The Girl Aviators' Motor Butterfly - BestLightNovel.com
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"Oh!" cried Peggy suddenly, "there comes a runabout; that ram will surely collide with it!"
A runabout coming in the opposite direction dashed round a corner of the country road at this juncture. The driver was a young girl, but she was veiled and her features could not be seen under the thick face covering.
Apparently the ram saw the other car coming, for the animal actually appeared to make a halfway intelligent effort to steer the car out of the road.
For her part the girl in the runabout swerved her car from side to side in a struggle to avoid a collision, which appeared inevitable.
"Stop it!" shrieked Bess; "she'll be killed."
CHAPTER XV.
A RAMBUNCTIOUS RAM.
The ram evidently saw the other car coming; it tried to leap out but its hoofs were jammed in the spokes of the steering wheel. Before Jake could pick himself up from the floor of the front part of the car there came a loud shriek from the runabout. It was echoed by Miss Prescott and The Wren.
Cras.h.!.+
The two cars came together with a fearful jolt.
The eyes of the young aviators aloft were fixed on the scene. They saw the large car strike the runabout and crumple its engine hood. Peggy gave a scream.
The ram, jolted out of its seat by the force of the collision, fell out to one side, allowing Jake to resume control of the wheel. But the runabout! It was ditched, its unfortunate occupant being pitched headlong into a ditch at the side of the road.
Down swept the aeroplanes, and there was a wild rush to the rescue.
Peggy, Jess and Bess ran to the side of the injured occupant of the strange runabout. The boys divided themselves, attending to everything.
"Roy! Roy! hurry, she's unconscious!"
The cry came from Peggy as she rushed to the side of the young motorist.
Roy was not far off, and, at his sister's cry, he hastened to her side.
Peggy had the girl's head in her lap.
"Get water!" she cried.
But Jimsy was already on hand with a collapsible aluminum cup full of water from a near by spring.
"Oh, the poor dear," sighed Peggy, "to think that our fun should have--"
The strange girl opened her eyes.
"Who are you?" she exclaimed. "Where is my machine?"
"Never mind for a minute," spoke Peggy, seeing that Jimsy and Jake were trying to drag the machine out of the ditch, "we'll fix it, never fear."
"Oh, my head!" groaned the girl.
"That pesky ram," exploded Roy angrily; "let me help you up into the road, you'll be more comfortable."
"Oh, thank you, I can stand," came faintly from the injured girl.
"I--am--much better now. What happened?"
"Why a sort of volunteer driver was experimenting with our car, and I guess he made a mistake in driving," smilingly explained Roy.
"Oh, that ram!" cried the girl half hysterically. "I thought I had a nightmare at first."
"I don't blame you," smiled Peggy, "seeing a ram driving a motor car is apt to give one such ideas."
"Are you really better?" asked Jess sympathetically as she came up.
"Peggy, get my smelling salts out of the traveling bag!" cried Miss Prescott anxiously.
The accident had disturbed her sadly. The only unperturbed one in the party was Jake. He took things with philosophical calm.
"Knew more trouble was comin'," said he, and contented himself by dismissing the situation with that.
"I've got good news for you," said Jimsy, coming up; "your car isn't hurt a bit."
"Oh, good!" cried the girl, clasping her hands and flus.h.i.+ng. Her veil was raised now and they saw that she was very blonde, very pretty and just now very pale.
"My, what a rambunctious ram!" punned Roy; "he ramified all over, didn't he?"
"Gracious, for a time I thought I was seeing things!" gasped the girl, who was seated on a tufted hummock of gra.s.s at the side of the road.
"And then you felt them," laughed Jimsy. "That's the way such things run."
They all laughed. Soon after, Roy, Jimsy and Jake dragged the small runabout out of the ditch. In the meantime Peggy had introduced herself and Jess to the young girl. The latter's name was Lavinia Nesbitt.
She lived not far from the scene of the accident, and had been taking a jaunt in her machine.
The runabout had been rescued, and the whole party introduced and talking merrily when Jess set up a cry.
"Goodness! here comes that ram again!"
Down the road, with the two sheep drivers at its heels, the beast was indeed coming. It advanced at a hard gallop, with head lowered and formidable horns ready for a charge, into the midst of the group.
"Look out for him!" yelled the sheep herders.
They needed no second injunction. All skipped adroitly out of the path of the oncoming beast, which was rus.h.i.+ng on like a whirlwind. Jimsy proved equal to the emergency. From his aeroplane he took the rope which had already done good service in rescuing the _Golden b.u.t.terfly_ from the pond. He formed it into a loop--the lariat of the Western plains.
"Now we've got him!" he exclaimed; "that is, if we are careful. But watch out!"
"No danger of that," responded Peggy, from the vantage of the tonneau of the car; "but how are you going to rope him?"
"Watch!"