The Motor Girls eBook

Margaret Penrose
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about The Motor Girls.

The Motor Girls eBook

Margaret Penrose
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about The Motor Girls.

“Yes.  Stocks—­bonds—­and so on, you know.  Bank stocks.  Think of that, Jack, my boy!”

“Good for you!  Three cheers for the bank stock!” exclaimed Jack in a half whisper.  “In the new bank, I suppose?”

“The correct supposition,” answered Ed.  “I have been invited to subscribe for some of the new issue of stock, and I’ve decided to.  I’m going over to get it in a day or two.  I’m to pay partly in cash, and turn over to them some of my bonds and other negotiable securities that I inherited from father, who was a banker, you know.  I think I am making a good investment.”

“Not a bit of doubt about it,” said Jack.  “I wish I had the chance.”

“I hear that Sid Wilcox wanted to get some of the stock, Jack,” went on Ed.  “He comes of age soon, and he will have some cash to invest.  But, somehow, there’s a prejudice against Sid.  He has not been asked to take stock, though the directors rectors know he has money.”

“Well, I guess the trouble is he can’t be depended on.  He’d be peddling the stock all over the State, or putting it up for doubtful transactions, and I guess the directors wouldn’t like that.  He’s a reckless sort.  I shouldn’t mind his fits of crankiness, if he would only leave girls out.  But when he goes in for some kind of mischief harmless in itself, he invariably brings some girl into it, and she has to suffer in the scrape with him.  It’s not right of Sid.  But—­speaking of angels—­there he is now.”

Jack’s runabout, called the Get There, had been climbing the hill back of the Whirlwind, and both machines were now on a level stretch of road and approaching Fisher’s store—­an “emporium,” as the sign called it, and a place where one could get anything from a watch to a shoestring, if old Jared Fisher only knew that it was wanted before he went to town.

It so happened, however, by some strange intervention of providence, that he never did know in time.  But, at any rate, you could always get soda water—­the kind that comes in the “push-in-the-cork bottles,” and that was something.

As the two autos drew up, the occupants beheld, standing on the steps of the store, Sidney Wilcox and Ida Giles.  Jack halted his car behind the Whirlwind.

“Hello there!” called out Ed.  “Seems to me I’m bound to meet all my friends to-day.  How are you, Sid?”

Ed leaped from Jack’s car and up the steps to greet Sid.

“Oh, I’m so-so,” was the rather drawling answer.  “But what’s the matter with you?  Been clamming?”

“Not exactly,” replied Ed, glancing down at the mud spots; “but I caught something, just the same.”

“So I see,” responded Sid, chuckling at his wit.  “Pity to take it all, though.  You should have left some for the turtles.  They like mud.”

Jack, who followed Ed, said something in conventional greeting to Ida.  But the girl with Sid never turned her head to look in the direction of the Whirlwind.  Cora remarked on this in a low voice to Isabel and Elizabeth.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Motor Girls from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.