"We haven't run away."
"No? Well, I thought mebbe youse did," said the flower-seller, grinning
impishly. "I see a plenty of 'em comin' off the trains, I do."
"Runaway girls?" cried Nan,
"They don't tell me they have run away. But they are all greenies--just
as green as grass," this shrewd child of the street declared.
"Have you seen any girls lately who have come to the city to be picture
actresses?" Nan asked with sudden eagerness.
"Yep," was the reply.
"Sure?" cried Bess. "You don't mean it!"
"Yes, I do. Two girls bigger'n you. Le's see--it was last Friday."
"The second day of the big blizzard?" cried Nan.
"That's the very day," agreed Bess. "It's when Sallie and Celia would
have got here if they _were_ coming to Chicago."
"Hi!" exclaimed the flower girl. "What's you talkin' about? Who's Sallie
and Celia?"
"Girls whom we think came to the city the other day just as you said,"
Nan explained. "They have run away to be moving picture actresses."
"Hi!" exclaimed the flower-seller again. "What sort o' lookin' girls?"
"Why--I don't know exactly," confessed Nan. "Do we, Bess? Mrs. Morton
said Sallie took with her those photographs that were taken while the
girls were playing as extras in 'A Rural Beauty.'"
"That's it!" suddenly interrupted the flower-girl.
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