<h3>THE SECRET DOOR</h3>
<p>The routine of Jerry's new life shaped into pleasant ways. She felt more
like Jerry Travis and less like a dream-creature living in a golden
world she had brought around her by wishing on a wishing-rock. She could
not have found a moment in which to be homesick; twice a week she wrote
back to Sweetheart and Little-Dad long scrawly letters that would have
disgraced her in the eyes of Miss Gray of the English department, but
expressed such utter happiness and contentment that Mrs. Travis, with a
little regret, dismissed the fear that Jerry would be lonely away from
her and Sunnyside.</p>
<p>After the first week of school the girls and boys settled down to what
Graham called "digging." Geometry looked less formidable to Jerry,
Cicero was like a beautiful old friend, Gyp was with her in English and
history, Ginny Cox was in one of her classes, too, and Jerry liked her
better each day. Patricia Everett was teaching her to play tennis until
basketball practice began.</p>
<p>There were the pleasant walks to and from school through the city
streets, whose teeming life never failed to fascinate Jerry; the jolly
recess, breaking the school session, when the girls gathered around the
long tables and ate their lunch; and then the afternoon's play on the
athletic field at Highacres.</p>
<p>Had old Peter Westley ever pictured, as he sat alone in his great empty
house, how Highacres would look after scores of young feet had trampled
over its velvety stretches? Perhaps he had liked that picture; perhaps,
to him, his halls were echoing even then to the hum of young voices;
perhaps he had felt that these young lives that would pass over the
threshold of the house he had built out into the world of men and women
would belong, in some way, to him who had never had a boy or girl.</p>
<p>One afternoon Gyp and Jerry lingered in the school building to prepare a
history lesson from references they had to find in the library. Gyp
hated to study; the drowsy stillness of the room was broken by the
pleasant shouting from the playground outside. She threw down her pencil
and stretched her long arms.</p>
<p>"Oh, goodness, Jerry—let's stop. We can ask mother all these things."</p>
<p>Jerry was quite willing to be tempted. She, too, had found it hard to
hold her attention to the Thirty-one Dynasties.</p>
<p>Gyp leaned toward her. "I'll tell you—let's go exploring. There are all
the rooms in the back we've never seen."</p>
<p>During the past six months workmen had been rebuilding the rear wing of
Highacres into laboratories. The changes had not been completed. Gyp and
Jerry climbed over materials and tools and little piles of rubbish,
poking inquisitive noses into every corner. Now and then Gyp stopped to
ask a workman a few questions. They stumbled around in the basement
where in a few weeks there would be a very complete machine-shop and
carpentry room. Then they found a stairway that led to the upper floors
and scampered up it.</p>
<p>"Oh, Jerry Travis, I <i>wish</i> you could see yourself," laughed Gyp as they
paused on the third floor.</p>
<p>"Your face is dirty, too," Jerry retorted.</p>
<p>"Isn't this fun? It doesn't seem a bit like school, does it? I wonder if
they're ever going to use these rooms. Let's play hide-and-seek. I'll
blind and count twenty and you hide and we mustn't make a <i>sound</i>!"
which, you know, is a very hard thing to do when one is playing
hide-and-seek.</p>
<p>Gyp's charm—and there was much charm in this lanky girl—lay in her
irrepressible spirits. Gyp was certain—and every boy and girl of her
acquaintance knew it—to find an opportunity for "fun" in the most
unpromising circumstances. No one but Gyp could have known what fun it
would be to play hide-and-seek in the halls and rooms of the third floor
of Highacres—especially when one had to step very softly and bite one's
lips to keep back any sound!</p>
<p>It was Jerry's turn to blind. She leaned her arm against the narrow
frame of a panel painting of George Washington that was set in the wall
at a turn in the corridor. As she rested her face against her arm she
felt the picture move ever so slightly under her pressure. Startled, she
stepped back. Slowly, as though pushed by an invisible hand, the panel
swung out into the corridor.</p>
<p>"<i>Gyp</i>——" cried Jerry so sharply that Gyp appeared from her
hiding-place in a twinkling. "Look—what I did!" Jerry felt as though
the entire building might slowly and sedately collapse around her.</p>
<p>"For goodness' sake," cried Gyp, staring. She swung the panel out. "It's
a <i>door</i>! Jerry Travis, <i>it's a secret door</i>!" She put her head through
the narrow opening. "Jerry——" she reached back an eager hand.
