<h2 id="c8">CHAPTER VIII <br/><span class="small">A LIVELY AFTERNOON</span></h2>
<p>There followed an eternity of suspense for
those watching for the reappearance of Dorothy.
The missing of the hold she expected to get on the
board and the effort to keep Miss Higley up, together
with the struggle she had gone through,
caused the girl to lose all control of herself. She
had sunk instantly without having any opportunity
of using her free arm to keep herself above
water.</p>
<p>Seeing this Rose-Mary and Molly, who had
climbed out on the base of the chute, jumped into
the lake again, making for the spot where they saw
Dorothy go down the second time.</p>
<p>But before they could reach it they saw Dorothy’s
head above the surface. She had come up
under the chute, in an open square of water,
formed by the four supporting posts of the affair.
Cautiously she reached out and caught hold of
a beam. Then another arm was seen to grasp a
projecting plank! Miss Higley was struggling!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_73">[73]</div>
<p>She was not dead! Not unconscious!</p>
<p>“Dorothy!” screamed Tavia from shore, as
she saw the form of her chum come to the surface
the second time. But Tavia did not see Dorothy
wave a reassuring hand at her as she climbed up
on the chute, and helped Miss Higley support
herself across one of the base planks. For Tavia
had fallen unconscious beside Edna, who was only
just beginning to show signs of life under the
prompt administrations of Rose-Mary and Dick.</p>
<p>In all this confusion the white-aproned matron
forgot to use her telephone. But, as she now
assisted the other girls in working over Edna, she
directed some of the swimmers, who had come to
shore, to look after Tavia.</p>
<p>Lena Berg, the quietest girl of Glenwood, rushed
into the bathing office and telephoned to Central
to “send doctors.” Almost before those
working over Edna and Tavia had realized it, and,
almost as soon as the throng of young ladies had
started to assist Miss Higley and Dorothy to shore,
an automobile with two doctors in it stopped at
the gate. The physicians were soon working over
Tavia and Edna.</p>
<p>A few seconds later Rose-Mary and Molly
pulled up to shore in an old boat they had found
anchored near the chute, and in the craft, which
they rowed with a broken canoe paddle, were
Dorothy and Miss Higley!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_74">[74]</div>
<p>As so often happens that one small accident is
responsible for any number of mishaps, especially
where girls or women become panic-stricken, it
seemed now that the rescue of Miss Higley and
Dorothy acted like magic to restore all four victims
of the water to their senses, at least, if not to
actual vigor. Tavia and Edna both jumped up as
the boat grounded on the beach, and Miss Higley
and Dorothy staggered ashore.</p>
<p>“Be careful,” cautioned one of the physicians,
as the teacher was seen to totter, and almost fall.
She was plainly very weak, and, while the younger
doctor looked after Dorothy the other, who was
his father, took Miss Higley into the bathing pavilion
office to administer to her there.</p>
<p>Tavia had only fainted. Indeed she had been
scarcely able to swim out to help Edna, not being
entirely recovered from her recent nervous fever.
Edna had swallowed considerable water, but it was
fresh, and when she had been relieved of it, and
the usual restoratives applied, she, too, was herself
again.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_75">[75]</div>
<p>Dorothy insisted there was absolutely nothing
the matter with her, but it was plain that such
physical efforts as she had been obliged to make
in her rescue of Miss Higley, must at least exhaust
a girl of her frail physique. So young
Dr. Morton insisted on her being assisted in a
“thorough rub.” Then she was given a warm,
stimulating drink, and, soon after that, Dorothy
was able to tell what had happened.</p>
<p>An hour later all the brown bathing suits had
been discarded, Tavia and Dorothy had been supplied
with dry clothing, and all the Glenwood
girls who had come to Sunset Lake sat on the rocky
shore back of the sand, waiting for the hour to arrive
when they must start back to the school.
There was no lack of talk to make the time pass
quickly.</p>
<p>Miss Higley seemed the least perturbed of any—she
had a way of always being beyond a mere
personal feeling. She never “allowed herself”
to encourage pains or aches; in fact she was one of
those strong-minded women who believe that all
the troubles of this life are hatched in the human
brain, and, therefore the proper cure for all ills
is the eradication of the germ producer—sick-thoughts.
So, as soon as she felt her lungs in
working order again she “took the defensive” as
Tavia expressed it, and sat up as “straight as a
whip,” with her glasses at exactly the proper pitch
and the black cord at precisely the accustomed
dangle.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_76">[76]</div>
<p>“Mar-vel-ous!” gasped Dick, aside, giving
the long word an inimitable roll, and, at the same
time, bestowing a wondering look on the recently
resuscitated teacher.</p>
<p>“But do tell us,” begged Rose-Mary, “what
happened first—of all those exciting things?”</p>
<p>“I did,” answered Edna Black. “I was shooting
the chute to my heart’s content, when, all of a
sudden, I stuck somewhere. Then, after trying
everything I knew how to do to get loose, I said
my prayers.”</p>
<p>“Next,” called Rose-Mary, indicating Tavia.</p>
<p>“Well, of course,” began Tavia, “Dorothy and
I were not to go near the water, but when we saw
Edna turn up missing we just kicked off our slippers
and, in the language of the poets, ‘got busy.’
I found Ned here, first shot, stuck in between the
two corner boards of the chute posts. She didn’t
need any coaxing to come up, once I untangled her
skirt from a nail which held it fast, and I brought
her up without any unnecessary explanations.”</p>
<p>“And, in the meantime Miss Higley had gone
down,” interjected Dorothy. “That is she went
down after Edna first.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_77">[77]</div>
<p>“And came up last,” added the teacher, with a
significant nod to Dorothy.</p>
<p>“How did you find Miss Higley, Parson?”
Rose-Mary continued to question, with a view to
getting the entire story.</p>
<p>“I found her in a mud hole, held fast, but able
to help herself somewhat. Then I—I got her
up—somehow—.”</p>
<p>“Indeed I was almost unconscious until you
dragged my head up to the air,” Miss Higley
hastened to say, anxious to give Dorothy her due,
for certainly the rescue was a matter of heroic effort,
and Miss Higley, being heavy, and, at the
same time, unable to help herself, gave Dorothy
the most difficult of all the surprising tasks of that
eventful afternoon.</p>
<p>“But when she sank that time—like a stone,”
suggested Dick to Dorothy.</p>
<p>“Oh, I merely missed catching hold of a plank
and I had to go down—I couldn’t keep up.”</p>
<p>“Certainly; why not?” put in Nita Brandt,
glad to be able to say something “safe.”</p>
<p>“And you, Lispy,” said Lena to Nita. “You
and Adele started the epidemic with your water
wings. Next time make it life preservers.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_78">[78]</div>
<p>The girlish spirits, “bottled up” during the
period of worry came out with a resounding
“pop” now, and the walk home proved even
pleasanter than the one to the beach.</p>
<p>“For now,” declared Ned, between her jokes,
“we are like the man who laughed at the ugly cow
from inside the fence—he found it much funnier
to laugh at the cow from outside the fence.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_79">[79]</div>
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