CHAPTER XVIII

  THE FIVE-REEL DRAMA

  There was a spark of romance in old Mrs. Sadoc Smith, after all. Ruth readto her the first part of "The Heart of a Schoolgirl" and to further thecontinuation and ultimate successful completion of that scenario, the oldlady would have done much.

  Curly looked upon Ruth with awe. He was a devotee of the moving pictures,and every nickel he could spare went into the coffers of one or the otherof the "picture palaces" in Lumberton. Lumberton was a thriving city, withboth water-freight and railroad facilities besides its mills and lumberinterests; so it could well support several of the modern houses ofentertainment that have sprung up in such mushroom growth all over theland.

  Mr. Hammond's films taken at Lumberton were of an educational nature andthe Board of Trade of the city expected much advertising of the industriesof the place when the films were released.

  However, to get back to Mrs. Sadoc Smith--Her instructions from Mrs.Tellingham included the putting out of the lamp in the big room the fourBriarwood girls occupied by ten o'clock every night; but Mrs. Smithallowed Ruth to come downstairs after the other girls were in bed andwrite under the radiance of the reading lamp on her sitting-room table. Itwas quiet there, for Mrs. Sadoc Smith either sent Curly to bed, or madehim keep as still as a mouse. And there was nobody else to disturb theyoung author as she wrote, save the cat that delighted to jump up into herlap and lie there purring, while the scenario was being written.

  Ruth did not avail herself of this privilege often; but she was desirousfor the scenario to be finished and in Mr. Hammond's hands. So sure hadthat gentleman been of her success, and so pleased was he with the plan ofthe entire play, that he had taken a copy of the first part with him whenhe left Lumberton and now wrote that Mr. Grimes was already making a fewof the studio scenes.

  The young author rather shrank from letting the pugnacious Mr. Grimes haveanything to do with her story; but she knew that both Mr. Hammond andHazel Gray thought highly of the man's ability. Nor was she in a positionto insist upon any other director. She was working for Briarwood, not forher own advantage.

  "If Grimes takes hold of it with his usual vigor, it will be a success,"Mr. Hammond assured Ruth in his letter. "Hurry along the rest of the play.Spring is upon us, and we shall have some good open weather soon in whichto take the pictures at Briarwood Hall."

  Ruth hurried. Indeed, the story was finished so rapidly that the girlscarcely realized what she had done. There was no time for her to go overthe scenario carefully for revision and polishing. The last scenes sheread to nobody; she scarcely knew herself how they sounded.

  Ruth Fielding had written an ingenious and very original scenario. Itscrudities were many and manifest; nevertheless, the true gold was there.Mr. Hammond had recognized the originality of the girl's ideas in thefirst part of the play. He was not going into the scheme, and risking hismoney and reputation as a film producer, from any feeling of sentiment. Itwas a business proposition, pure and simple, with him.

  In the first place, nobody had ever thought of just this kind of movingpicture. The producer would be in the field with a new idea. In addition,the drama would be looked for all over the country by the friends of thepupils, past and present, of Briarwood Hall. The girls themselvesappearing in some of the scenes would add to the interest their parents,friends, and the graduates of the Hall, were bound to take in theproduction.

  To Ruth, nervous and overworked after the finishing of the scenario, thedays of waiting until Mr. Hammond read and pronounced judgment on theplay, were hard indeed to endure. No matter how much confidence herfriends--even Mrs. Tellingham--had in her ability to succeed, Ruth was notat all sure she had written up to the mark.

  Try as she might she began to fall behind in her recitation marks duringthese days of waiting. Her nervousness was enhanced by the doubts she feltregarding her general standing in her classes.

  Mrs. Tellingham talked cheerfully in chapel about "our graduating class;"but some of the girls who were working with a view to receiving theirdiplomas in June would never be able to reach the high mark necessary forMrs. Tellingham to allow them those certificates.

  There would be a fringe of girls standing at the back of the class who,although never appearing at Briarwood Hall another term, could not win theroll of parchment which would enter them in good standing in any of thewomen's colleges. Ruth did not want to be among those who failed.

  She worried about this a good deal; she could not sleep at night; and hercheeks grew pale. She worked hard, and yet sometimes when she reached theclassroom she felt as though her head were a hollow drum in which thethoughts beat to and fro without either rhyme or reason.

  Ruth Fielding was a perfectly healthy girl, as well as an athletic one.But in a time of stress like this the very healthiest person can easilyand quickly break down. "I feel as though I should fly!" is an expressionoften heard from nervous and overwrought schoolgirls. Ruth wished that shemight fly--away from school and study and scenarios and sullen girls likeAmy Gregg.

  One evening when she came back to Mrs. Sadoc Smith's with a strapful ofbooks to study before bedtime, Ruth saw Curly Smith by the shed door busywith some fishing tackle. Ruth's pulses leaped. Fishing! She had notthrown a hook into the water for months and months!

