Read Betsy Was a Junior and Betsy and Joe Online
Authors: Maud Hart Lovelace
“No!” cried Dennie. “Say! I've just been going along for the ride.”
“You rode me, kid,” Maddox said. “But I had it coming and now you're going to get what you wanted.”
They couldn't talk him down. That was the way it was. Dennie took the ball, Maddox ran interference, shouldered one tackier out of the way, rammed another full, and, falling, had his nose almost ripped by Dennie's cleats as Dennie's feet flashed through the hole Maddox had made to victory. Dave kicked goal. The final score was Deep Valley 17, St. John 14.
On the St. John side of the field, loyal rooters tried to cheer and didn't do badly. In the Deep Valley section, the cheers were better than good. Everyone was jumping up and down and screaming. Tib wasn't only screaming; she was crying. She kept wiping her eyes and blowing her nose but she didn't seem to know that she was doing it. She kept right on cheering through it all.
Maddox tried to walk off the field but found himself seized by strong, affectionate, and perhaps
apologetic hands. Then he was up on the shoulders of Stan and Dave and three or four more. That was the way he went off the field.
The Deep Valley rooters cake-walked off behind him. They cake-walked up Main Street and all who could crowd in had supper in a restaurant which was only slightly less noisy than the football field had been. Winona started a game of drop the handkerchief under an arc light, and they waited for their train at the depot in the midst of bedlam, while chaperoning teachers looked on with sympathetic mirth.
On the return trip, Maddox sat with Tib. His left eye was green, blue, and black, and an enormous bandage covered his lip. Tib's hand was slipped through his arm. She was preening her yellow head.
The other girls hung over him. Even Irma came.
“How did you ever do it?” she asked, her large eyes soft and adoring.
Tib nudged her and clapped her hands lightly.
“Shoo!” she whispered. “Shoo!”
Maddox turned his battered head stiffly to look down at Tib and smile.
I
T WAS FORTUNATE THAT
November was cold, with snow on the ground and an icy bite in the air, for the Rays had to create some early Christmas spirit. Julia's box must be mailed by the first of December. And it must be crammed with love and fun and the feeling of home, for Julia was homesick.
In spite of the luxury at the Von Hetternichs', in
spite of her joy at studying in Germany, she was homesick, as she had been at the State University. It was torturing, she said, to be homesick all the time and yet not want to come home.
She definitely didn't want to come home. She was studying the role of Susanna in Mozart's
The Marriage of Figaro
, and loved it. But Deep Valley, the green house on High Street, held her more firmly than she had dreamed they would when she went out into the Great World.
“Oh, dear!” she wrote. “I dread Christmas Day both for you and for me. I'm sorrier for myself, though. You have only me to be lonesome for, but I have each separate one of you to long for and be sorry I was ever bad to.”
“As though she was ever bad to any of us!” said Mrs. Ray.
Betsy, feeling weepy, said briskly, “She certainly needs that motto, Margaret.”
Margaret was embroidering a motto for Julia. “Cheer Up,” it said. Betsy was embroidering one for her father that said, “Don't Worry,” in black thread tricked out with red French knots. No one ever worried less than Mr. Ray, and Betsy was very poor at sewing. But all the girls were making mottos, and so Betsy was making one. Whether it would be finished in time for Christmas was problematical. She lost her
needle, tangled her thread, pricked her finger, and dripped blood.
“You don't need to bother with French knots. Just keep on pricking your finger,” Tacy joked.
Margaret's motto was a model of neatness. Every day when she came in from school, after she had practised her piano lesson and petted the dog and cat, she sat down in her rocker and embroidered.
Mrs. Ray was making Julia a waist, silk, of a violet-blue which matched her eyes. Betsy had bought her a set of collar pins. Anna was stuffing dates and making nougat.
Mr. Ray was sending an extra check. It was what Julia had asked for. She had not realized until she went to Europe how many different kinds of lessons were necessary if you were going to be an opera singer.
By the time the box had gone, Thanksgiving was upon them. This year it was the Slades' turn to entertain. The Rays alternated Thanksgiving dinner with their friends, the Slades.
Betsy liked the arrangement, for Tom was just her age. He always came back from Cox Military full of the latest slang. This year he said, “Curses, Jack Dalton! Give me the child!”
Tom was a large boy, with rough dark hair and thick glasses. In his uniform he was meticulously neat; he had to be. But he didn't like being neat, and
in “civvies” he was always rumpled. He liked to read and play the violin.
