That summer was much like other summers
in Malden. Nancy had been graduated with some
honor; but there was nobody to rejoice with her over
her success. The school had been crowded on the
last day with friends and parents of the other girls;
there was not a soul who more than perfunctorily wished
Nancy Nelson “good luck.”
The neighborhood of Higbee School
was very quiet a week after the term closed.
The serving force was greatly reduced; most of the
big house was closed, and all the cottages. Even
Miss Prentice, four days after graduation, started
for Europe with a party of teachers, and Miss Trigg
and Nancy were left practically alone.
But the orphaned girl had something
this summer on which to feed her imagination.
She was going to Pinewood Hall. And Pinewood Hall
was exclusive, and on the very top wave of popularity.
It cost a lot of money to go to that
school, Miss Trigg had suggested to Miss Prentice
to remind the lawyer that Nancy would need a more
elaborate outfit of gowns, and Mr. Gordon had sent
the extra money for that purpose without a word of
objection.
The thought had taken root in Nancy’s
mind at last that she must be somebody of importance.
At least, she was an heiress. Whether she owned
a single relative, or not, she commanded money. That
was something.
Of course, the other girls at Higbee
had always looked down upon her and considered her
“a charity scholar;” but Nancy believed
that at Pinewood Hall she could hold up her head with
the best.
Nobody would know her there.
She would begin a fresh page of her history.
She would make the girls love her for herself; it would
not matter there that she had no near relatives.
Mr. Henry Gordon, her guardian, must know all about
her, and with regard to this gentleman the girl had
a very grave determination in her mind a
determination which she did not confide even to Miss
Trigg.
Nancy Nelson meant to see and speak
with the lawyer before she went to Pinewood Hall.
Whether he wanted to or not, Mr. Gordon
must tell her something about herself. If she
had relatives living she wanted to know, at least,
why they were ashamed of her. Or, if she
was merely the ward of an estate, she wanted to know
what the estate was and how big it was.
The girl had thought so much about
her equivocal position that her future troubled her.
If there was just enough money to give her a college
education, she wanted to know it. If she must
prepare herself for taking some place at the end of
her schooldays in the work-a-day world, she wanted
to know that, too.
These were practical thoughts for
so young a girl; but Nancy Nelson was practical,
despite her imagination.
She had already looked up Clintondale
on the map, and upon the railroad time-table.
It was half a day’s ride east of Malden, and
Cincinnati was one of the points where she changed
cars.
Although she had never traveled by
train herself, Nancy had heard the other girls exchanging
experiences, and she knew that she could get a “stop-over”
from the conductor of the train.
She had seen one of Mr. Gordon’s
letters which he had written Miss Prentice; the principal
had shown it to her.
At that time the girl had memorized
the street and number printed at the top of the lawyer’s
stiffly-worded communication. She would never
forget “N South Wall Street.”
That was the one secret Nancy
Nelson kept hidden within her heart all that long
summer while she waited with Miss Trigg, the secretary
and general utility teacher, for the return of the
principal of Higbee School and the beginning of her
new life.
Miss Trigg tried to be nice to her;
indeed, she was nice to her after a fashion.
But Miss Trigg’s pleasures were between bookcovers;
Nancy Nelson was too healthy a girl not to desire
something of a more exciting nature than Roman history
or higher mathematics on a long, hot summer afternoon.
That was why she stole away from the
deeply absorbed Miss Trigg on one such occasion late
in August, when they had ridden out to Granville Park
to spend an hour or two in the open.
Granville Park bordered a good-sized
pond, dammed at its lower end, where was an old mill
site. An automobile road crossed the bridge that
had been built here; but the mill had not been in commission
for years. It was a quiet and picturesque spot.
Just above the millrace was a quiet
pool under the bank where great, fragrant water-lilies
floated upon the surface. Those lilies always
attracted Nancy. She wished she were a boy.
Boys could do so many things forbidden to girls!
She longed to strip off her shoes
and stockings and wade into the black water to obtain
some of the lilies. She had no idea that, just
beyond the little patch of marine plants, the bottom
of the pond fell away abruptly, and that a current
tugged stoutly for the millrace.
On this particular day, when she had
left Miss Trigg reading in her favorite summer-house
high on the rocky hill, and Nancy had tripped lightly
down to the path that skirted the pond’s steep
edge, there was a boy doing just what she had so wished
to do herself.