  "Going fishing, Curly?" she said wistfully.

  "Yep."

  "Where are they biting now?"

  "There's carp and bream under the old mill-dam up in Norman's Woods. I saw'em jumping there to-day."

  "Oh! when are you going?" gasped the girl, hungry for outdoor sport andadventure.

  "In the morning--before _you're_ up," said the boy, rather sullenly.

  "I wager I'll be awake," said Ruth, sitting down beside him. "I wakeup--oh, just awfully early! and lie and think."

  Curly looked at her. "That don't get you nothin'," he said.

  "But I can't help it."

  "Gran says you're overworked," Curly said. "Why don't you run away fromschool if they make you work so hard? _I_ would. Our teacher's sick sothere isn't any session at the district school to-morrow."

  "Oh, Curly! Play hooky?" gasped Ruth, clasping her hands.

  "Yep. Only you girls haven't any pluck."

  "If I played hooky would you let me go fishing with you to-morrow?" askedRuth, her eyes dancing.

  "You haven't the sand," scoffed Curly.

  "But can I go if I _dare_ run away?" urged Ruth.

  "Yep," said the boy, but with rather a sour grin.

  "What time are you going to start?"

  "Four."

  "If I'm not down in the kitchen by that time, throw some gravel up to thewindow," commanded Ruth. "But don't break the window."

  "Oh, shucks! you won't go when you see how dark and damp it is," declaredCurly.

  When, just after four o'clock in the morning, Curly crept downstairs fromhis shed chamber, knuckling his eyes to get the sleep out, there was alight in the kitchen and Ruth was just pouring out two fragrant cups ofcoffee which flanked a heaping plate of doughnuts.

  "Old Scratch!" gasped Curly. "Gran will have our hides and hair! You'renot _going_, Ruth Fielding?"

  "If you will let me," said Ruth, meekly.

  "Well--if you want. But you'll get wet and dirty and mussy----"

  Then he stopped. He saw that Ruth had on an old gymnasium suit, her rubberboots lay on the chair, and a warm polo coat was at hand. She already woreher tam-o-shanter.

  "Huh! I see you're ready," Curly said. "You might as well go. Butremember, if you want to come home before afternoon, you'll have to findyour way back alone. I'm not going to be bothered by a girl's fantods."

  "All right, Curly," said Ruth, cheerfully.

  Curly put his face under the spigot, brushed his hair before the littlemirror in the corner, and was ready to sample Ruth's coffee.

  "We want to hurry," he said, filling his pockets with the doughnuts,"it'll be broad daylight before we know it, and then everybody we see willwant to come along. The other fel
lows aren't on to the old dam yet thisseason. The fish are running early."

  He brought forth a basket with tackle and bait, dug over night. Ruthburdened herself with a big, square box, neatly wrapped and tied. Curlyeyed this askance.

  "I s'pose you expect to tear your clo'es and want something to wear backto town that's decent," he growled.

  "Well, I want to look half way respectable," laughed Ruth, as they setforth.

  The damp smell of thawing earth greeted their nostrils as they left thehouse. No plowing had been done, save in very warm corners; but the lushbuds on the trees and bushes, and the crocuses by the corner of the oldhouse, promised spring.

  A clape called at them raucously as he rapped out his warning on a deadlimb beside the road. A rabbit rose from its form and shot away into thedripping woods. The sun poked a jolly red face above the wooded ridgebefore the two runaways left the beaten track and took a narrow woodpaththat would cut off about a mile of their walk.

  It was a rough way and the pace Curly set was made to force Ruth to begfor time. But the girl gritted her teeth, minded not the pain in her side,and sturdily followed him. By and by the pain stopped, she got her secondwind, and then she began to tread close on Curly's heels.

  "Huh!" he grunted at last, "you needn't be in such a hurry. The dam willstay there--and so will the fish."

  "All right," responded Ruth, still meekly, but with dancing eyes.

  The fishing place was reached and while yet the early rays of the sunfell aslant the dimpling pools under the dam, the two threw in theirbaited hooks. Curly evidently expected to see the girl balk at the bait,but Ruth seized firmly the fat, squirmy worm and impaled it scientificallyupon her hook.

  She caught the first fish, too! In fact, as the morning drew leisurelyalong, Ruth's string splashing in the cool water grew much faster thanCurly's.

  "I never saw the beat of your luck!" declared the boy. "You must have beenfishing before, Ruth Fielding."

  "Lots of times."

  "Where?"

  Ruth told him of the Red Mill on the bank of the Lumano, of her fishingtrips with Tom Cameron, and of all the fun that they had about Cheslow,and up the river above the mill.

  Mid-forenoon came and Curly produced some crackers and a piece of bologna.The doughnuts he had pocketed were gone long ago.

  "Have a bite, Ruth?" he said generously. "I wish it was better, but Ididn't have much money, and Gran won't ever let me carry any lunch. Shesays the proper place for a boy to eat is at his own table. It's there forme, and if I don't get home to get it, then I can do without."

