It’s summertime once more on the Platz with this week’s feature book: The Chalet School Wins the Trick, first published in 1961, and covering the summer term following Leader. A group of girls, relatives of San patients, are left to run wild on the Platz without supervision, and soon become embroiled in a feud with the Chalet School. Notable events:
A week before the summer term is due to begin, Rosalie Dene, up to the eyes in work, is on her way to seek Bill at St Mildred’s when she encounters a group of five girls building a campfire on the school cricket pitch. She admonishes them for trying to light a fire on the Platz where such a thing is forbidden due to the pines and the wooden chalets, and orders them off the premises. The girls cheek her, but leave the grounds reluctantly. The next person to encounter the gang is Len Maynard, on her way back from a visit to Biddy Courvoisier. She encounters the girls in the pine woods, and they rudely tell her that they loathe her and everyone to do with the school, and they haven’t heard the last of them. Len is deeply amused by the whole thing. The gang goes on an all-day picnic to Ste Cecilie, and on the way back, the school coaches bringing the girls to the Platz for the new term pass them. The gang are stunned to realise just how big the school is. Unbeknownst to them, they are all to begin at the school in September, Miss Annersley being unable to take them for the summer term as the school is full, as well as it being again the usual policy. All of the girls have relatives in the San, and none of them have any idea just how ill they are, though Audrey, the oldest of the girls, has her suspicions about the seriousness of her father’s TB. That evening, Audrey explains in detail about Camp Fire to the next oldest girl, Solange. Audrey, unable to join her local Guides due to the timing of the meetings and the distance from her home, had been looking forward to joining her school’s Camp Fire group instead. Her father’s illness and the family’s subsequent removal to Switzerland so that he could be at the San had thwarted any hope of her joining Camp Fire, and so she had planned to start her own, hence their attempt to build a fire on the cricket pitch. On the first evening back at school, Betty Landon asks Len for the latest Platz news, and we learn that Naomi Elton’s last operation was a complete success and, although it will be months before she can leave the San and she will always have to be careful, by the time she is in her twenties she will have no limp nor need her stick. We also learn that nothing more has been heard of Professor Richardson. The next day, Va go for a ramble, and Jo Scott, mindful that this is Joan Baker’s last term before she leaves for a secretarial college, asks to partner her. They act as whippers-in on the way up to the Rösleinalpe, and halfway up they spot Win Everett, Audrey’s youngest sister, climbing the bank near the railway. Jo climbs up and catches her, lowering her down to Joan before she can fall onto the live rails. Len and her friends, hearing Win’s yells of indignation, come running back, and Len recognises her. Len and Ted Grantley take Win back to the Pension Caramie and hand her over to Mrs Gardiner, mother of Val, another of the gang. That evening, Len tells the rest of Va about her encounter with the gang and their declared feud. Win gets into big trouble over her exploit, and the rest of the gang come in for a talking-to from their elders also over setting her a bad example. They set this row down to the school’s account, and Val, on a trip to Berne with her mother one day, returns with some stink bombs, which she and Audrey’s other young sister, Celia, plot to use on the school. Their chance comes when the prefects decide to hold a meeting next to the fence at the side of the tennis courts. Having just settled the cricket team and the Tennis Six, the meeting is interrupted when Val and Celia throw the stink bombs into their midst. Disgusted, the prefects wonder who the culprits are, as they know that all of their own girls are at Saturday morning prep and mending, and they have yet to learn about the gang’s vendetta against the school. Josette and Maeve ask the triplets if they know of any outsiders on the Platz who could have stink bombed them, and Len tells them about her encounter with the gang. Thus alerted, the prefects resolve to keep an eye out for future pranks. Meanwhile, Nancy Wilmot, Kathie Ferrars and Sharlie Andrews go to English tea at Biddy’s chalet, and on their way back encounter the gang, who make their dislike clear by scowls, giggles, head tossing and, in Win’s case, sticking out her tongue. Stunned, the three mistresses wonder what it’s all about, and that evening Kathie asks Rosalie Dene if she knows who they are. Rosalie tells them about her run-in with the girls