<h2 id="c15">CHAPTER XV <br/><span class="small">A SPELL OF THE “GLUMPS”</span></h2>
<p>Whizzing along the road Nat tried to decide
how it would be best to break the disappointing
news to Dorothy. Of his escapade with
Urania he had fully determined not to say a word.
Dorothy had enough girls to worry about, he
argued, and if she heard of this one she would
form a searching expedition, and set out at once
to hunt the Gypsy who, Nat thought, was like a
human squirrel and able to take care of herself.</p>
<p>The return trip seemed shorter than that which
took Nat out to Dalton, and as the Fire Bird
swung into the Cedars’ entrance somewhat later
than the youth expected to get back, Dorothy was
at the gate awaiting to hear news of Tavia.</p>
<p>“Buffalo,” announced Nat sententiously, as
Dorothy came up beside the car which jerked to
a stop amid a screeching of the brake. “She
went there some time ago. She’s at Grace Barnum’s.
Wait. I have the address.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_140">[140]</div>
<p>Without delaying to put the machine up, Nat
produced a slip of paper upon which he had written,
at Mrs. Travers’s direction, the street and
number of Miss Barnum’s residence. He handed
it to Dorothy.</p>
<p>“Do you think it’s all right?” asked Dorothy,
looking at the directions.</p>
<p>“’Course it is. Everybody in Dalton is as
chipper as possible. You’re the only one who’s
worrying. Now, if I were you, I’d just let up,
Doro. You’ll be down sick if you don’t.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps I am foolish. And I have given you
a lot of trouble,” spoke up the girl a little sadly.</p>
<p>“Trouble? Nothing!” exclaimed Nat. “I
just like the lark. When you want any more
sleuthing done apply at headquarters. I’m the
gum-shoe man for this section,” and at that he
turned his attention to the Fire Bird, while Dorothy
walked thoughtfully back to the house.</p>
<p>Poor Dorothy! An instinctive foreboding of
danger had taken possession of her now, and,
try as she did to dispel it, an unmistakable voice
seemed to call out to her:</p>
<p>“Find Tavia! She needs you, Dorothy Dale!”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” thought Dorothy, “she has run
away and is really with some circus troupe, as the
Gypsy girl said. Or perhaps she is at some watering
place, taking part in a play—”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_141">[141]</div>
<p>This last possibility was the one that Dorothy
dreaded most to dwell upon. Tavia must have
loved the stage, else why did she constantly do
the things she did at school, so like a little actress,
and so like a girl “stage-struck,” as Aunt Winnie
called it?</p>
<p>These and similar fancies floated through Dorothy’s
brain hour after hour, in spite of whatever
diversion presented itself for her amusement.</p>
<p>The afternoon, following Nat’s trip to Dalton,
Dorothy, with her brothers, Roger and Joe, went
to gather pond lilies near the waterfall. It was
a delightful day, and the sun glistened on the quiet
sheet of the mill pond, making liquid diamonds.
The lilies, of which there was an abundance,
looked like carved wax that had frozen the sun’s
gold in each heart. But, somehow, Dorothy,
could not work up her usual enthusiasm in gathering
the blossoms.</p>
<p>It was delightful to dip her hands into the cool
stream and surely to hear little Roger prattle
was an inspiration, but all the while Dorothy was
thinking of crowded Buffalo, and wondering what
a certain girl might be doing there on that summer
afternoon.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_142">[142]</div>
<p>In the evening Major Dale and Mrs. White,
taking Dorothy with them, went for a drive
along the broad boulevard that was the pride of
that exclusive summer place—North Birchland.
Dorothy tried bravely to rouse herself from her
gloomy reveries but, in spite of her efforts, Mrs.
White complained that her niece was not like her
usual self—“Perhaps not feeling well,” she ventured.</p>
<p>“I’m ‘glumpy’ ever since I left Glenwood,”
admitted Dorothy. “Not because I want to be,
nor that I am not having a most delightful time,
but I simply have the ‘glumps.’ At Glenwood
they prescribe extra work for an attack like this,”
and the girl laughed at her own diagnosis.</p>
<p>“You certainly should dispel the ‘glumps,’”
said Mrs. White. “I can’t imagine what could
produce an attack here at the Cedars, with all your
own folks around you, Dorothy, dear. I do believe
you are lonely for those impossible girls.