  Ruth accepted a piece of the bologna and the crackers gravely. She baitedher hook with a piece of the bologna and caught a big, struggling carp.

  "What do you know about that?" cried Curly, in disgust. "You could baityour hook with a marble and catch a whopper, I believe!"

  Meanwhile, Ruth was having a most delightful time. The roses had come backinto her cheeks at the first. Her eyes sparkled, and she "wriggled allover," as she expressed it, "with just the _feel_ of spring."

  She did not spend all her time fishing, but ran about and examined theearly plants and sprouting bushes, and woke up the first violets andsearched for May flowers, which, of course, she did not find. Squirrelschattered at them, and a blue jay hung about, squalling, evidently hopingfor crumbs from their lunch. Only there were no crumbs of Curly's frugalbologna and crackers left.

  When the sun was in mid-heaven the boy confessed to being as hungry asever, and tightened his belt. "Crackers don't stick to your ribs much," hegrumbled.

  Ruth calmly began opening her box. Curly looked at her askance.

  "You aren't figgering on going home _now_, are you?" he asked.

  "Oh, no. I sha'n't go home till you do."

  Then she produced from the box sandwiches, deviled eggs, a jelly roll, ajar of peanut butter, crackers, olives, and some more of Mrs. Smith's gooddoughnuts.

  "Old Scratch!" Curly ejaculated. "You're the best fellow to go fishingwith, Ruth Fielding, that I ever saw. You can come to _my_ parties anytime you like."

  They spent the whole day delightfully and, tired, scratched, and not alittle wind-burned, Ruth tramped home behind Curly in good season forsupper at Mrs. Sadoc Smith's.

  She did not tell the boy that the whole outing had been arranged the nightbefore with his grandmother before Ruth herself went to bed. Curlyexpected to be "called down," as he expressed it, by his grandmother whenthey arrived home. To his amazement they were met cheerfully and usheredin to a bounteous supper on which Mrs. Smith had expended no littlethought and time.

  Curly was stricken almost dumb by his grandmother's generosity andgood-nature. After supper he whispered to Ruth:

  "Say! you're a wonder, you are, Ruth Fielding. Never anybody got aroundGran the way you do, before. You're a wonder!"

  Helen and Ann met Ruth in great excitement. "Where under the sun have youbeen--and in that ragged old gym suit?" gasped Helen.

  "You look as though your face was burnt. I believe you've been playinghooky, Ruth Fielding!" cried Ann.

  "Right the first time," sighed Ruth, happily. "Oh, I feel _so_ muchbetter. And I know I shall sleep like a brick."

  "You mean, a railroad tie, don't you?" demanded Ann. "_That's_ a sleeper!"

  "Of course we found your note, and we told Miss Brokaw. But she's got itin for you just the same," said Helen, slangily. "And only guess!"

  "Yes! Guess! Ruth! Fielding!" and Ann seized her and danced her about theroom. "You missed it by being absent to-day."

  "Oh, don't! Never mind all this! I'm tired enough. I've walked _miles_,"groaned Ruth. "What have I missed?"

  "Mr. Hammond is in Lumberton. He came to see you about the scenario,"Helen eagerly said.

  Ruth sat down and clasped her hands, while her cheeks paled. "It's afailure!" she whispered.

 
Alice B. Emerson's Novels
»Ruth Fielding of the Red Mill; Or, Jasper Parloe's Secretby Alice B. Emerson
»Betty Gordon at Boarding School; Or, The Treasure of Indian Chasmby Alice B. Emerson
»Betty Gordon at Bramble Farm; Or, The Mystery of a Nobodyby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding at Snow Camp; Or, Lost in the Backwoodsby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding at the War Front; or, The Hunt for the Lost Soldierby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding on Cliff Island; Or, The Old Hunter's Treasure Boxby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding in Moving Pictures; Or, Helping the Dormitory Fundby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding in the Great Northwest; Or, The Indian Girl Star of the Moviesby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding at Briarwood Hall; or, Solving the Campus Mysteryby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding and the Gypsies; Or, The Missing Pearl Necklaceby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding At College; or, The Missing Examination Papersby Alice B. Emerson
»Betty Gordon at Mountain Camp; Or, The Mystery of Ida Bellethorneby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding at Silver Ranch; Or, Schoolgirls Among the Cowboysby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding In the Saddle; Or, College Girls in the Land of Goldby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding At Sunrise Farm; Or, What Became of the Raby Orphansby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding on the St. Lawrence; Or, The Queer Old Man of the Thousand Islandsby Alice B. Emerson
»Ruth Fielding Down East; Or, The Hermit of Beach Plum Pointby Alice B. Emerson
»Betty Gordon in Washington; Or, Strange Adventures in a Great Cityby Alice B. Emerson