<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II<br/> <small>ALL ABOUT NAN</small></h2>
<p>Nan Sherwood stumbled and would have fallen,
for she could not pick her steps very safely with
her gaze directed behind, had not a firm hand seized
her shoulder. The gentleman who did this may
have been as intent upon detaining the girl as upon
saving her from an overthrow.</p>
<p>“Hoity-toity!” he ejaculated, in a rather querulous
voice. “Hoity-toity!” he repeated. “What’s
this I hear? ‘Stop thief’? Impossible!”</p>
<p>He was a lean-faced man with a deeply lined
countenance, a big nose, and shell-bowed spectacles
through which his pale, gray eyes twinkled, after
all, in a rather friendly way. Or so the startled
Nan thought in those few seconds that elapsed before
the other girl reached them.</p>
<p>“Impossible!” repeated the man, having looked
into Nan’s eyes.</p>
<p>“I guess it isn’t impossible!” cried the over-dressed
girl, seizing the handle of the russet bag
and trying to jerk it out of Nan’s hand. “The bold
thing! She <i>is</i> a thief! And see her! She won’t
give it up!”<span class="pagenum">[11]</span></p>
<p>“Why—it’s my bag!” murmured Nan, horrified
by this utterly unexpected situation.</p>
<p>“It’s not! it’s mine!” asserted the other girl, striving
with all her might to secure the bag.</p>
<p>But Nan Sherwood was no weakling. In fact,
she was really very strong for her age. And her
spring and summer in the Big Woods had bronzed
her skin almost to the hue of a winter-cured oak-leaf.
Her muscles were as well developed as a
boy’s. The angry girl could not get the russet bag
away from Nan’s secure grip.</p>
<p>“Wait! wait, young ladies!” urged the gentleman
with the spectacles that made him look so owl-like.
“There must be some mistake here.”</p>
<p>“There is!” snapped the angry girl. “It’s a mistake
to let a little thief like her ride with respectable
people. I’m going to have her arrested! I—I’ll
tell my father——”</p>
<p>All the time she was thus incoherently accusing
Nan, she was likewise endeavoring to get possession
of the bag. But Nan had no idea of giving
up her Aunt Kate’s beautiful present.</p>
<p>“Why—why!” Nan gasped. “It’s mine! I
bought it myself!”</p>
<p>“What a story!” shrieked the other girl. “A
dowdy little thing like you never owned such a
bag. Look at my card on the handle.”</p>
<p>“That should settle it,” said the bespectacled gentleman,
with confidence, and he reached for the bag.<span class="pagenum">[12]</span></p>
<p>Nan allowed him to take it. To her amazement
he slipped an engraved visiting card out of the
frame set into the bag’s handle. Nan almost
dropped. She had not noticed the card during the
struggle and she knew she never had owned a visiting
card like that in her life.</p>
<p>The gentleman held the card very close to his
eyes to read the name engraved upon it.</p>
<p>“Ahem!” he said. “I thought I recognized you,
Miss Riggs, despite your wild state of alarm. ‘Miss
Linda Riggs,’” he added, repeating the name on the
card. “Quite right. The bag is yours, Miss
Riggs.”</p>
<p>“I should think you would have known <i>that</i>, Professor
Krenner, when I first spoke,” snapped the
girl, seizing the bag ungratefully from his hand.
“Anybody ought to see what that girl is!” and she
eyed poor Nan with a measure of disdain that
might have really pained the Tillbury girl had she
not just then been so much troubled by another
phase of the incident.</p>
<p>“Why! where—where is <i>my</i> bag, then?” Nan
gasped.</p>
<p>Professor Krenner glanced sideways at her. He
was a peculiar old gentleman, and he believed deeply
in his own first impressions. Nan’s flushed face,
her wide-open, pained eyes, her quivering lips, told
a story he could not disbelieve. The professor’s
mind leaped to a swift conclusion.<span class="pagenum">[13]</span></p>
<p>“Are you sure you sat just there, child?” he
asked Nan.</p>
<p>“Oh—I——”</p>
<p>He could see over the heads of the few curious
passengers who had surged around them.</p>
<p>“Was your bag like Miss Riggs’?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Exactly,” breathed Nan.</p>
<p>Just then a soft, drawling voice asked:</p>
<p>“Any ob yo’ ladies an’ gemmen done lef’ a bag?”</p>
<p>The porter held out a russet leather traveling bag.
Nan leaped for it with a cry of relief.</p>
<p>“It belongs to the young lady, porter,” said Professor
Krenner, authoritatively.</p>
<p>“Why, the bags are just alike!” cried one lady.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe a dowdy thing like her ever
honestly owned a bag like mine in this world!”