"Look—it's a stairway—a secret stairway!"</p>
<p>Jerry put her head in. Enough light filtered through a crack above so
that the girls could make out the narrow winding steps. They were very
steep and only broad enough for one person to squeeze through.</p>
<p>"Come on, Jerry, let's——"</p>
<p>"Gyp, you don't know where it'll take you——" Jerry suddenly remembered
their poor princess in her dungeon.</p>
<p>"Silly—nothing could hurt us! Come on. Close the panel—there, like
that. I'll go first." She led the way, Jerry tiptoeing gingerly behind
her.</p>
<p>The door at the top gave under Gyp's push and to their amazement the
girls found themselves in the tower room.</p>
<p>It was a square room with a sloping ceiling and narrow windows; there
was nothing in the least unusual about it. Gyp and Jerry looked about
them, vaguely disappointed. It might have been, with its litter of old
furniture, chests of books, piles of magazines and papers, an attic room
in any house. The October sunshine filtered in thin bars through the
dust-stained windows, cobwebs festooned themselves fantastically
overhead. The opening that led to the secret stairway appeared, on the
inside of the room, to be a built-in bookcase on the shelves of which
were now piled an assortment of hideous bric-a-brac which Mrs. Robert
Westley had refused to take into her own home.</p>
<p>"Well, it's fun, anyway, just having the secret stairway," decided Gyp,
scowling at what she mentally called the "junk" about her. "<i>Why</i> do you
suppose Uncle Peter had it built in?"</p>
<p>Jerry could offer no explanation.</p>
<p>"Hadn't we ought to tell someone?"</p>
<p>Gyp scorned the thought—part with their precious secret—let everybody
know that that imposing portrait of George Washington hid a <i>secret
door</i>? Why, even mother and Uncle Johnny couldn't know it—it was their
very own secret!</p>
<p>"I should say <i>not</i>. At least——" she added, "not for awhile. I guess
I'm a Westley and I have a right to come up here." Which argument
sounded very convincing to Jerry.</p>
<p>"Oh, I have the grandest idea," Gyp dragged Jerry to the faded
window-seat and plumped down upon it so hard that it sent a little cloud
of dust about them. "Let's get up a secret society—like the horrid old
Sphinxes."</p>
<p>Fraternities and sororities were not allowed in Lincoln School, but from
time to time there had sprung up secret bands of boys and girls, that
held together by irrevealable ties for a little while, then passed into
school history. One of these was the Sphinxes. They were annoyingly
mysterious and dark rumors were current that their antics, if known,
would not meet, in the least, the approval of the Lincoln faculty.
Isobel was a Sphinx, most faithful to her vows, so that all the teasing
and bribing that Graham's and Gyp's fertile brains could contrive,
failed to drag one tiny truth from her.</p>
<p>Of course Jerry had been at Lincoln long enough to know all about the
Sphinxes. And she knew, too, that Gyp meant to suggest a society that
would be like the Sphinxes only in that it was secret. She could not be
one of that Third Form study-room without sharing the general scorn of
the Sophomores for the Senior Sphinxes.</p>
<p>"We can meet up here, you see—once a week. And let's have it a secret
society that'll stand ready to serve Lincoln with their very lives—like
those secret bands of men in the South—after the Civil War."</p>
<p>Jerry declared, of course, that Gyp's suggestion was "wonderful."</p>
<p>"We'll have a real initiation when we'll all swear our allegiance to
Lincoln School forever and ever and we'll have spreads and it'll be such
fun making every one wonder where we meet. And we'll have terribly funny
signs."</p>
<p>"What'll we call it?" asked Jerry, ashamed that she could offer nothing
to the plan.</p>
<p>"Let's call it the Ravens and Serpents—that sounds so awful and we
won't be at all. And a crawly snake is such a dreadful symbol and it's
easy to draw." Gyp's brain worked at lightning pace in its initiative.</p>
<p>"What girls shall we ask?"</p>
<p>Gyp rattled off a number of names. They were all girls who were in the
Third Form study-room.</p>
<p>"Can't we ask Ginny Cox?"</p>
<p>Gyp considered. "No," she answered decidedly. "She'd be fun but she's
too chummy with Mary Starr and Mary Starr's a Sphinx. We can't ask her."</p>
<p>Gyp was right, of course, Jerry thought, but she wished Ginny Cox might
be invited to join.</p>
<p>"Let's go down now. Oh, won't it be fun? Swear, Jerauld Travis, that
burning irons won't drag our secret from you!"</p>
<p>"Nothing will make me tell," promised Jerry. They stole down the
stairway, moved George Washington carefully back into place, tiptoed to
the main floor and out into the sunshine.</p>
<p>Thus did the secret order of the "Ravens and Serpents" have its birth.
