Mary Louise eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about Mary Louise.

Mary Louise eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about Mary Louise.
at her eminently respectable school.  She realized perfectly that the girl was blameless, whatever her grandsire might have done, and she deeply deplored the scornful attitude assumed by the other pupils toward poor Mary Louise; nevertheless a certain bitter resentment of the unwholesome scandal that had smirched her dignified establishment had taken possession of the woman, perhaps unconsciously, and while she might be a little ashamed of the ungenerous feeling, Miss Stearne fervently wished she had never accepted the girl as a pupil.

She had accepted her, however.  She had received the money for Mary Louise’s tuition and expenses and had promptly applied the entire sum to reducing her grocery bills and other pressing obligations; therefore she felt it her duty to give value received.  If Mary Louise was to be driven from the school by the jeers and sneers of the other girls, Miss Stearne would feel like a thief.  Moreover, it would be a distinct reproach to her should she allow a fifteen-year-old girl to wander into a cruel world because her school—­her sole home and refuge—­had been rendered so unbearable that she could not remain there.  The principal was really unable to repay the money that had been advanced to her, even if that would relieve her of obligation to shelter the girl, and therefore she decided that Mary Louise must not be permitted, under any circumstances, to leave her establishment without the authority of her natural guardians.

This argument ran hurriedly through her mind as the girl stood calmly waiting.

“Is this action approved by your mother, or—­or—­by your grandfather?” she asked, somewhat more harshly than was her wont in addressing her pupils.

“No, Miss Stearne.”

“Then how dare you even suggest it?”

“I am not wanted here,” returned the girl with calm assurance.  “My presence is annoying to the other girls, as well as to yourself, and so disturbs the routine of the school.  For my part, I—­I am very unhappy here, as you must realize, because everyone seems to think my dear Gran’pa Jim is a wicked man—­which I know he is not.  I have no heart to study, and—­and so—­it is better for us all that I go away.”

This statement was so absolutely true and the implied reproach was so justified, that Miss Stearne allowed herself to become angry as the best means of opposing the girl’s design.

“This is absurd!” she exclaimed.  “You imagine these grievances, Mary Louise, and I cannot permit you to attack the school and your fellow boarders in so reckless a manner.  You shall not stir one step from this school!  I forbid you, positively, to leave the grounds hereafter without my express permission.  You have been placed in my charge and I insist that you obey me.  Go to your room and study your lessons, which you have been shamefully neglecting lately.  If I hear any more of this rebellious wish to leave the school, I shall be obliged to punish you by confining you to your room.”

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Mary Louise from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.