"Mary--Miss Nestor!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed our hero, in some confusion.
He had brought his car to a stop, and had thrown open the door, alighting on the crossing, while a little knot of curious people gathered about.
"I didn"t see you," went on the lad. "I came from behind the milk wagon, and--"
"It was my fault," Miss Nestor hastened to add. "I, too, was waiting for the milk wagon to pa.s.s, and when it got out of my way, I darted around the end of it, without looking to see if anything else was coming. I should have been more careful, but I"m so excited that I hardly know what I"m doing."
"Excited? What"s the matter?" asked Tom, for he saw that his friend was not her usual calm self. "Has anything happened, Mary?"
"Oh, I"ve such news to tell you!" she exclaimed.
"Then get in here, and we"ll go on." advised Tom. "We are collecting a crowd. Come and take a ride; that is if you have time."
"Of course I have," the girl said, with a little blush, which Tom thought made her look all the prettier. "Then we can talk. But where are you going?"
"To send a message to a gentleman in Philadelphia, saying that I will help him out of some difficulties with his new electric airship. I"m going to take a run down there in my monoplane, b.u.t.tERFLY, to-morrow, and--"
"My! to hear you tell it, one would think it wasn"t any more to make an airship flight than it was to go shopping," interrupted Mary, as she entered the electric car, followed by Tom, who quickly sent the vehicle down the street.
"Oh, I"m getting used to the upper air," he said. "But what is the news you were to tell me?"
"Did you know mamma and papa had gone to the West Indies?" asked the girl.
"No! I should say that WAS news. When did they go? I didn"t know they intended to make a trip."
"Neither did they; nor I, either. It was very sudden. They sailed from New York yesterday. Mr. George Hosbrook, a business friend of papa"s, offered to take them on his steam yacht, RESOLUTE. He is making a little pleasure trip, with a party of friends, and he thought papa and mamma might like to go."
"He wired to them, they got ready in a rush, caught the express to New York, and went off in such a hurry that I can hardly realize it yet. I"m left all alone, and I"m in such trouble!"
"Well, I should say that was news," spoke Tom.
"Oh, you haven"t heard the worst yet," went on Mary. "I don"t call the fact that papa and mamma went off so suddenly much news. But the cook just left unexpectedly, and I have invited a lot of girl friends to come and stay with me, while mamma and papa are away; and now what shall I do without a cook? I was on my way down to an intelligence office, to get another servant, when you nearly ran me down! Now, isn"t that news?"
"I should say it was--two kinds," admitted Tom, with a smile. "Well, I"ll help you all I can. I"ll take you to the intelligence office, and if you can get a cook, by hook or by crook, I"ll bundle her into this car, and get her to your house before she can change her mind.
And so your people have gone to the West Indies?"
"Yes, and I wish I had the chance to go."
"So do I," spoke Tom, little realizing how soon his wish might be granted. "But is there any particular intelligence office you wish to visit?"
"There"s not much choice," replied Mary Nestor, with a smile, "as there"s only one in town. Oh. I do hope I can get a cook! It would be dreadful to have nothing to eat, after I"d asked the girls to spend a month with me; wouldn"t it?"
Tom agreed that it certainly would, and they soon after arrived at the intelligence office.
CHAPTER III
TOM KNOCKS OUT ANDY
"Do you want me to come in and help you?" asked the young inventor, of Miss Nestor.
"Do you know anything about hiring a cook?" she inquired, with an arch smile.
"I"m afraid I don"t," the lad was obliged to confess.
"Then I"m a little doubtful of your ability to help me. But I"m ever so much obliged to you. I"ll see if I can engage one. The cook who just left went away because I asked her to make some apple turnovers. Some of the girls who are coming are very fond of them."
"So am I," spoke Tom, with a smile.
"Are you, indeed? Then, if the cook I hope to get now will make them, I"ll invite you over to have some, and--also meet my friends."
"I"d rather come when just you, and the turnovers and the cook are there," declared Tom, boldly, and Mary, with a blush, made ready to leave the electric car.
"Thank you," she said, in a low voice.
"If I can"t help you select a cook," went on Tom, "at least let me call and take you home when you have engaged one."
"Oh, it will be too much trouble," protested Miss Nestor.
"Not at all. I have only to send a message, and get some piano wire, and then I"ll call back here for you. I"ll take you and the new cook back home flying."
"All right, but don"t fly so fast. The cook may get frightened, and leave before she has a chance to make an apple turnover."
"I"ll go slower. I"ll be back in fifteen minutes," called Tom, as he swung the car out away from the curb, while Mary Nestor went into the intelligence office.
Tom wrote and sent this message to Mr. Hostner Fenwick, of Philadelphia:
"Will come on to-morrow in my aeroplane, and aid you all I can. Will not promise to make your electric airship fly, though. Father sends regards."
"Just rush that, please," he said to the telegraph agent, and the latter, after reading it over, remarked:
"It"ll rush itself, I reckon, being all about airships, and things like that," and he laughed as Tom paid him.
Selecting several sizes of piano wire of great strength, to use as extra guy-braces on the b.u.t.terfly, Tom re-entered his electric car, and hastened back to the intelligence office, where he had left his friend. He saw her standing at the front door, and before he could alight, and go to her, Miss Nestor came out to meet him.
"Oh, Tom!" she exclaimed, with a little tragic gesture, "what do you think?"
"I don"t know," he answered good-naturedly. "Does the new cook refuse to come unless you do away with apple turnovers?"
"No, it isn"t that. I have engaged a real treasure, I"m sure, but as soon as I mentioned that you would take us home in the electric automobile, she flatly refused to come. She said walking was the only way she would go. She hasn"t been in this country long. But the worst of it is that a rich woman has just telephoned in for a cook, and if I don"t get this one away, the rich lady may induce her to come to her house, and I"ll be without one! Oh, what shall I do?"
and poor Mary looked quite distressed.
"Humph! So she"s afraid of electric autos; eh?" mused Tom. "That"s queer. Leave it to me, Mary, and perhaps I can fix it. You want to get her away from here in a hurry; don"t you?"
"Yes, because servants are so scarce, that they are engaged almost as soon as they register at the intelligence office. I know the one I have hired is suspicious of me, since I have mentioned your car, and she"ll surely go with Mrs. Duy Puyster when she comes. I"m sorry I spoke of the automobile."