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<h2> CHAPTER XII MISS RENNSDALE ACCEPTS </h2>
<p>"One-two-three; one-two-three—glide!" said Professor Bartet,
emphasizing his instructions by a brisk collision of his palms at "glide."
"One-two-three; one-two-three—glide!"</p>
<p>The school week was over, at last, but Penrod's troubles were not.</p>
<p>Round and round the ballroom went the seventeen struggling little couples
of the Friday Afternoon Dancing Class. Round and round went their
reflections with them, swimming rhythmically in the polished, dark floor—white
and blue and pink for the girls; black, with dabs of white, for the
white-collared, white-gloved boys; and sparks and slivers of high light
everywhere as the glistening pumps flickered along the surface like a
school of flying fish. Every small pink face—with one exception—was
painstaking and set for duty. It was a conscientious little
merry-go-round.</p>
<p>"One-two-three; one-two-three—glide! One-two-three; one-two-three—glide!
One-two-th—Ha! Mister Penrod Schofield, you lose the step. Your left
foot! No, no! This is the left! See—like me! Now again!
One-two-three; one-two-three—glide! Better! Much better! Again!
One-two-three; one-two-three—gl—Stop! Mr. Penrod Schofield,
this dancing class is provided by the kind parents of the pupilses as much
to learn the mannerss of good societies as to dance. You think you shall
ever see a gentleman in good societies to tickle his partner in the dance
till she say Ouch? Never! I assure you it is not done. Again! Now then!
Piano, please! One-two-three; one-two-three—glide! Mr. Penrod
Schofield, your right foot—your right foot! No, no! Stop!"</p>
<p>The merry-go-round came to a standstill.</p>
<p>"Mr. Penrod Schofield and partner"—Professor Bartet wiped his brow—"will
you kindly observe me? One-two-three—glide! So! Now then—no;
you will please keep your places, ladies and gentlemen. Mr. Penrod
Schofield, I would puttickly like your attention, this is for you!"</p>
<p>"Pickin' on me again!" murmured the smouldering Penrod to his small,
unsympathetic partner. "Can't let me alone a minute!"</p>
<p>"Mister Georgie Bassett, please step to the centre," said the professor.</p>
<p>Mr. Bassett complied with modest alacrity.</p>
<p>"Teacher's pet!" whispered Penrod hoarsely. He had nothing but contempt
for Georgie Bassett. The parents, guardians, aunts, uncles, cousins,
governesses, housemaids, cooks, chauffeurs and coachmen, appertaining to
the members of the dancing class, all dwelt in the same part of town and
shared certain communal theories; and among the most firmly established
was that which maintained Georgie Bassett to be the Best Boy in Town.
Contrariwise, the unfortunate Penrod, largely because of his recent
dazzling but disastrous attempts to control forces far beyond him, had
been given a clear title as the Worst Boy in Town. (Population, 135,000.)
To precisely what degree his reputation was the product of his own
energies cannot be calculated. It was Marjorie Jones who first applied the
description, in its definite simplicity, the day after the "pageant," and,
possibly, her frequent and effusive repetitions of it, even upon wholly
irrelevant occasions, had something to do with its prompt and quite
perfect acceptance by the community.</p>
<p>"Miss Rennsdale will please do me the fafer to be Mr. Georgie Bassett's
partner for one moment," said Professor Bartet. "Mr. Penrod Schofield will
please give his attention. Miss Rennsdale and Mister Bassett, obliche me,
if you please. Others please watch. Piano, please! Now then!"</p>
<p>Miss Rennsdale, aged eight—the youngest lady in the class—and
Mr. Georgie Bassett one-two-three—glided with consummate technique
for the better education of Penrod Schofield. It is possible that
amber-curled, beautiful Marjorie felt that she, rather than Miss
Rennsdale, might have been selected as the example of perfection—or
perhaps her remark was only woman.</p>
<p>"Stopping everybody for that boy!" said Marjorie.</p>
<p>Penrod, across the circle from her, heard distinctly—nay, he was
obviously intended to hear; but over a scorched heart he preserved a stoic
front. Whereupon Marjorie whispered derisively in the ear of her partner,
Maurice Levy, who wore a pearl pin in his tie.</p>
<p>"Again, please, everybody—ladies and gentlemen!" cried Professor
Bartet. "Mister Penrod Schofield, if you please, pay puttickly attention!
