“As witness the nestle,” put in Katherine.

“So please tell us who he is,” finished Madeline calmly.

“The very idea of coming back to see us and then going off fussing with Winsted men!” Babe’s tone was solemnly reproachful.

But Mary was equal to the situation. “I haven’t seen a Winsted man since I came,” she declared. “I was going to tell you who was with me this afternoon, but I shan’t now, because you’ve all been so excessively mean and suspicious.” A waitress appeared, and Mary’s expression grew suddenly ecstatic. “Do I see creamed chicken?” she cried. “Girls, I dreamed about Cuyler’s creamed chicken every night last week. I was so afraid you wouldn’t have it!”

Her appreciation of the dinner was so delightfully whole-hearted that even Roberta forgave her everything, down to her absurd enthusiasm over a ponderous psychology lecture and the very dull reception that followed it. At the latter, to be sure, Mary acted exactly like her old self, for she sat in a corner and monopolized Dr. Hinsdale for half an hour by the clock, while her little friends, to quote Katherine Kittredge, “champed their bits” in their impatience to capture her and escape to more congenial regions.

The next night at the Westcott House dance Mary was again her gay and sportive self. If she was bored, she concealed it admirably, and that in spite of the fact that her little scheme of playing freshman seemed doomed to failure. Mary had walked out of chapel that morning with the front row, and, even without the enormous bunch of violets which none of her senior friends would confess to having sent her, she was not a figure to pass unnoticed. So most of the freshmen on her card recognized her at once, and the few who did not stoutly refused to be taken in by her innocent references to “our class.”

She had the last dance but one with the sour-faced Miss Butts, who never recognized any one; but Mary did not know that, and being rather tired she swiftly waltzed her around the hall a few times and then suggested that they watch the dance out from the gallery.

“What class are you?” asked Miss Butts, when they were established there. “My card doesn’t say.”

“Doesn’t it?” said Mary idly, watching the kaleidoscope of gay colors moving dizzily about beneath her. “Then suppose you guess.”

Miss Butts considered ponderously. “You aren’t a freshman,” she said finally, “nor a sophomore.”