ntered; two more followed;
two more followed in turn, until there were eight couples--girls and
all shrouded in sheets, with pillow-case hoods over their heads, in
which were cut small "eyes"--within the duet room. Somebody closed the
door. Somebody else motioned Ruth to awaken Helen.
Ruth hesitated. She at once supposed that some of their school-fellows
meant to haze them; but she did not know how her chum would take such a
startling awakening from sound sleep. She knew that, had she been
asleep herself and opened her eyes to see these shrouded figures
gathered about her bed, she would have been frightened beyond
expression.
"Don't let her see you first!" gasped Ruth, affrightedly.
Instantly two of the girls seized her and, as she involuntarily opened
her lips to scream, one thrust a ball of clean rags into her mouth,
thrusting it in so far that it effectually gagged her, nor could she
expel the ball from her mouth. It was not a cruel act, but it was
awfully uncomfortable, and being held firmly by her two assailants,
Ruth could do nothing, either in her own behalf, or for Helen.
But she was determined not to cry. These big girls called them
"Infants," and Ruth Fielding determined not to deserve the name. She
had no idea that the hazing party would really hurt them; they would
have for their principal object the frightening of the new-comers to
Briarwood Hall; and, secondarily, they would try to make Ruth and Helen
appear just as ridiculous as possible.
Ruth was sorry in a moment that she had breathed a syllable aloud; for
she was not allowed to awaken Helen. Instead, a girl went to either
side of the bed and leaned over Ruth's sleeping chum. The tall, peaked
caps made of the pillow-cases looked awful enough, and Ruth was in a
really unhappy state of mind. All for Helen's sake, too. She had
opened the door to these thoughtless girls. If she only had not done
it!
Suddenly Helen started upright in bed. Her black eyes glared for a
moment as she beheld the row of sheeted figures. But her lips only
opened to emit a single "Oh!"
"Silence!" commanded one of the figures leaning over the bed, and Ruth,
whose ears were sharpened now, believed that she recognized Mary Cox's
voice. She immediately decided that these girls who had come to haze
them were the very Juniors who had been so nice to them that
evening--"The Fox" and her fellow-members of the Upedes. But Ruth was
more interested just then in
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