"Oh, I see. Miss Dent has been telling me of your mother's absence. I am sorry."
"Nan, where is Jack?" asked Miss Sarah.
"I sent her on an errand, Aunt Sarah. She'll be back after a while."
"Do you know anything of her having reported that there would be no school to-day?" asked Miss Lawrence severely. "Not a scholar came though I waited till after ten. I could not imagine why it was and have tried to trace the cause. From what I learned Jack was the first one who started the report. Why did she think there would be no school?"
Nan glanced at her Aunt Sarah and was relieved to see that she did not wear her severest look though Miss Lawrence looked sternly unsmiling. "I don't think the way Jack looked at it," began Nan, addressing Miss Lawrence, "that she meant to tell a story. She said there couldn't be any school if there were no scholars, and so she saw to it that there were no scholars. She always wants to help and she knew how busy I would be, but she knew, too, that I would insist upon her going to school and so she thought out this plan for having a holiday."
There was actually a smile on Aunt Sarah's face.
"That's Jack all over," she said. "And I know full well that from her point of view she believed she wasn't telling a story."
"That's what she said to me," Nan again asserted.
"It's most astonishing," said Miss Lawrence, but even in her eyes there was a flicker of amusement as she glanced at Miss Dent. "Of course, she must be punished," she went on, "for she must realize how wrong it was and such things cannot be overlooked."