He was a very old friend. He had sat behind Betsy and Tacy in kindergarten. He liked Tacy.
“Let's go up to the Kellys',” he said off-handedly, after Thanksgiving dinner was over.
The Kelly house was crowded with brothers and sisters home for the holidays. Tom and Betsy were warmly welcomed and offered nuts, chocolates, apples, and spare pieces of pie. But Tacy paid more attention to Betsy than she did to Tom.
“I don't seem to get anywhere with Tacy,” Tom burst out, as he and Betsy started home through the gray November dusk.
“Oh, Tacy's like that. She doesn't make a fuss over anybody.”
“She makes a fuss over you.”
“With boys, I mean. She likes you a lot, Tom.”
“Well, she certainly doesn't act it,” growled Tom. “Not that it matters! The world is full of girls.”
Betsy couldn't permit that. “Not redheaded ones with big Irish eyes,” she said.
Tom burst out laughing. “Curses, Jack Dalton!” he said.
The next day Betsy was going to have coffee with Tib, but she went to the Kelly house first. She maneuvered to get Tacy alone and with what she considered great tact brought the conversation around to Tom.
“Dearest Chuck,” she said, “if you don't mind a suggestion, you ought to be nicer to Tom.”
“Why, Sweet My Coz?” Tacy inquired.
“Well, he's a nice boy. And he likes you. And everybody's going with somebody.”
“I don't want to go with anybody.”
“You like him, don't you?”
“No more than I do anybody else,” said Tacy honestly. “I like Cab and Dennie and Tony and Tomâ¦all those boys I know well.”
Betsy grew earnest. “You'd better look out. Tom is too desirable a boy to keep running after a girl who treats him like a stick of wood.”
“I don't treat him like a stick of wood,” said Tacy. “But I certainly don't feel mushy about him.”
“He'll start rushing somebody else.”
“Let him!”
“But, Tacy, who would take you to the holiday parties?”
“Nobody, probably, and I don't give a hoot,” said Tacy serenely.
The puzzle was that this was true. Tacy liked the Crowd, she liked fun, but she just didn't like boys, not in the way the other girls did.
Betsy and Tib talked it over later at coffee. The Mullers had coffee every afternoon. Betsy had acquired the delicious vice in Milwaukee. There were usually cakesâapple cake or coffee cake sprinkled
with sugar and cinnamon. At the very least, there were delectable cookies.
Betsy, who had a sweet tooth, dropped in often, and her visits were mirth-filled occasions, for the Mullers, who took a great interest in her study of German, would allow her to speak no English. She must ask for cream, sugar, cakes, say “please” and “thank you,” tell her news only in German. Fred and Hobbie, choking down laughter at her mistakes, would point to objects on the table and shout their German names. Matilda came in from the kitchen to join the fun.
But today Betsy and Tib took their coffee upstairs.
Tib was cutting out a dress. She was making some of her own clothes this year.
“I was so fussy that Mamma told me I'd better make them myself, and I told her all right I would,” said Tib, running daring scissors through a length of pink silk spread out on the bed.
“Oh, Tib, how smart you are!” Betsy said. “Is that for the Christmas parties? I'm going to have a white wool, trimmed with gold.”
“It sounds lovely. I hope there'll be millions of dances. I hear there's going to be one at the Melborn Hotel.”
“Really? How marvelous!”
“You'll go with Joe or Tony. I wonder who Tacy will go with?”
“She could just as well go to all the dances with
Tom,” Betsy answered, and told about the conversations with Tom and with Tacy.
Tib shook her head. “I hate to say it, but I believe that Tacy is going to be an old maid.”
“Oh, Tib!” cried Betsy.
“You don't get married without lifting your finger.”
“I know it,” said Betsy in an agonized tone. “But she can't be an old maid! She just can't! If all the rest of us get to work, we ought to be able to marry her off. She's so beautiful, with that gorgeous hair and those big blue eyes.”
“But she doesn't do anything with them,” Tib protested. “I wish I had them for about five minutes.”
“You do all right being little and blonde,” Betsy said.
“Ralph likes blondes. I'm glad of that,” said Tib. She had felt romantic about Ralph Maddox ever since the St. John game. “Lloyd and Dennie are both having fits,” she went on, holding a piece of pink silk shoulder to shoulder and looking in the mirror. “I hope Ralph asks me first for that dance at the Hotelâ¦if they give it. Who do you want to go with, Betsy? Which one do you like best, Tony or Joe?”
“I've loved Tony for years,” said Betsy, lightly.