Gyp assembled various symbols, impressive in their terribleness, that,
during the study hours of the next day, conveyed, with the help of
whispered explanations and a violent exchange of notes, invitations to
six other girls to join the new order. And after the close of school
eight pupils elected to remain indoors, ostensibly to study; eight heads
bent diligently over the long oak table in the library until a safe
passage into the deserted halls above was assured. Then Gyp and Jerry
led the new Ravens to the secret door where, in a sepulchral whisper,
Gyp extracted a solemn promise from each that she would not divulge the
secret of the hidden stairway. One by one, quite breathless with
excitement, they climbed to the tower room where Gyp with ridiculous
solemnity called "to order" the first assembly of the Ravens and
Serpents of Lincoln School.</p>
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<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="illus3" id="illus3"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus3.jpg" alt=""/></div>
<h3> ONE BY ONE, QUITE BREATHLESS WITH EXCITEMENT, THEY CLIMBED TO THE TOWER ROOM</h3>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>All the Ravens agreed with Gyp that their secret society must pledge
itself to protect and serve the spirit of Lincoln; then, having disposed
of that they fell, eagerly, to discussing plans for "spreads."</p>
<p>"Let's take turns bringing eats."</p>
<p>"How often shall we meet?"</p>
<p>"Let's meet every Wednesday. Melodia always makes tarts on Tuesday and
maybe I can coax her to make some extra ones," offered Patricia Everett.</p>
<p>"And the dancing class is in the gym. then and no one will notice us."</p>
<p>"We ought to have knives and forks and things like a regular club!"</p>
<p>"And a president and a secretary."</p>
<p>"I ought to be president." Gyp's tone was final.</p>
<p>The other Ravens assented amicably. "Of course you ought to be. And
Jerry can be secretary because she helped find this spliffy room."</p>
<p>"Girls, at the next meeting let's each bring a knife, fork, spoon, plate
and cup."</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>won't</i> it be fun?" A Raven pirouetted on her toes in a most
unparliamentary and unbird-like fashion.</p>
<p>"Pat and I'll bring the eats next Wednesday," declared Peggy. "Some one
has to start."</p>
<p>"If we've decided everything we have to decide this meeting's
adjourned," and without further formal procedure Gyp summarily brought
to an end the first meeting of the Ravens. After a merry half-hour they
tiptoed down the secret stairway, George Washington went back into his
place on the wall and the eight girls scattered, each to her own home,
with hearts that were fairly bursting with excitement.</p>
<p>That evening at the dinner table Gyp, very obviously, made a secret sign
to Jerry. She brought one hand, with a little downward, spiral movement,
to rest upon the other hand, the first two fingers of each interlocked.</p>
<p>"Oh! Oh! That's a secret sign you made," cried Tibby.</p>
<p>"Well, maybe it is," answered Gyp, putting her spoon in her soup with
assumed indifference.</p>
<p>"Some silly girls' society, I'll bet," put in Graham with a tormenting
grin.</p>
<p>Gyp had passed beyond the age when Graham's teasing could disturb her.
She smiled to show how little she minded his words.</p>
<p>"You'll know, my dear brother, <i>sometime</i>, whether we're silly or not,"
she answered with beautiful dignity. "<i>We're</i> not a society that's
organized just for <i>fun</i>!" Which was, of course, a slap at the Sphinxes.
Isobel roused suddenly to an active interest in the discussion.</p>
<p>"You're just copy-cats," she declared, with a withering scorn that
brought Graham to Gyp's defence.</p>
<p>No wonder Jerry never found a moment in the Westley home dull!</p>
<p>"<i>You</i> needn't think," he shot across the table at Isobel, "that 'cause
you have waves in your hair you're the whole ocean!"</p>
<p>"Funny little boy," Isobel retorted, trying hard to hold back her anger.
"Mother, I should think you'd make Graham stop using his horrid slang!"</p>
<p>"That's not slang—that's <i>idiotmatic</i> English," added Graham, smiling
mischievously at his mother. He chuckled. "You should have heard Don
Blacke in geom. class to-day. He got up and said: 'Two triangles are
equal if two sides and the included angle of one are equal
<i>respectfully</i> to two sides,' and when we all laughed he got sore as a
cat!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
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