Grace Harlowe's Senior Year at High School eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 189 pages of information about Grace Harlowe's Senior Year at High School.

Grace Harlowe's Senior Year at High School eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 189 pages of information about Grace Harlowe's Senior Year at High School.

“No,” answered Grace mysteriously.  “I am going to draw money from there after I have called upon a certain person.”

“But what have I to do with it!” questioned Eleanor.

“Come with me and see,” Grace replied.  “After we have succeeded in our undertaking, I’ll answer any questions you may ask.  I warn you, however, that the call I am about to make is not a friendly one.  Are you willing to stand by me through what may be a rather disagreeable scene?”

“I certainly am,” replied Eleanor emphatically.  “You ought to know from past experiences that disagreeable scenes are my forte.”

“I know that I’d rather have you with me on this expedition than any one else I know,” responded Grace.  “You are not easily intimidated.”

The two girls by this time had left Main Street and turned into Putnam Square.

“Grace,” said Eleanor suddenly.  “I believe I can guess the place you are headed for.  You are going to Henry Hammond’s office, aren’t you?”

“Yes,” said Grace, surprised at the accuracy of Eleanor’s guess, “I am.”

“And you are going there about the money that he stole from Marian.  Am I right!”

“You are,” answered Grace truthfully.  “But how did you know?”

“Because,” said Eleanor quietly, “I intended going there myself.”

“Then you think that——­” began Grace.

“I think that Henry Hammond is a thief and an impostor,” finished Eleanor.  “He tried to interest Aunt Margaret in some real estate, and called at ‘Heartsease’ on two different occasions.  She is a very shrewd business woman and he couldn’t fool her in the least.  Both times he called he kept looking about him all the time, as though he were trying to see whether we had any valuables.  He raved over the house, and hinted to be shown through it, but we weren’t so foolish.

“When Chief Burroughs was questioning the prisoner to-day about his confederate, it suddenly flashed across me that it might be this man Hammond.  He appeared here for the first time on the night of the bazaar and—­”

“Eleanor,” exclaimed Grace, “you’ve missed your vocation.  You should have been a detective.  I believe what you say to be the truth and have thought so for some time.  We can hardly denounce Henry Hammond upon suspicion, but we can scare him and make him give back the class money.  Perhaps we are defeating the ends of justice by not telling what we suspect, but if we have him arrested on suspicion, then the only way we can get back our money is to publicly charge him with extorting it from Marian.  Think what a disgrace that would be for her in her graduating year, too,” Grace added.  “She would feel too ashamed to ever again face her best friends.”

“I have thought of all that, too, and now that we are both of the same mind, let’s on to victory,” said Eleanor.

The two girls paused and shook hands as they entered the building in which Henry Hammond had his office, then mounted the stairs with the full determination of winning in their cause.

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Project Gutenberg
Grace Harlowe's Senior Year at High School from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.