“You're not answering my question, and you know it.”
No one knew which one Betsy liked best, but the rivalry began to attract attention, and the general
opinion was that Joe was edging ahead. Word got around school that Betsy and Joe Willard were practically going together.
Miss Clarke, the Zetamathian faculty advisor who had seen Betsy through the Essay Contests, beamed upon them; and Miss O'Rourke, the Philomathian faculty advisor who had sponsored Joe, looked mischievous. Miss Fowler, the little English teacher who had given them both so much encouragement and praise, smiled when she saw them together.
In Miss Bangeter's Shakespeare class they sat side by side at the back of the room. Miss Bangeter, with her dark magnetic eyes and sonorous voice, had almost transformed that roomful of desks and blackboards into the Forest of Arden. Trees with love songs hung and carved upon them seemed to rise between the desks. The sun slanted down through leafy aisles upon gallants and fair ladies, shepherds, shepherdesses, clowns, and courtiers. The Forest of Arden always made Betsy think of the Big Hill.
She underlined a sentence and passed it across to Joe. “Fleet the time carelessly, as they did in the golden world.”
“That's what I'd like to do,” she whispered.
“That's what we'll do next spring,” Joe whispered back, while even Miss Bangeter looked pleased.
B
URSTING IN TO CALL FOR
Betsy one morning in mid-December, Tib and Tacy cried, “Say, what about our Christmas shopping trip?”
This was an annual event, as heavily weighted with tradition as a Christmas pudding with plums. As children they had gone with just ten cents apiece to spend. They had visited every store in town, priced
everything from diamonds to gum drops, and bought, each one, a Christmas tree ornament. The last few years, they had been less carefree; they had had real shopping to do. But they had never failed to make the trip, savoring Christmas together all up and down Front Street.
“Of course,” said Betsy. “Let's go after school tonight.”
There had been repeated falls of snow, and Deep Valley was bedded down in drifts. But bright sun and jingling sleighbells made the cold seem festive. Front Street masqueraded in evergreen and holly. The store windows were full of gifts, and the stores were full of merry harassed crowds and the smell of damp clothing.
The girls bought presents for their parents, for their brothers and sisters, and for other members of the Crowd. Tacy bought beauty pins for Mrs. Poppy, with whom she studied singing. Betsy bought a Deep Valley pennant for Leonard. At last, for old times' sake, they bought the Christmas tree ornaments, each selecting just one after prolonged debate.
As they paid their dimes, they were laughing at themselves, but Betsy admitted silently that she had never ceased to be thrilled by the sight of a Christmas tree ornament, so fragile, so glittery, so full of the promise of Christmas. When they were drinking coffee at Heinz's, she took her silver ball out of its wrappings.
“Just think!” she beganâBetsy was always saying
“Just think!” this year. “Just think! This may be our last Christmas shopping trip!”
“What do you mean by that?” asked Tib, startled.
“Well, next year I'll be at the U. You'll be going to Browner College in Milwaukee, probablyâ¦or maybe on the stage; it wouldn't surprise meâ¦and Tacy will be going to the College on the hill, studying Public School Music. We may very well not get downtown together.”
“Heavens!” said Tacy. She looked aghast.
“We can't go on doing the same things forever,” said Tib. But she looked sober, too.
“Maybe we ought to have more cakes,” suggested Betsy, by way of consolation. So they ordered another round of cakes.
They went home laden with bundles, but Betsy had not yet bought her most important gift. She had not even mentioned it to Tacy and Tib. This was for Joe.
He had already bought her present.
“It doesn't amount to much. Just something I thought you might like,” he had said with shining carelessness one Sunday night at lunch.
He almost always came for Sunday night lunch now. Tony was often there and the relationship between them had grown a little stiff. Joe was aware that although Betsy's feeling for Tony might be sisterly, Tony's feeling for her was more than brotherly.
And Tony had heard the general rumors about Betsy and Joe.
Tony had the inside track at the Ray house Sunday nights. But Joe was winning a special place, too. Margaret actually permitted him to tease her. He pelted Mrs. Ray with compliments, and when Mr. Ray was making the famous sandwiches, Joe always kept him company. He got Mr. Ray to talk about the shoe store, about his youth, about Deep Valley history. Mr. Ray loved to talk and Joe to listen.
“I think your father is the finest person I ever met in my life,” Joe said one night. “He has the finest character and philosophy, he is the happiest. I've been trying to decide what makes him so happy. I believe it's because he never thinks of himself. He is always thinking about doing something for somebody elseâ¦you, or Margaret, or your motherâ¦or Anna, or the shoemaker who works for him, or some poor widow across the slough with a house full of kids.”