during the holidays, and the staff, like the prefects, go on the alert. The next encounter with the gang involves IIIa, specifically Jack Lambert, Wanda von Eschenau, Renata van Buren and Arda Peik. Out on a ramble, the four are leading the line when they come to a footbridge over which the gang are hanging, looking at the stream. Wanda requests that they be allowed to pass, but the gang refuse, and Jack, Renata and Arda charge at them. Renata slips and wrenches her arm saving herself, Jack bumps her head and loses her hat to the rushing stream, and Celia falls over Win, who is only just saved from falling into the stream by Audrey. Miss Bertram, in charge of the walk, comes up, scolds everyone roundly, and marches the gang along with the form to the Pension Caramie. All culprits are scolded and given punishment lessons, and Audrey receives a serious talk from her mother on lack of responsibility, which does nothing to improve her feelings towards the CS. The Tennis Six play the girls from a Pension in Geneva, and the entire school turns out to watch. While the building is empty, Val and Celia sneak into the Speisesaal and throw pepper over all the food left out in preparation for Abendessen. Jo Scott discovers the damage first when she comes in to open the jalousies, and she summons the triplets and their friends to help try and clear things up before the rest of the school finds out. Matron, Miss Wilmot and Miss Ferrars help, and with some emergency supplies from Anna at Freudesheim, they manage to produce enough food to disguise what has happened. At the end of Abendessen, Mlle de Lachenais, who has been taking the meal in Miss Annersley’s absence, informs the girls that Commander Carey has died following an operation, and that the Head is accompanying Mary-Lou and Verity back to Britain to be with Mrs Carey. The triplets and Co. discuss what will happen to Mary-Lou’s archaeology career, fearing that she will have to give it up to look after her mother and Verity. The prefects discuss the affair – during which we learn that Josette is going to Australia with Madge, Jem, Sybil and the twins, instead of St Mildred’s – and although they are convinced that Audrey and Co. were responsible for ruining the food, they have no proof, and are unable to think of any way of stopping future pranks. Meanwhile, Audrey deduces from some remarks of her mother’s, as well as the other pension guests, that her father is not going on well, and when she visits him with a note from her mother one day, she sees for herself how ill she is. Wandering off to the pines to think things out, she runs into Mary-Lou, who has just returned from Howells. Mary-Lou introduces herself and asks if she can help, but then Jo arrives with Geoff and Phil, greets them, and makes a chance remark to Audrey about her going to the Chalet School next term. Audrey runs off with her mind in a whirl. Mary-Lou confirms to Jo that she intends to give up her archaeology career to look after her mother, though she hopes Verity will soon pull herself together when she goes to the Royal College of Music. Jo tells her to invite her mother out to Freudesheim for a while, as Switzerland suits her better anyway, and Mary-Lou agrees. Audrey runs off blindly and, without realising it, hides in a clump of bushes on the school grounds. As she thinks things through, she begins to realise just how much it must be costing for them to stay at the pension, especially with the loss of her father’s wages, and how much sending them to school would cost. She resolves to talk to her mother about it all as soon as possible, and, on leaving the bushes, realises she is trespassing again. Josette catches her before she can escape, but, seeing how troubled she is, kindly asks if she can help, and escorts her to the drive which is a shorter route back to the pension. That evening, Audrey and Mrs Everett go for a walk, and when Audrey admits that she is beginning to think about serious matters like money, Mrs Everett is glad to know that she will be able to confide in her from now on. She confirms that they will have to stay on the Platz for some time, but that the San doctors are hopeful Mr Everett will recover. She and Mrs Gardiner are looking out for a chalet they can rent together to save on expense, and she says that Audrey will be going to the CS on Jo’s scholarship, which will mean they only have to find fees for Celia, which makes things easier. Half-term arrives, and the triplets and Ruey head over to Freudesheim. Meanwhile, Audrey and Co. go for a walk and spot the path to the Auberge. They stop halfway along to have a picnic, and Solange, who has been staying in Montreux for a couple of weeks, tells them that she met Maria Marani, now Maria Maclaren, and heard all sorts of favourable stories about the CS. She admits that she thinks they were