He was a good-natured looking boy,
with plump cheeks and a mass of light, curly hair
that he probably hated, but Nancy thought it made him
look “too cute for anything.”
He might have been three years her
senior, and was a strong, healthy-looking youth.
Nancy stopped in the fringe of bushes
and watched him. She saw him pluck several of
the long-stemmed beauties, and she wondered, if she
showed herself when he came ashore, he would offer
her some.
Then she became aware of several voices
in the neighborhood girls’ voices.
They seemed to be calling to the boy, for once he lifted
his shining face and shouted something.
Nancy looked keenly in the direction
his eyes took. Through the trees she saw that
an automobile stood on the bridge or right
at its beginning. The boy belonged to the automobile
party. They had spied the lilies, and he had
come down to wade into the pond for them.
Of course he was getting them for
the other girls he would give none to Nancy.
She could see the chauffeur, in his
duster and goggles, standing in the road, too.
But the girls who chatted so gaily, and shouted to
the boy in the water, she could not see at all, try
her best.
The lad had now a great bunch of the
water-lilies; but the girls above evidently wanted
them all. They encouraged him to wade out farther;
there were some fine ones on the outer edge of the
patch.
“Don’t be afraid!”
Nancy heard one shrill-voiced girl call. “What’s
the matter, Bob? Is the water wet?”
“That’s all right, Goosey!”
said the boy. “But you know well enough
I can’t swim. And there’s a hole
here
“Oh!”
The boy, lilies and all, suddenly
went under! His half-strangled cry did not reach
the ears of those in the automobile. And it was
evident that they could not see the lily patch very
well, for they were laughing and chattering without
an idea that the boy was in danger.
He came to the surface in a moment.
Nancy had only sprung out upon the open path.
But it was plain he had told the exact truth when he
said he could not swim and his mouth had
been open when he went under that first time.
The boy uttered a sobbing cry and
went down again. Nancy knew that the water must
be already in his lungs. He was drowning swiftly
and surely while the current bore him steadily
toward the millrace.
How could she help him? Nancy
could swim and swim well. Miss Prentice
did not neglect proper outdoor athletics for her girls.
She engaged a swimming instructor at one of the big
public baths in Malden for two afternoons a week all
through the school year.
But the girl very well knew that she
could not swim in the swift current of the race.
She could not plunge in and aid the drowning boy.
Nor was there anything that she could
fling to him anything that would bear him
up until help could come. The bank was so steep
and high! For an instant Nancy could only scream,
and her sturdy voice drowned immediately the chatter
and laughter of the girls in the automobile.
She saw the chauffeur spring down
the path toward the bank of the pond and she ran to
meet him. For a second time the boy’s head
appeared above the surface. The hand gripping
the great bunch of lilies beat the air; but Nancy
saw that his eyes were wide open and that he seemed
to have recovered his courage.
Although he could not fight the current,
he was trying to get his breath without swallowing
any more water.
“The boy’ll drown!”
gasped the chauffeur, white-faced and helpless.
Nancy could see the side of the automobile
more clearly now. Lashed to the running-board
was an extra tire, fully inflated. She seized
the shaking man by the hand.
“Get a knife! get a knife!”
she commanded. “Haven’t you a knife?”
“Ye-yes,” he gasped, fumbling in his pocket.
“Come on!” she ordered,
and ran up the path to the road where the automobile
stood.
He came, opening the knife as he ran.
The girls in the car were shrieking now. Nancy
did not even look at them; it is doubtful if they
saw her. She pointed to the tire and the chauffeur
understood.
He started to cut the lashings recklessly;
but she stopped him with a cry. The stout cord
was what she wanted. Quickly she looped it around
the tire and he seized it and ran back to the pond’s
edge.
The imperiled boy was half-way through
the race; the brown current curled about him, trying
to bear him down.
With a shout the chauffeur threw the
tire into the water ahead of the boy. The latter
had sufficient presence of mind to seize it, and the
chauffeur dragged him toward the bank.
But it was too steep, and the boy
was too much exhausted to climb out without help.
“You’ll you’ll
have to help me!” gasped the boy in the water.
But the man could not both cling to
the rope and lend the unfortunate victim of the accident
a hand. Nor was there a tree or bush to which
he might tie the rope.
The boy had hooked one arm over the
improvised life-preserver. But his head had sunk
low on his breast. He was almost completely exhausted,
and the current, tugging at his legs, must soon sweep
him from his insecure hold.