Eva made no answer. Indeed, she would have found it hard to speak, for she was choking with tears,—tears that presently found vent in “a good cry,” as Alice and Janey left the room.
What should she do? What could she do with all the girls against her? If she could only tell Miss Vincent, she could advise her. But Miss Vincent had been summoned home by illness that very morning.
Poor Eva! the way before her looked extremely difficult. She was very sensitive, and Miss Vincent’s story had made an impression upon her that could not be got rid of. She was astonished to find it had not made the same impression upon Alice,—that Alice had not seen in it, as she had, a clear direction what to do, or what to try to do; and now here was Janey, as entirely out of sympathy, and Alice had said that all the rest of the girls would be the same. If Alice was right, it might—it might make a bad matter worse; it might make the girls dislike Cordelia more, to—to interfere. For a moment Eva felt that this view of the matter would solve her difficulty, by exonerating her from undertaking her task. The next moment there flashed into her mind these words of Miss Vincent’s: “If only one of them had thought to say a kind word to me.”
About half an hour later Alice and Janey, with three or four of the other girls, were practising in the gymnasium together.
“I wonder where Eva is?” whispered Alice. “She’s always here at this time; she is so fond of the gym.”
“She didn’t like what we said, so perhaps she won’t come to-day,” whispered Janey.
“Well, I had to say what I did; if I hadn’t, Eva would have—But there she is now,” as the door opened. Then aloud, “Eva, Eva, come over here and try the bars with us.”
Eva ’s heart gave a little jump of gladness as she accepted this pleasantly spoken invitation. She hated to be on ill terms with anybody, and especially with Alice, of whom she was fond; and as she went forward and swung herself lightly up beside her, she forgot for the moment everything that was unpleasant.
There was a pretty little running exercise up and down a gently inclined plane that was in great favor at the school; and when the three swung down from the bars, Alice proposed that they should try the race-track, as they called it.
They were just starting off when the door opened, and Cordelia Burr came in. She stared about her in her odd frowning way, and then hurried forward to join the runners. Eva gave a little start of recoil. Alice gave more than a start. She seized Eva and Janey by the wrists, and, pushing them before her, sent a nod and backward to several others who had left the bars to come over to the race-track. She did not say even to herself that she meant to crowd Cordelia out; but the fact was accomplished, nevertheless, for by the time Cordelia reached the track there was no room for her. Eva had seen this same kind of stratagem enacted before, and thought