Mr. Ray, for his part, was highly gratified with his attentive listener. Now when he brought home especially good anecdotes he was eager to share them with the Willard boy. Betsy was occasionally almost annoyed by this. She and Joe didn't have much time together. Sometimes when they were sitting by the fire, happily alone for once, Mr. Ray would join them, sit down, and begin to talk.
“A remarkable fellow came into the store today. Name of Kerr. And guess what he did. I'm always selling the other fellow a bill of goods. But this fellow Kerr sold me. I didn't want to put in a line of knitwear. Never thought of doing it. Perfectly content with shoes. But, by golly, I did!”
Joe was delighted. “How did he manage it?” he asked.
“He was so darned positive,” Mr. Ray replied. “He knows exactly what he wants and what you ought to want, whether you do or not.”
At this point, Mrs. Ray, to whom Betsy had been lifting eyebrows in appeal, called Mr. Ray away. She asked him to fix a squeaking door.
“Shucks!” said Mr. Ray. “That door has been squeaking for weeks. Why do I have to fix it right now when I want to talk to Joe?”
There could certainly be no doubt about Mr. Ray's liking for Joe, and even Anna, although she adored Tony, allowed that Joe was “puny.”
“There was a boy something like that who used to call on the McCloskey girl,” she remarked to Betsy. The McCloskeys were a legendary family for whom Anna had worked in a legendary past. When Anna quoted the McCloskeys, it was important.
She quoted them, as Christmas drew near, about cookies. They had always made three kinds, she said,
and so she was making three kinds now.
The December issue of the
Ladies' Home Journal
had an impressive page entitled “Twenty Christmas Cookies from One Batter.” Betsy showed it to Anna, who sniffed.
“
Ja
, and I'll bet they all taste alike. Mrs. McCloskey's recipes are good enough for me.”
Mrs. Ray was rapturously shopping. Betsy was worrying darkly over her “Don't Worry” motto. Margaret was working on somethingâit looked like a blotterâwhich she whisked out of sight whenever Betsy came near.
Mr. Ray brought home holly wreaths, which were put up in the windows. He brought home mistletoe, and candy canes. A Christmas tree waited on the chill back porch, sending out whiff of aromatic fragrance whenever the door was opened.
Mr. Ray called the girls aside. “You could never guess what my present for Jule is, not if you tried a hundred years.”
“What is it, Papa?” Betsy urged.
“Never mind. You'll find out.”
Margaret protested. “You never kept Mamma's present a secret from us before.”
Mr. Ray only chuckled.
Margaret, who sang in the seventh-grade chorus, was practising Christmas carols.
“It came upon the midnight clearâ¦.”
Betsy and Tacy were practising for the high school Christmas program.
“The first Noel, the angel did say
,
Was to certain poor shepherds
,
In fields as they layâ¦.”
Betsy was busy with choir practise, too. And there seemed to be a sound of carols in the air even when she wasn't in chorus or choir. She thought sometimes that in spite of the void caused by Julia's absence, this was going to be a wonderful Christmas.
It was getting difficult, though, to divide her time between Joe and Tony. Balancing their claims, she felt sometimes like an acrobat on a tight rope. She consoled herself by thinking of Tony. He wasn't any longer stealing rides on freight cars. He wasn't going with that wild crowd. And soon, certainly, he would get a crush on some other girl.
But Tony, she admitted reluctantly, hadn't had very many crushes during the years she had known him. Moreover, in an offhand nonchalant way, he was letting her know that he liked herâ¦too much.
Walking downtown with Joe after school, she asked where he was spending Christmas
“Butternut Center,” he replied. “My uncle and
aunt sort of like to have me around.”
“Do you suppose you'll get in town during the day?”
“Does your father make turkey sandwiches at night?”
“He certainly does.” Betsy smiled. “They're the most famous of the year. He puts cold dressing in them.”
“When do you get your presents?”
“Christmas morning, in our stockings. We hang them the night before and then after we've decorated the tree and sung carols, we turn out the lights and fill them. It's lots of fun.”
“You Rays know how to do things,” Joe answered. “Well,” he added, “the last day of school is Christmas Eve. I'll give you your present then and you can put it into your own stocking.”
