| Chap. | Page | |
|---|---|---|
| I. | The New School | [9] |
| II. | A Scrape | [23] |
| III. | Shaking Down | [36] |
| IV. | The School Mascot | [50] |
| V. | Lilac Grange | [64] |
| VI. | An Awkward Predicament | [78] |
| VII. | The Mad Hatters | [93] |
| VIII. | An Adventure | [108] |
| IX. | The Tennis Championship | [122] |
| X. | An Antique Purchase | [136] |
| XI. | Waterloo Day | [148] |
| XII. | Katrine's Ambition | [162] |
| XIII. | Githa's Secret | [175] |
| XIV. | A Midnight Alarm | [189] |
| XV. | Amateur Artists | [202] |
| XVI. | Concerns a Letter | [215] |
| XVII. | The Wishing Well | [226] |
| XVIII. | A Discovery | [236] |
| XIX. | An Accident | [246] |
| XX. | Bob Gartley Explains | [257] |
| XXI. | The Sports | [268] |
| XXII. | The Old Oak Cupboard | [279] |
Illustrations
| Page | |
|---|---|
| "Left alone, the two girls were not slow indiscussing the wonderful news" [Frontispiece] | [14] |
| "'The Goose Girl, by all that's wonderful!'whispered Gwethyn" | [28] |
| "Gwethyn tore off the silk handkerchiefs. Shesaw at once what had happened"" | [102] |
| "The unpleasant truth was hopelessly plain—theywere prisoners in the empty house" | [118] |
| "'I believe I've broken my leg', he moaned" | [248] |
| "'This concerns us very much, Githa. It's yourgrandfather's last will'" | [284] |