Linda Riggs exclaimed bitterly, “She stole it.”</p>
<p>Another passenger laughed. “As far as we
know, my girl, you may have stolen your bag.”</p>
<p>“How dare you?” gasped the dressy girl. “I
guess you don’t know who my father is?”</p>
<p>“I confess the crass ignorance that engulfs my
mind upon that important point,” laughed the unimpressed
man, who looked as though he might be
of some importance himself. “Who is your father,
my dear?”</p>
<p>“He is Mr. Henry W. Riggs, and he just about
owns this railroad,” said the girl, proudly.</p>
<p>“I have heard of him,” agreed the man. “And<span class="pagenum">[14]</span>
you may tell him from me that if I owned as much
stock in this road as he is supposed to, I’d give the
public better service for its money,” and the passengers
went away, laughing at the purse-proud and
arrogant girl.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Nan Sherwood had thanked the porter
for recovering her bag and Professor Krenner
for championing her cause. She did not look again
at the girl who had so hurt and insulted her. But
she was very pale and quiet as she went back to
rejoin her chum, Bess Harley, in the other car.</p>
<p>That was the way of Nan Sherwood. When she
was hurt she never cried over it openly; nor was it
often that she gave vent to a public expression of
anger.</p>
<p>For her age, Nan was strangely self-contained
and competent. Not that she was other than a
real, happy, hearty schoolgirl with a deal more than
her share of animal spirits. She was so very much
alive that it had been hard for her to keep her body
still enough to satisfy her teachers at the Tillbury
High School which, until the middle of the previous
winter, she had attended with her chum.</p>
<p>Bess’ father was well-to-do and Bess had had
almost everything she really craved since the hour
she was born, being the oldest of the “Harley tribe,”
as she expressed it. When it was decided that she
should, at the end of her freshman year in high
school, attend the preparatory school for girls,<span class="pagenum">[15]</span>
known as Lakeview Hall, Bess was determined that
her chum, Nan Sherwood, should go with her.</p>
<p>But Nan’s parents were not situated at all as were
Bess Harley’s—neither financially or otherwise.
Mr. Robert Sherwood had been, for years, foreman
of a department in the Atwater Mills. Suddenly
the mills were closed and Nan’s father—with
multitudes of other people—found his income cut
off.</p>
<p>He owned a little cottage on Amity Street; but
it was not all paid for, as Nan’s mother had been a
semi-invalid for a number of years and much of the
money Mr. Sherwood might have saved, had gone
for medical attention for “Momsey,” as Nan called
her mother.</p>
<p>But the invalid wife and mother was the bravest
and most cheerful of the three who lived in “the
dwelling in amity,” as Mr. Sherwood called the
little cottage, and it was she who inspired them to
hope for better times ahead.</p>
<p>Nan could not fail to be benefited in character by
such an example as her mother set; but the girl very
well knew that, in their then present circumstances,
there was no possibility of her entering Lakeview
Hall in the fall with Bess Harley.</p>
<p>This was really a tragic outlook for the school
chums; but in the very darkest hour a letter arrived
from a lawyer, named Andrew Blake, of Edinburgh,
Scotland, stating that a great uncle of Mrs.<span class="pagenum">[16]</span>
Sherwood’s had recently died, bequeathing her an
estate valued at something like ten thousand pounds.</p>
<p>The only shadow cast upon this delightful prospect
was the fact that Mrs. Sherwood must appear
before the Scotch Court to oppose the claim of more
distant relatives who were trying to break the will.</p>
<p>The doctors had already recommended a sea
voyage for Mrs. Sherwood. Now it seemed a
necessity. But her parents could not take Nan
across the ocean. What should be done with the
troubled girl was the much mooted question, when
there burst in upon the family Mr. Sherwood’s
brother from Upper Michigan, a giant lumberman,
who had come to Tillbury to offer any help in his
power to Nan’s father in his financial straits.</p>
<p>Immediately upon hearing of the legacy, Mr.
Henry Sherwood declared he would take Nan back
to Pine Camp with him, and in the first volume of
this series, entitled “Nan Sherwood at Pine Camp,
or, The Old Lumberman’s Secret,” are told all Nan’s
adventures in the Big Woods during the spring and
summer, and until the time came for her to prepare
to enter Lakeview Hall in September.</p>
<p>For, although the court proceedings regarding
Mr. Hughie Blake’s will had not been entirely settled,
money had been advanced by Mr. Andrew
Blake to Mr. Sherwood and the desire of Nan’s
heart was to be accomplished. She was now on her
way to Lakeview Hall with Bess Harley; and, as we<span class="pagenum">[17]</span>
have seen, she had not gone far on the journey from
Chicago before Adventure overtook her.</p>
<p>This first was not a pleasant adventure, however;
and it brought in its train incidents which colored
all Nan Sherwood’s initial semester at Lakeview
Hall.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[18]</span></p>
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