Piano, please! Now then!"</p>
<p>The lesson proceeded. At the close of the hour Professor Bartet stepped to
the centre of the room and clapped his hands for attention.</p>
<p>"Ladies and gentlemen, if you please to seat yourselves quietly," he said;
"I speak to you now about to-morrow. As you all know—Mister Penrod
Schofield, I am not sticking up in a tree outside that window! If you do
me the fafer to examine I am here, insides of the room. Now then! Piano,
pl—no, I do not wish the piano! As you all know, this is the last
lesson of the season until next October. Tomorrow is our special
afternoon; beginning three o'clock, we dance the cotillon. But this
afternoon comes the test of mannerss. You must see if each know how to
make a little formal call like a grown-up people in good societies. You
have had good, perfect instruction; let us see if we know how to perform
like societies ladies and gentlemen twenty-six years of age.</p>
<p>"Now, when you're dismissed each lady will go to her home and prepare to
receive a call. The gentlemen will allow the ladies time to reach their
houses and to prepare to receive callers; then each gentleman will call
upon a lady and beg the pleasure to engage her for a partner in the
cotillon to-morrow. You all know the correct, proper form for these calls,
because didn't I work teaching you last lesson till I thought I would drop
dead? Yes! Now each gentleman, if he reach a lady's house behind
some-other gentleman, then he must go somewhere else to a lady's house,
and keep calling until he secures a partner; so, as there are the same
number of both, everybody shall have a partner.</p>
<p>"Now please all remember that if in case—Mister Penrod Schofield,
when you make your call on a lady I beg you to please remember that
gentlemen in good societies do not scratch the back in societies as you
appear to attempt; so please allow the hands to rest carelessly in the
lap. Now please all remember that if in case—Mister Penrod
Schofield, if you please! Gentlemen in societies do not scratch the back
by causing frictions between it and the back of your chair, either! Nobody
else is itching here! <i>I</i> do not itch! I cannot talk if you must
itch! In the name of Heaven, why must you always itch? What was I saying?
Where ah! the cotillon—yes! For the cotillon it is important nobody
shall fail to be here tomorrow; but if any one should be so very ill he
cannot possible come he must write a very polite note of regrets in the
form of good societies to his engaged partner to excuse himself—and
he must give the reason.</p>
<p>"I do not think anybody is going to be that sick to-morrow—no; and I
will find out and report to parents if anybody would try it and not be.
But it is important for the cotillon that we have an even number of so
many couples, and if it should happen that someone comes and her partner
has sent her a polite note that he has genuine reasons why he cannot come,
the note must be handed at once to me, so that I arrange some other
partner. Is all understood? Yes. The gentlemen will remember now to allow
the ladies plenty of time to reach their houses and prepare to receive
calls. Ladies and gentlemen, I thank you for your polite attention."</p>
<p>It was nine blocks to the house of Marjorie Jones; but Penrod did it in
less than seven minutes from a flying start—such was his haste to
lay himself and his hand for the cotillon at the feet of one who had so
recently spoken unamiably of him in public. He had not yet learned that
the only safe male rebuke to a scornful female is to stay away from her—especially
if that is what she desires. However, he did not wish to rebuke her;
simply and ardently he wished to dance the cotillon with her. Resentment
was swallowed up in hope.</p>
<p>The fact that Miss Jones' feeling for him bore a striking resemblance to
that of Simon Legree for Uncle Tom, deterred him not at all. Naturally, he
was not wholly unconscious that when he should lay his hand for the
cotillon at her feet it would be her inward desire to step on it; but he
believed that if he were first in the field Marjorie would have to accept.
