate.
She chafed under the restrictions with which her niche in the world
hedged her in.
"I wish I were a man!" she exclaimed impatiently. "Then I could go to
war and fight for my country and--and go over the top. The boys have
all the glory and excitement of war and the girls have nothing but the
stupid, commonplace things to do. It isn't fair!"
"But women are doing glorious things in the war," Migwan interrupted
quickly. "They're going as nurses in the hospitals right at the front;
they're working in the canteens and doing lots of other things right in
the thick of the excitement."
"Oh, yes, women are," replied Sahwah, "but girls aren't. Long ago, in
the days before the war, I used to think if there ever would be a war the
Camp Fire Girls would surely do something great and glorious, but
here we are, and the only thing we can do is knit, knit, knit, and fold
bandages, and the babies in the kindergarten are doing that. We're too
young to do anything big and splendid. We're just schoolgirls, and no
one takes us seriously. We can't go as nurses without three years'
training--we can't do anything. There might as well not be any war, for
all
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