<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII<br/> <small>A Bettie-less Plan</small></h2>
<p class='drop-cap'>THE first thing that happened after
Christmas was the announcement of
the School Board's decision to wait a full
year before beginning to build a new schoolhouse.</p>
<p>"Even if we could decide on a site," said
they, "it would be hard on the tax-payers
to furnish money for such a building all at
one assessment. By spreading it over two
years' tax-rolls it will come easier."</p>
<p>The fathers, for the most part, were
pleased with the arrangement, but many of
the mothers disliked it very much indeed.</p>
<p>"We must do something about it," said
Aunty Jane, who had called at Mrs. Bennett's
to talk the matter over. "I'm in
favor of sending Marjory away to some
good girls' school, because she has some
money that is to be used solely for educational
purposes. There is enough for college
and for at least one year at a boarding school,
besides something for extras. My conscience
will feel easier when that money begins
to go toward its proper purpose."</p>
<p>"The Doctor thinks of going to Germany
next fall for a special course of study that he
thinks he needs," returned Mrs. Bennett.
"If we could place Mabel in a safe, comfortable
school, I could go with him. We've
been talking of it for a long time."</p>
<p>"I certainly am not satisfied," admitted
Mrs. Mapes, when Aunty Jane put the matter
to her. "There are too many pupils
crowded into that Baptist basement and it's
so damp that I've had to put cold compresses
on Jean's throat four times since the fire. If
you can find a good school to fit a modest
pocketbook we'd be glad to send Jean for
the one year."</p>
<p>Then Aunty Jane unfolded her plans to
the Tuckers.</p>
<p></p>
<p>"It's a beautiful idea," said pleasant Dr.
Tucker, "as far as the rest of you are concerned;
but you will have to leave Bettie
entirely out of the scheme; we simply can't
afford it. We've always hoped to be able
to do something for Dick—he wants to be a
physician—but even that is hopelessly beyond
us at present."</p>
<p>"No," added Mrs. Tucker, shifting the
heavy baby to her other arm and hoping that
Aunty Jane would not notice the dust on the
battered table, "we couldn't even think of
sending Bettie. But Mrs. Slater intends letting
Henrietta go some place next fall; why
don't you talk it over with her?"</p>
<p>"I mean to," assured Aunty Jane. "You
see, it will need a great deal of talking over
because it may prove hard to find exactly the
right kind of school. The eastern seminaries
are too far away. It must be some place
south of Lakeville, within a day's journey,
within reach of all our pocketbooks, and in
a healthful location. It mustn't be too big,
too stylish, or too old-fashioned. I'm sending
out postal cards every day and getting
catalogues by every mail; but so far, I
haven't come to any decision except that
Marjory is to go <i>some</i> place."</p>
<p>At first, the older people said little about
school matters to the four girls, but as winter
wore on it became an understood thing
that not only fortunate Henrietta but Jean,
Marjory and Mabel were to go away to
school the following September.</p>
<p>"Won't it be simply glorious," said Henrietta,
who was entertaining the Cottagers
in her den, "if all four of us land in the
same school; and we <i>must</i>—I shall stand out
for that. And you and I, Jean, shall room
together and be chums."</p>
<p>"Then Marjory and I," announced
Mabel, "shall room together, too, and fight
just the way we always do if Jean isn't on
hand to stop us."</p>
<p>"Won't it be perfectly fine?" breathed
Marjory. "I've always loved boarding-school
stories and now we'll be living right
in one."</p>
<p>Bettie kept silence, but her eyes were big
and troubled. With the girls gone she
knew that her world would be sadly changed.
Her close companionship with the other Cottagers—she
was only three when she first
began to play with Jean—had prevented her
forming other friendships. Without doubt,
Aunty Jane would be lonely; the Bennetts, in
Germany, might miss noisy, affectionate
Mabel, Mrs. Mapes might long for helpful
Jean and Mrs. Slater would certainly find
her big, beautiful home dull with no sparkling
Henrietta but it was Bettie, poor little
impecunious, uncomplaining Bettie, who
would be the very loneliest of all. The
others would lose only one girl apiece; Bettie's
loss would be fourfold. Lovely Jean,
sprightly Marjory, jolly Mabel and attractive
Henrietta—how <i>could</i> she spare them all
at once! And the glorious times the absent
four would have together—how <i>could</i> Bettie
miss all that? It seemed, to the little, overwhelmed
girl, too big a trouble to talk about.</p>
<p>For a long, long time the more fortunate
girls were too taken up with their own
prospects to think very seriously of Bettie's;
but one day Jean was suddenly astonished at
the depth of misery that she surprised in
Bettie's wistful, tell-tale eyes. After that,
the girls openly expressed their pity for Bettie,
who would have to stay in Lakeville.
