"My name is Janet Steele."
"Ah! Your address?" repeated the doctor.
This time there was no doubt that the girl flushed, and more than a few seconds pa.s.sed before she made answer:
"Thirty-seven Whiffle Street."
At the same moment somebody exclaimed: "Here comes Fatty Morehead, the cop.
Better late than never," and a general laugh went up from the crowd.
Jess seized Laura"s wrist, exclaiming: "Oh, Laura! he will want to take down our names and addresses, too. Let"s get away."
The Red Cross girl uttered an e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n of chagrin. She began pushing her way out of the press, and in an opposite direction from that in which the portly policeman was coming.
Jess whispered swiftly in Laura"s ear: "Come on! Let"s follow her! I"m awfully interested in that Red Cross girl, Laura!"
"Why should you be?" asked her chum. "Although she looks like a nice girl, I never saw her before."
"Neither did I," said Jess. "But did you hear the address she gave? That is the poor end of Whiffle Street, as you very well know, and mother and I used to live right across the street from that house. I did not know anybody lived in the old Eaton place. It has been empty for a long, long time."
CHAPTER III
ODD!
Bobby Hargrew met Laura and Jess on the edge of the crowd, for she had been unable to worm herself into the middle of it again, and told them swiftly of the boys" departure to hunt for the car that had done the damage.
"And that"s just like the boys!" exclaimed Jess Morse, with some exasperation. "To run away and desert us!"
"I don"t know but I"m glad," said Laura. "I don"t feel much like shopping after seeing that poor man hurt."
"Or skating, either," complained Jess.
Presently the three overtook the strange girl. Bobby, whom Chet had said was "just as friendly with strangers as a pup with a waggy tail,"
immediately got into conversation with her.
"Say! was he hurt badly?" she asked.
"I think his right leg was broken," the Red Cross girl replied. "And his head was badly hurt. Your friends, here, could see that."
"He bled dreadfully," sighed Laura. "But you had the bandage on so nicely that the doctor did not even disturb it, my dear."
"Thank you," said the Red Cross girl. She hesitated on the corner of the side street. "I fear I must leave you here. I am going home."
"Oh," cried Jess, who was enormously curious, "we can go your way just as well as not, Miss Steele! We live at the other end of Whiffle Street--up on the hill, you know."
"All but me," put in Bobby. "But I can run right through Laura"s yard to my house."
She indicated Laura as she spoke. The Red Cross girl looked at Mother Wit with some expectancy. Jess came to the rescue.
"Let"s get acquainted," she said. "Why not? We"ll never meet again under more thrilling circ.u.mstances," and she laughed. "This is Miss Laura Belding, Miss Steele. On your other hand is Miss Hargrew--Miss Clara Hargrew. I am Josephine Morse. I used to live across the street from the old Eaton place where you live now."
"You are a stranger in town, are you not?" Laura asked, taking the new girl"s hand.
"Yes, Miss Belding. We have only been here four weeks. But I have worked in the Red Cross before--and one must do something, you know."
"Do something!" burst forth Bobby. "If you went to Central High and had Gee Gee for one of your teachers, you"d have plenty to do."
"We are all three Central High girls," said Laura gently. "Have you finished school, Miss Steele?"
"I have not been able to attend school regularly for two years," admitted the new girl. "I am afraid," and she smiled apologetically, "that you are all much further advanced in your education than I am. You see, my mother is an invalid and I must give her a great deal of my time. It does not interfere, however, with my doing a little for the Red Cross."
"I am sorry your mother is ill," said Laura.
"We were advised to come up here for her sake," said Janet Steele hastily.
"We have been living in a coast town. The doctors thought an inland climate--a drier climate--would be beneficial."
"I hope it will prove so," said Laura.
"It seems a shame you can"t get out with the other girls," Jess added.
"And come to school and let Gee Gee get after you," joined in Bobby grimly.
"Is she such a very strict disciplinarian?" asked Miss Steele, smiling down at the irrepressible one as they walked through the side street toward Whiffle.
"She"s the limit," declared Bobby.
"Oh," said Laura mildly, "I think Miss Carrington is nowhere near so strict as she used to be. Margit Salgo really has made her quite human, you know."
"Say!" grumbled Bobby, "she can hand out demerits just as easy as ever. And she had her sense of humor extracted years ago."
"Has that fault cropped up lately, my dear?" asked Laura, laughing. "It must be so. What happened, Bobby?"
The younger girl, who was a soph.o.m.ore, whereas Laura and Jess were juniors, came directly under Miss Carrington"s attention in several cla.s.ses. Bobby was forever getting into trouble with the strict teacher.
"Why, look, now," said Bobby, warmly, "just what happened yesterday!
English cla.s.s. You know, that"s nuts for Gee Gee. I was bothered enough, I can tell you, trying to correct a paper she had handed back to me, and she kept right on talking and asking questions, and the recitation period was almost ended. I didn"t want to hang around there to correct that paper--"
"You know very well you should have taken it home to correct," Laura put in.
"Oh, don"t tell me that! I take so much extra work home as it is, that Father Tom Hargrew asks me if I don"t do anything at all in school. And, anyway, I didn"t think Gee Gee saw me. But, of course, she did."
"And then what?" Jess asked.
"Why, she shot a question at me, and I didn"t get it at first. "Miss Hargrew! Pay attention!" she went on. Of course, that brought me up standing. "What is a pseudonym?" she wanted to know. How silly! You know the trouble we"ve been having with that car Father Tom bought. "I don"t know what it is, Miss Carrington," I told her. "But if it is something that belongs to an automobile, father will have to buy a new one pretty soon, I"m sure.""