<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br/> <small>A Heroine's Come-Down</small></h2>
<p class='drop-cap'>MABEL, with the Janitor and four pursuing
firemen at her reckless heels,
had made a bold dash through the long corridor
that led to Miss Bonner's room. Owing
to a strong upward draft, there was
surprisingly little smoke in this corridor and
none at all in Miss Bonner's distant corner.</p>
<p>Still hotly pursued, Mabel, who had the
advantage of knowing exactly whither she
was bound, darted down the narrow aisle,
reached into her desk, and, unselfishly passing
by sundry dearly loved treasures of her
own, seized the fat brown purse. Such joy
to find it when so many of the desks had
been stripped of their contents!</p>
<p>She was none too soon, for the next moment
the Janitor's hands had closed upon
her and, plump as she was, the sturdy fellow
easily carried her out of the room, although
Mabel protested crossly that she would
much rather walk. In this uncomfortable
fashion they reached the corridor.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/i0132.jpg" width-obs="310" height-obs="500" alt="Man carrying girl under his arm" /> <div class="caption">THE STURDY FELLOW CARRIED HER OUT OF THE ROOM.</div>
</div>
<p>"Not that way—not that way!" shouted
the firemen, pointing towards a glowing,
spreading patch on the ceiling of the main
hall. "It's breaking through—you can't
reach the door! It's not safe at that end."</p>
<p>"Down to the basement!" shouted the
Janitor, nodding toward a narrow doorway,
through which the men promptly vanished.</p>
<p>Then, seemingly, a new thought assailed
the Janitor.</p>
<p>"Open door number twelve," he shouted
after the men.</p>
<p>Then, hurriedly pushing up a sliding door
at the safest end of the hall and murmuring
"Quicker this way," the Janitor unceremoniously
lifted Mabel and dropped her
down the big dust-chute.</p>
<p>What a place for a heroine! In spite of
her surprise, Mabel felt deeply mortified. It
was humiliating enough for a would-be
rescuer to be rescued; but to be dropped
down a horrid, stuffy dust-chute and to land
with a queer, springy thud on a pile of sliding
stuff—the contents of a dozen or more
waste-baskets and the results of innumerable
sweepings—was worse.</p>
<p>In a very few seconds, the hasty Janitor
had opened the lower door of the chute and,
with the firemen standing by, was calmly
hauling her out by her feet—Oh! She could
<i>never</i> tell that part of it.</p>
<p>And then, as if that were not bad enough,
that inconsiderate Janitor seized her by the
elbow and hurried her right into the coal bin,
forced her to march over eighty tons of
black, dusty, sliding coal and finally compelled
her to crawl—yes, <i>crawl</i>—out of a
small basement window on the safest side of
the building. The only explanation that the
rescuer vouchsafed was a gruff statement
that the fire was "More to the other end"
and that short-cuts saved time. Mabel tried
to tell him what <i>she</i> thought about it, but the
Janitor seemed too excited to listen.</p>
<p>Of course, by this time, the Bennetts, the
Cottagers, the firemen, the Janitor's wife
and most of the bystanders were in a perfectly
dreadful state of mind; for the coal-hole
window was not on their side of the
building—Mabel was glad of that—so none
of her friends witnessed her exit. The
Cottagers, in particular, were clutching each
other and fairly quaking with fear when a
familiar voice behind them panted breathlessly:</p>
<p>"I saved it, girls."</p>
<p>Jean, Marjory and Bettie wheeled as one
girl. It was certainly Mabel's voice, the
shape and size were Mabel's, but the
color——</p>
<p>"Oh!" cried Jean, in a horrified tone.
"Are you <i>burned</i>? Are you all burned up
to a crisp?"</p>
<p>But thoughtful Bettie, after one searching
look to make certain that it really was
Mabel, had not stopped to ask questions,
nor to hear them answered. She remembered
that the Bennetts were still anxious
concerning their missing daughter, and
straightway flew to relieve their minds.</p>
<p>"She's safe, Mabel's safe," she shouted,
running to the Bennetts, to Mr. Black, to
the Tuckers, to all Mabel's friends, and completely
forgetting her own usual shyness.
"Yes, she's all safe. No, not burned; just
scorched, I guess."</p>
<p>Then everybody crowded around Mabel.
Mrs. Bennett was about to kiss her, but
desisted just in time.</p>
<p>"Mabel!" she cried, as Jean had done.
"Are you burned?"</p>
<p>"No," mumbled Mabel, indignantly.
"I'm not even singed. I—I just came out
through the coal hole, but you needn't tell.
That horrid Janitor dragged me out over a
whole mountain of coal."</p>
<p>"Thank Heaven!" breathed Mrs. Bennett.</p>
<p></p>
<p>"Huh!" snorted Mabel, "that's a mighty
queer thing to thank Heaven for, when it was
only last night that I had a perfectly good
bath. That's the meanest Janitor——"</p>
<p>"Where is he?" demanded Dr. Bennett,
eagerly. "I must thank him."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Bennett, "I must thank
him too."</p>
<p>"And I," said Dr. Tucker, "should like
to shake hands with him."</p>
<p>And would you believe it! Not a soul had
a word of praise for Mabel's bravery. Not
a person commended her for saving that
precious purse. Instead, the local paper
devoted a whole column to lauding the
prompt action of that sickening Janitor, Dr.
Bennett gave him a splendid gold watch, the
School Board recommended him for a
Carnegie medal—all because of the dust-chute.</p>
<p>"Don't let me hear any more," Dr. Bennett
said that night, "about that miserable
two dollars and forty-seven cents. I'd
rather give you two hundred and forty-seven
dollars than have you take such risks."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," rejoined Mabel, meekly.
"But you didn't say anything like that day
before yesterday when I asked for three
more cents to make it an even two-fifty. I
must say I don't understand grown folks."</p>
<p>"Mabel, you go—go take that bath. And
when you're clean enough to kiss, come back
and say good-night."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," sighed Mabel, "but I <i>do</i> wish
I <i>could</i> raise three more cents."</p>
<p>Mr. Bennett fished two quarters and three
pennies from his pocket and handed them to
Mabel.</p>
<p>"There," said he, "you have an even
three dollars, but I hope you won't consider
it necessary to rescue them in case of any
more fires."</p>
<p>Fortunately, there were no more fires;
but the original one made up for this lack by
lasting for an astonishing length of time.
For seven days the school building continued
to burn in a safe but expensive manner;
for the eighty tons of coal over which
Mabel had walked so unwillingly had caught
fire late in the afternoon and had burned
steadily until entirely reduced to ashes. It
was a strange, uncanny sight after dark to
see the mighty ruin still lighted by a fitful
glare from within. Only the four walls,
the bare outer shell of the huge structure,
remained. You see, all the rest of it had
been wood—and steam pipes. Every splinter
of wood was gone; but the pipes, and
there seemed to be miles of them, were
twisted like mighty serpents. They filled
the cellar and seemed fairly to writhe in the
scarlet glow. It made one think of dragons
and volcanoes and things like that; and
caused creepy feelings in one's spine.</p>
<p>Even the dust-chute was gone. Mabel
was glad of that. She hated to think of the
Janitor proudly pointing it out to visitors
and saying:</p>
<p>"I once dropped a girl down there."</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p></p>
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