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"And I am not related to Mr. Gordon," explained Nancy, wis.h.i.+ng to be perfectly open and aboveboard. "But Mr. Gordon has always looked after me and--and I didn't know but I might be of some use to him if he is alone and injured."
"Ahem!" returned the Senator, grimly. "I do not know that I quite approve. I cannot understand what your princ.i.p.al was thinking of when she let you two girls come off alone on such an errand. But----Ahem! I will see you when we arrive at Cincinnati."
Jennie had not said a word during this conversation. She waited until Senator Montgomery had gone along the aisle and was out of earshot. Then she seized Nancy's arm suddenly.
"I've got it!" she whispered.
"Ouch! Got what?" demanded Nancy, striving to free her arm.
"I see it all!"
"Then let me see a little of it, Jennie. And, goodness me, dear! don't pinch so. What _do_ you mean?"
"Do you know who that man is?" demanded Jennie, in an awed whisper.
"Of course. He's Grace Montgomery's father."
"Yes!" cried Jennie, impatiently. "But who else?"
"Why--why----"
"I don't understand why we did not see it before!" exclaimed Jennie, mysteriously. "At any rate _you_ ought to have remembered it when Scorch was talking that day."
"I really wish you would say what you mean, Jen," said her chum.
"That man--that Senator Montgomery--who knows your Mr. Gordon so well and says he is hurrying to him now----"
"Well?" asked the wide-eyed Nancy.
"That fellow is the man in gray of whom Scorch told us so long ago.
Don't you remember? The man who came to Mr. Gordon and seemed to object because he had sent you to school at Pinewood Hall?"
Nancy was stricken dumb for the moment. Scorch's description of the mysterious man who had left Mr. Gordon in tears came back to her mind now, clearly.
"The man in gray," repeated Jennie, nodding her curly head vigorously.
CHAPTER XXVIII
SCORCH "ON THE JOB"
"Oh, dear! Do you suppose that can be possible?" Nancy demanded, finally.
"You know I'm right," Jennie returned, firmly.
"It--it might be another man."
"Two big men, who look important, and who both dress so peculiarly?"
"We-ell!"
"It's he, all right," declared Jennie, vigorously. "And he knows as much about you as Gordon does."
"Do you think so?"
"But he isn't as kindly-intentioned toward you as even Old Gordon. I know by the look he gave you as he went away."
"But Grace Montgomery's father!" gasped Nancy.
"Maybe you're related to Grace," ventured Jennie, with a sudden chuckle.
"And after all the stuff she's said about you 'round Pinewood, too!"
"Oh, I hope not!" exclaimed Nancy.
"Don't want Grace for a relation--eh?"
"Dear, me! No!" cried Nancy, quite honestly.
This amused Jennie immensely; but soon she became more serious and the two girls discussed the possibilities of the matter most of the way to Cincinnati.
Mr. Montgomery did not come back to them. They were free, therefore, to wonder what he would do when they reached the city.
"Perhaps he won't want you to see Mr. Gordon," suggested Jennie.
"But why?"
"Why is he so much interested in your affairs?"
"Do we know that he _is_?" demanded Nancy.
"Well! Scorch heard him----"
"If it really was the same man."
"Dear me!" said Jennie, wearily. "You are such a Doubting Tomaso----"
"I don't believe that's the feminine form of 'Thomas,'" chuckled Nancy.
"I don't care. It's as plain as the nose on your face----"
"Now, don't get too personal," begged Nancy, rubbing her nasal organ.
"Let's wait and see."
"But he may try to stop us, I tell you."
"Not likely. And why?"