JEAN, Bettie, Marjory and Mabel ran with the rest to see what was happening, for their homes were not far from the schoolhouse. Indeed, owing to its ample setting, the building was plainly visible from all directions; and from a distance, it always loomed larger than anything else in the town. To all the citizens it was a most unusual and alarming sight to see thick, black smoke curling about the eaves and rising in a threatening column above the familiar building. Such a thing had never happened before. Marjory was the first of the quartette to discover what was going on. She had opened her bedroom window the better to count the strokes of the fire-bell when, to her So Marjory flew around the block—like a little excited hen, Dr. Tucker said—and collected the girls. They ran in a body to join the swelling crowd that surrounded the smoking building. "Keep back out of danger," called Aunty Jane, who was watching the fire from her upstairs window. "We will," shrieked Marjory, who, with the other three, was rushing by. "Don't get mixed up with the hose," warned Dr. Tucker, who was carrying young Peter to view the fire. "We won't," promised Bettie. "We'll stand on the very safest corner." "This is it," declared Jean, stopping short on the sidewalk. "We can see right over "Should you think," panted Mabel, hopefully, "that there'd be school Monday?" "Looks doubtful," said Marjory. "Not upstairs, anyway," returned Jean. "Everything must be smoked perfectly black. And it's getting worse every minute instead of better." "Goodness!" cried Mabel, suddenly turning pale at a new and alarming thought. "I do hope it won't burn my room. The money for Miss Bonner's birthday present is in my desk. It's—it's a horrible lot of money to lose. I ought never to have left it there. Dear me! Do you think——" "Phew!" cried Jean, paying no heed to Mabel. "Look at that!" "That" was a terrifying flash of red that suddenly illumined six of the big upper windows. "The High School room," groaned Bettie. "It's—it's flames!" "Hang it!" growled an indignant tax-payer. "Why doesn't somebody do something? That building cost fifty thousand dollars." "Fire started from a defective flue on top floor," explained another bystander, "but that's no reason why the whole place should go. There's no fire downstairs, but there will be—What's that? No water? Broken hydrant?" Mabel listened attentively. The bystander continued: "Then the whole building is doomed. It's had time enough to get a tremendous start." "Oh, look!" cried Jean. "It's bursting through into the next room—my room! Oh, how dreadful! All our plants, our books, our pictures—Oh, oh! I can't bear to look." Firemen and volunteer helpers were, hurrying in and out the wide south door. Men carried out towering piles of books and "Why!" exclaimed Jean, wheeling suddenly. "Where's Mabel? Wasn't she right beside you a minute ago, Bettie? I certainly saw her there." "She was—but she isn't now," returned Bettie, looking about anxiously. "I thought she was behind me." "Dear me!" murmured motherly Jean. "I hope she hasn't gone any closer. Suppose the scallops on that roof should begin to melt off." "Oh, look!" cried Marjory. "There! In the doorway!" All three looked just in time to see a "Oh," groaned Jean, "it's Mabel!" "Oh," moaned Marjory, "why did I ever tell her that there was a fire?" "I'm afraid," hazarded Bettie, "that she's gone to Miss Bonner's room to get that money." Bettie was right. That was exactly what Mabel had done. All along Mabel's way hands had stretched out to stop the flying figure. But the hands were always just a little too late. You see, the owners of the tardy hands did not realize quickly enough that rash little Mabel actually meant to enter a building whose top floor was all in flames. She was fairly inside before the onlookers grasped the situation. "How perfectly foolish!" cried Marjory, stamping her foot in helpless rage. "Of course somebody'll get her out—there's two Mabel, however, was not feeling at all foolish. No, indeed. The little girl, to her own way of thinking, was doing a worthy, even a heroic, deed. She was rescuing the precious two dollars and forty-seven cents that her class had so laboriously raised to buy Miss Bonner a birthday gift. She would have liked to accomplish it in a little less spectacular manner, but, no other way being available, she had made the best of circumstances and was ignoring the crowd. She hoped, indeed, that no one had noticed her; with so much else to look at it seemed as if one small girl might easily remain unobserved. To be sure she was risking her life, the life of the only little girl that her parents possessed; but that seemed a small affair beside two dollars and forty-seven cents. The roof might fall, the cornice might drop, the huge chimney might collapse, the suffocating smoke or scorching By this time, Jean, Marjory and Bettie were white and absolutely speechless with fear. Four firemen were sitting on Dr. Bennett to keep him from rushing in after the little girl he had promptly recognized as his own, and five women were supporting and encouraging Mrs. Bennett, who had grown too weak to stand although she still had her wits about her. "Fifty dollars reward," Mr. Black was shouting, "to the man that gets that child!" He would have gone after her himself, but Mrs. Crane had him firmly by the coat-tails and both Dr. and Mrs. Tucker were clinging to his arms. "Be aisy, be aisy," Mrs. Malony, the egg-woman was murmuring to the world in general. "Miss Mabel's the kind thot's always escapin' jist be the skin av her teeth. But, although the crowd rested as "aisy" as it could, the moments went by and no Mabel appeared. With every instant the fire grew worse. By this time, the smoke and angry sheets of flame had burst through the roof and were streaming, with a mighty, threatening roar, straight up into the blackened sky—a splendid sight that was visible for a long distance. There was no water to check the mighty fire, for, a very few moments after the hose had been attached, the hydrant had burst and the water that should have been busy quenching the fire was quietly drenching the feet of many an unheeding bystander. And presently the thing that everybody expected happened. With a lingering, horrible crash a large part of the upper floor dropped to the main hall below. Smoke poured from the lower doors and windows. In another moment leaping hungry flames But where was Mabel? |