They parted at the usual corner and Joe went on to the
Sun
, but Betsy didn't go to the library. She went to Front Street, and she came nearer to duplicating the traditional Christmas shopping trip than she and Tacy and Tib had done. She traversed Front Street from end to end, looking into every store.
It was proper for a boy to give a girl only books, flowers, or candy. It would be proper for Betsy to give Joe nothing more. A box of home made candy might be the best thing, but she did want to give him something he could keep. She ended at Cook's Book Store,
her favorite store in town, and browsing about, she found a small, red, limp-leather edition of Shakespeare. The Avon edition, it was called. She purchased
As You Like It
.
Hurrying to her father's store in order to get a ride home in the sleigh, she passed Alquist's. She remembered that she hadn't bought a present for Tony and went in and bought a red tie. It wouldn't be proper to give a tie to the average boy, but Tony was so much more than just a beau. So much more, and alsoâ¦so much less.
On the evening before the last day of school, the Crowd went to the high school to decorate. They stopped by for Cab and made him go, too. Decorating the school for Christmas was a senior prerogative and a very hilarious occasion.
A few industrious persons really worked, hanging popcorn and cranberry strings and loops of silver paper on a tall evergreen tree set up on the platform. The others drew pictures and scrawled slams on the blackboards, tacked mistletoe in strategic places. Clutching mistletoe, Dennie pursued Winona over the tops of the desks.
Tib ran up to Betsy. “Remember what I told you about a dance at the Melborn Hotel? Well, it's going to be on New Year's Eve. Ralph just asked me.”
Betsy had a tightrope walker's shiver. She didn't
want to go to this all-important dance with Tony.
During the rest of the evening she stayed so close to Joe that he asked, “What's the matter? Scared of something?”
“Scared to go home in the dark.”
“Gosh!” said Joe. “That's too bad. I have to get down to the roller rink to cover an exhibition of skating. You don't want to come along, do you?”
“I mustn't,” said Betsy. “There's too much to do at home.”
She thought of bringing up the subject of the dance. After all, she and Joe were almost going together. But Betsy wasn't sure she had the poise. Besides, she didn't want to. It would take away something of the thrill to ask him instead of having him ask her.
She thought she could manage. “If Tony asks me,” she planned, “I'll say I'm engaged. It would be just a white lie. Or I'll tell him frankly I'd prefer to go with Joe. He has to know sometime.”
Probably, she thought, he wouldn't get the chance to ask her. She had come with Tacy and Tib and would go home with them.
At the time for departure, however, Tony came up.
“I'll walk you home,” he said, taking her arm.
“I came over with the girls, Tony, and I think I'd better⦔
“I think you'd better go home with me,” he interrupted, insouciant as ever.
Dennie, Cab, and Lloyd had joined Tacy, Tib, and Winona. They sauntered along High Street together. In desperation, when they reached her home, Betsy asked them all in.
It was the worst thing she could have done. Everyone began to talk about the dance.
“What's this? What's this?” cried Tony. “A dance on New Year's Eve? Mar-vo-lous!”
He turned to Betsy, and his manner was unconcerned, but not the look in his black eyes.
“How about it, Ray of Sunshine? Will you go with me?” he asked.
Betsy felt the room listening and panic overwhelmed her. She couldn't, in this company, say she was engaged. Julia with her cold confidence could have done it, but Betsy lacked the poise, and she certainly couldn't be frank. She had to protect Tony.
“Why, thanks,” she said. She noticed that some of the boys were looking at her keenly and tried to act careless, as though it didn't matter with whom one went to the New Year's Eve dance.
But it did matter, she felt with foreboding.
Joe was so proud. She had watched him and thought about him a great deal over the autumn, and she had never seen him make a frankly friendly overture. She
knew the reason: he felt he had nothing to offer. Other boys and girls had homes to entertain in, parents to give treats. He had nothing. He could never say, “Come on over to my house,” and bring a friend in for an apple or a cookie. He didn't want to accept favors he couldn't return. So he never made advances.
Betsy had made the advances. She had been generous with her friendship, with her admiration, with her praise. It was her nature to be that way and it had drawn Joe to her. Some boys might be spurred to greater devotion by a rival, but not Joe.
Betsy went to sleep worrying and she woke up still worrying.
Morning brought a diversion. Before breakfast was over, the doorbell rang, and she found no one less than Carney on the porch, Carney, dimple flickering!
They flew into each other's arms. “Why, you haven't changed at all!”
“Why should I have changed?” asked Carney. Tacy, Tib, and Alice came shouting up the steps. Carney was conveyed with a guard of honor to the high school.