mistaken in making an enemy of the school, especially as she has now been told she too will be going there. Jo and the girls come along at that point, and Jo invites them to join up. The party goes along to the Auberge, and the girls are thrilled with the echoes. Win tries to climb up on the fence to see what makes them, but Len stops her, which does not endear her to Win, who is still holding a grudge against Len, Miss Dene, the school, and everyone who has crossed Audrey, whom she adores. Jo notices her sulks on the way back, but is unable to deduce what is at the bottom of them. The girls return after half-term and settle down to preparing for GCEs. Va and Vb go for an art lesson with Miss Yolland in the pine woods at the back of the school, but as they are about to pack up and head back for Kaffee, Audrey and Solange burst in on them, having lost Win. Miss Yolland dispatches the triplets, Ruey and Jo Scott to join the hunt and sends the others back to the school. After much hunting, Audrey at lasts finds Win fast asleep under a rock, much to her relief. Solange has a quarrel with Val over Maria Maclaren, then goes off to join Audrey and Win to find somewhere to read. In a couple of fabulous EBDisms, she tells Audrey that she is going to the CS next term (despite having already broadcast this news two chapters ago), and Audrey in turn has apparently forgotten that Solange was actually on the Auberge trip, and tells her about it. While the trio are sitting out on a bench reading, Audrey suddenly realises that a thunderstorm is coming up quickly, and they make a run for shelter. They reach the currently-vacant Elisehütte and shelter under the porch, where they are joined by Val and Celia who had gone on their own walk. It is only after the storm is over that the door opens and they find themselves confronted by Mrs Everett and Miss Dene, who have been looking over the chalet. It is explained that the Everetts, the Gardiners and Solange and her aunt will all be staying at the Elisehütte from now on, having rented it from the Rutherfords who are away on a cruise with Alixe. Audrey shame-facedly apologises to Miss Dene about the camp fire business, and Miss Dene in turn asks why they were making one in the first place. Audrey and Solange explain about Camp Fire, and Miss Dene assures them that although the school can’t offer them that, there will be plenty of other activities for them to take part in. The school holds an Arabian Nights Sale, and the Caramie gang attend and are shown around by some of the Chalet girls. Tom has been unable to send her usual dolls’ house, but some of the boys from the woodwork club she runs have made their own, and she has sent twelve of them, with the competition to guess as many as possible. One of them is won by Win, much to her delight. Audrey also wins an impromptu competition thought up by Joey to guess Bruno’s weight. Finally, Jo announces to the school at large that there has been a double whammy of Chalet babies that day: Hilary Graves has had a son, and Maria Maclaren has had a daughter. The exams begin, and the day before the last exam, Jo, noticing how tired Len looks from revising, takes her and a few others down to Lake Thun for a picnic to unwind for a few hours. When they return, they are met at the station by Jack, who informs them that Win is missing again. It transpires that Win had joined Cecil, Phil and Geoff in the garden at Freudesheim for the day while Audrey and Solange went to the San and Mrs Everett took Val and Celia to the dentist in Berne. Win, still obstinately hating the school, slipped away when Rösli had gone to aid Anna, who had spilt boiling jam on herself. She had gone through the gate into the school grounds, and, hearing Kathie Ferrars taking IIIa for a lesson nearby, had thrown some stink bombs she had purloined from Celia’s drawer, then made a run for it, falling into a pit in the undergrowth beneath some thick bushes and knocking herself out. She is finally found hours later, concussed but otherwise none the worse for her adventure. Win is severely scolded for causing so much trouble, and Miss Annersley also has a word with Audrey about setting a better example for her younger sisters, but Win does eventually begin to let go of her grudge against the school.
So, thoughts on this book? What do you think of the Caramie gang, their feud against the school and their various other exploits? What about the run ins between them and Rosalie, Len, the mistresses and Jack and Co.? What about Win’s disappearing acts? Thoughts on Commander Carey’s death and the aftermath?
Note: with next Monday being Christmas Day when I am otherwise engaged, the Future thread will go up in two weeks' time. Merry Christmas!
_________________ 'I'm sorry, I only play for sport.' - Lara Croft
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