What do you say to paying some of them a little
visit, just to break in on your holiday?”</p>
<p>“Really, aunty,” protested Dorothy, “I am
perfectly content. What sort of girl would I be
to want to run away and leave you all after being
away so long at school? No, indeed, I’ll stay
right here at the beautiful Cedars, and I’ll try to
be a better girl—to get rid at once of my spell
of the ‘glumps’ as we used to call them at Glenwood.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_143">[143]</div>
<p>“But girls are girls,” insisted her aunt, “and
you have no control, my dear, over such sentiment
as I imagine you are afflicted with at present. Just
plan out a little trip somewhere and, I’ll vouch for
it, the visit to some giggling Dolly Varden of a
girl will do you no end of good. And then, too,
you may invite her back here with you.”</p>
<p>Mrs. White divined too well the reason for
Dorothy’s “blue spell.” She could see perfectly
how much her niece missed the light-hearted Tavia,
and in advising her to take a little trip Mrs.
White was sure Dorothy would choose to go
where her chum might be.</p>
<p>In this she was right, but concerning what
Dorothy might do to reach Tavia Mrs. White
had no idea. She merely suggested a “little trip
somewhere,” believing Dorothy would find Tavia,
either in Dalton, or visiting some girl friend, as
Dorothy had told her Tavia intended doing. But
circumstances conspired to give Dorothy the very
opportunity she longed for—she would go somewhere—anywhere—to
look for her “sister-friend”—the
girl who had been to her more
than friend and almost a sister.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_144">[144]</div>
<p>Ned and Nat had planned a trip to Buffalo at
the beginning of their vacation. They were to
meet a number of their chums there, and do some
exploring in the neighborhood of Niagara Falls.
They were to make the journey in the Fire Bird,
and when Mrs. White suggested a trip for Dorothy
it was the run to Buffalo, in the automobile,
that immediately came into the girl’s mind.</p>
<p>“If I only could go with the boys,” she pondered.
“But what excuse would I have?”</p>
<p>All the next day she turned the subject over in
her mind. Then something very remarkable
happened. Persons who believe in thought controlling
matter would not call the incident out of
the ordinary perhaps, but, be that as it may, when
Dorothy strolled down to the post-office, having a
slender hope of a letter from Tavia, she did find
a letter in the box—a letter from Rose-Mary
Markin, stating that she, and her mother, were
going to Buffalo and Niagara Falls for a few
days, and, as Buffalo was only about a day’s trip
from North Birchland, perhaps Dorothy could
take a “run” to Buffalo, and spend a few days
with them.</p>
<p>Dorothy’s head thumped when she read the
letter. The very thing of all others she would
have wished for, had she been as wise as the unknown
fate that worked it out for her, without
any action on her own part!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_145">[145]</div>
<p>She felt light enough now to “fly” over the
road back to the Cedars, to show the invitation to
Mrs. White. The boys were to leave for Buffalo
the next day, so there was little time to be
lost, should Major Dale and Mrs. White think it
best for Dorothy to make the trip. How the
girl trembled while waiting for the decision.
What if she should be disappointed? It was a
long ride in the auto—but with her cousins—</p>
<p>Mrs. White read Rose-Mary’s little note a second
time while Dorothy stood there waiting. The
aunt noticed how delicately Rose-Mary indicated
her own mother’s anxiety to meet Dorothy, and
then with what a nicety the whole matter was referred
to Major Dale and Dorothy’s aunt. This
carefully written note, neither stilted nor indifferent
in its tone, convinced Mrs. White at once that
the writer was exactly the girl Dorothy had described
her to be—her very best friend at Glenwood—excepting
only Tavia.</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t see why you can’t go with the
boys,” spoke her aunt finally. “They are always
careful, and if you leave here, as they intend to do,
at sunrise (that will be an experience for you) you
should get into Buffalo in time for the evening
dinner. I’ll just sound the major,” giving Dorothy
a loving embrace. “Not that a mere man,
even be he Major Dale, can hold out against two
such Sampson-like wills as ours.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_146">[146]</div>
<p>From that moment, until the time of her stepping
into the Fire Bird next morning, and waving
a good-bye to the little party that stood on the
porch to see them off, it all seemed like the strangest,
subtlest dream to Dorothy. She was going to
find Tavia—going herself to look for her, and
find out for herself all the questions that, for
weeks, had been eating away her happiness with
dreaded uncertainties.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_147">[147]</div>
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