This proved even harder to bear than their
light-hearted chatter; for it made Bettie pity
herself to an even greater extent.</p>
<p>Of course, it would be several months before
the hated school—Bettie, by this time,
was quite certain that she hated it—would
swallow up her dearest four friends at one
sudden, hideous gulp; but remote as the date
was, the interested girls could talk of very
little else. No matter what topic they might
begin with, it always worked around at last
to "when I go away next fall."</p>
<p>"I can't have any clothes this spring,"
said Jean, when the girls, in a body, were
escorting Henrietta home from her dressmaker's.
"Mother's letting my old things
down and piecing everything till I feel like
a walking bedquilt. You see, I'm to have
new things to go away with."</p>
<p>"Same here," asserted Mabel. "Only <i>my</i>
mother's having a worse time than yours to
make my things meet. My waist measure is
twenty-nine inches and my skirt bands are
only twenty-seven."</p>
<p>"<i>Only</i> twenty-seven," groaned shapely
Henrietta.</p>
<p>"If you see a second Aunty Jane," said
Marjory, skipping ahead to imitate the elder
Miss Vale's prim, peculiar walk, "running
round Lakeville all summer, you'll know
who it is. She's cutting down two of her
thousand-year-old gowns to tide me over the
season. One came out of the Ark and she
purchased the other at a little shop on Mount
Ararat."</p>
<p>"Grandmother's making lists," laughed
Henrietta, "of all the things mentioned in
all the catalogues. When she gets done,
probably she'll add them all up and divide
the result by <i>me</i>; and that will give a respectable
outfit for one girl."</p>
<p>"Poor Bettie!" said sympathetic Jean,
squeezing Bettie's slim hand. "You're out
of it all, aren't you?"</p>
<p>But this was too much for Bettie. She
turned hastily and fled.</p>
<p>The girls looked after her pityingly.</p>
<p>"Poor Bettie!" murmured Jean. "It's
awfully hard on her to hear all this talk
about school. She's always had us, you
know, and she thinks there won't be a scrap
of Lakeville left when we're gone."</p>
<p>In February Rosa Marie created a little
excitement by coming down with measles.
Maggie, the maid, had broken out with this
unlovely affliction and no one had suspected
what the trouble was until she had peeled in
the actual presence of Rosa Marie. Of
course Rosa Marie came down with measles
too. But there was an unusual feature about
this illness. Although it was Maggie and
Rosa Marie who were supposed to be the
sufferers it was really Mrs. Crane who did
all the suffering. You see, this inexperienced
lady read all the literature that she
could find that touched on the subject of
measles and its after-effects; and long after
Rosa Marie had entirely recovered, conscientious
Mrs. Crane remained awake
nights waiting for the dreaded "after-effects"
to develop.</p>
<p>"We'll bury Mrs. Crane with whooping
cough," sputtered Dr. Bennett, writing a
soothing prescription for the good lady, "if
Rosa Marie ever catches it. She's a hen
bringing up a solitary duckling, and she's
certainly overdoing it. She ought not to
have the responsibility of that child; she's
not fitted for responsibilities, yet she's the
sort that takes 'em."</p>
<p>"I'll adopt Rosa Marie myself," declared
Henrietta Bedford, hearing of this opinion
and waylaying Dr. Bennett in Mrs. Slater's
hall to make her light-hearted offer. "She'd
go beautifully with the other picturesque objects
in my den and I'm very sure that the
responsibility won't weigh <i>me</i> down."</p>
<p>"So am I," laughed Dr. Bennett. "So
sure of it that I shan't allow you to afflict
your grandmother with any carelessly
adopted babies. But that child is on my
conscience, since Mabel was the principal
culprit in the matter. We'll try to get Mrs.
Crane to send her to an asylum; only that
dear lady's conscience will have to be bombarded
from all sides before it will let her
consent to any such sensible plan. Perhaps
you can get the girls—particularly Mabel,—to
look at the matter from that point of
view; we must rescue Mrs. Crane."</p>
<p>"I'll try to," promised Henrietta.</p>
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