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The Red Cross Girl
by
“Any man,” cried she, to the mutual discomfort of Helen Page and the servants, “who thinks I’m like that mustn’t get away! I’m not like that and I know it; but if he thinks so that’s all I want. And maybe I might be like that–if any man would help.”
She gave her attention to the telephone and “Information.” She demanded to be instantly put into communication with the DAILY REPUBLIC and Mr. Sam Ward. She turned again upon Helen Page.
“I’m tired of being called a good sport,” she protested, “by men who aren’t half so good sports as I am. I’m tired of being talked to about money–as though I were a stock-broker. This man’s got a head on his shoulders, and he’s got the shoulders too; and he’s got a darned good-looking head; and he thinks I’m a ministering angel and a saint; and he put me up on a pedestal and made me dizzy–and I like being made dizzy; and I’m for him! And I’m going after him!”
“Be still!” implored Helen Page. “Any one might think you meant it!” She nodded violently at the discreet backs of the men-servants.
“Ye gods, Parker!” cried Anita Flagg. “Does it take three of you to pour a cup of tea? Get out of here, and tell everybody that you all three caught me in the act of proposing to an American gentleman over the telephone and that the betting is even that I’ll make him marry me!”
The faithful and sorely tried domestics fled toward the door. “And what’s more,” Anita hurled after them, “get your bets down quick, for after I meet him the odds will be a hundred to one!”
Had the REPUBLIC been an afternoon paper, Sam might have been at the office and might have gone to the telephone, and things might have happened differently; but, as the REPUBLIC was a morning paper, the only person in the office was the lady who scrubbed the floors and she refused to go near the telephone. So Anita Flagg said, “I’ll call him up later,” and went happily on her ride, with her heart warm with love for all the beautiful world; but later it was too late.
To keep himself fit, Sam Ward always walked to the office. On this particular morning Hollis Holworthy was walking uptown and they met opposite the cathedral.
“You’re the very man I want,” said Hollworthy joyously–“you’ve got to decide a bet.”
He turned and fell into step with Sam.
“It’s one I made last night with Anita Flagg. She thinks you didn’t know who she was yesterday, and I said that was ridiculous. Of course you knew. I bet her a theatre party.”
To Sam it seemed hardly fair that so soon, before his fresh wound had even been dressed, it should be torn open by impertinent fingers; but he had no right to take offense. How could the man, or any one else, know what Sister Anne had meant to him?
“I’m afraid you lose,” he said. He halted to give Holworthy the hint to leave him, but Holworthy had no such intention.
“You don’t say so!” exclaimed that young man. “Fancy one of you chaps being taken in like that. I thought you were taking her in–getting up a story for the Sunday supplement.”
Sam shook his head, nodded, and again moved on; but he was not yet to escape. “And, instead of your fooling her,” exclaimed Holworthy incredulously, “she was having fun, with you!”
With difficulty Sam smiled.
“So it would seem,” he said.
“She certainly made an awfully funny story of it!” exclaimed Holworthy admiringly. “I thought she was making it up–she must have made some of it up. She said you asked her to take a day off in New York. That isn’t so is it?”
“Yes, that’s so.”
“By Jove!” cried Holworthy–“and that you invited her to see the moving-picture shows?”
Sam, conscious of the dearly bought front row seats in his pocket, smiled pleasantly.