These things are governed by law.</p>
<p>It was his fond intention to reach her house even in advance of herself,
and with grave misgiving he beheld a large automobile at rest before the
sainted gate. Forthwith, a sinking feeling became a portent inside him as
little Maurice Levy emerged from the front door of the house.</p>
<p>"'Lo, Penrod!" said Maurice airily.</p>
<p>"What you doin' in there?" inquired Penrod.</p>
<p>"In where?"</p>
<p>"In Marjorie's."</p>
<p>"Well, what shouldn't I be doin' in Marjorie's?" Mr. Levy returned
indignantly. "I was inviting her for my partner in the cotillon—what
you s'pose?"</p>
<p>"You haven't got any right to!" Penrod protested hotly. "You can't do it
yet."</p>
<p>"I did do it yet!" said Maurice.</p>
<p>"You can't!" insisted Penrod. "You got to allow them time first. He said
the ladies had to be allowed time to prepare."</p>
<p>"Well, ain't she had time to prepare?"</p>
<p>"When?" Penrod demanded, stepping close to his rival threateningly. "I'd
like to know when——"</p>
<p>"When?" echoed the other with shrill triumph. "When? Why, in mamma's
sixty-horse powder limousine automobile, what Marjorie came home with me
in! I guess that's when!"</p>
<p>An impulse in the direction of violence became visible upon the
countenance of Penrod.</p>
<p>"I expect you need some wiping down," he began dangerously. "I'll give you
sumpthing to remem——"</p>
<p>"Oh, you will!" Maurice cried with astonishing truculence, contorting
himself into what he may have considered a posture of defense. "Let's see
you try it, you—you itcher!"</p>
<p>For the moment, defiance from such a source was dumfounding. Then,
luckily, Penrod recollected something and glanced at the automobile.</p>
<p>Perceiving therein not only the alert chauffeur but the magnificent
outlines of Mrs. Levy, his enemy's mother, he manoeuvred his lifted hand
so that it seemed he had but meant to scratch his ear.</p>
<p>"Well, I guess I better be goin'," he said casually. "See you tomorrow!"</p>
<p>Maurice mounted to the lap of luxury, and Penrod strolled away with an
assumption of careless ease which was put to a severe strain when, from
the rear window of the car, a sudden protuberance in the nature of a
small, dark, curly head shrieked scornfully:</p>
<p>"Go on—you big stiff!"</p>
<p>The cotillon loomed dismally before Penrod now; but it was his duty to
secure a partner and he set about it with a dreary heart. The delay
occasioned by his fruitless attempt on Marjorie and the altercation with
his enemy at her gate had allowed other ladies ample time to prepare for
callers—and to receive them. Sadly he went from house to house,
finding that he had been preceded in one after the other. Altogether his
hand for the cotillon was declined eleven times that afternoon on the
legitimate ground of previous engagement. This, with Marjorie, scored off
all except five of the seventeen possible partners; and four of the five
were also sealed away from him, as he learned in chance encounters with
other boys upon the street.</p>
<p>One lady alone remained; he bowed to the inevitable and entered this lorn
damsel's gate at twilight with an air of great discouragement. The lorn
damsel was Miss Rennsdale, aged eight.</p>
<p>We are apt to forget that there are actually times of life when too much
youth is a handicap. Miss Rennsdale was beautiful; she danced like a
premiere; she had every charm but age. On that account alone had she been
allowed so much time to prepare to receive callers that it was only by the
most manful efforts she could keep her lip from trembling.</p>
<p>A decorous maid conducted the long-belated applicant to her where she sat
upon a sofa beside a nursery governess. The decorous maid announced him
composedly as he made his entrance.</p>
<p>"Mr. Penrod Schofield!"</p>
<p>Miss Rennsdale suddenly burst into loud sobs.</p>
<p>"Oh!" she wailed. "I just knew it would be him!"</p>
<p>The decorous maid's composure vanished at once—likewise her decorum.
She clapped her hand over her mouth and fled, uttering sounds. The
governess, however, set herself to comfort her heartbroken charge, and
presently succeeded in restoring Miss Rennsdale to a semblance of that
poise with which a lady receives callers and accepts invitations to dance
cotillons. But she continued to sob at intervals.</p>
<p>Feeling himself at perhaps a disadvantage, Penrod made offer of his hand
for the morrow with a little embarrassment. Following the form prescribed
by Professor Bartet, he advanced several paces toward the stricken lady
and bowed formally.</p>
<p>"I hope," he said by rote, "you're well, and your parents also in good
health. May I have the pleasure of dancing the cotillon as your partner
t'-morrow afternoon?"</p>
<p>The wet eyes of Miss Rennsdale searched his countenance without pleasure,
and a shudder wrung her small shoulders; but the governess whispered to
her instructively, and she made a great effort.</p>
<p>"I thu-thank you fu-for your polite invu-invu-invutation; and I ac——"
Thus far she progressed when emotion overcame her again. She beat
frantically upon the sofa with fists and heels. "Oh, I DID want it to be
Georgie Bassett!"</p>
<p>"No, no, no!" said the governess, and whispered urgently, whereupon Miss
Rennsdale was able to complete her acceptance.</p>
<p>"And I ac-accept wu-with pu-pleasure!" she moaned, and immediately,
uttering a loud yell, flung herself face downward upon the sofa, clutching
her governess convulsively.</p>
<p>Somewhat disconcerted, Penrod bowed again.</p>
<p>"I thank you for your polite acceptance," he murmured hurriedly; "and I
trust—I trust—I forget. Oh, yes—I trust we shall have a
most enjoyable occasion. Pray present my compliments to your parents; and
I must now wish you a very good afternoon."</p>
<p>Concluding these courtly demonstrations with another bow he withdrew in
fair order, though thrown into partial confusion in the hall by a final
wail from his crushed hostess:</p>
<p>"Oh! Why couldn't it be anybody but HIM!"</p>
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