The fact that Audrey Valentine, conspicuous member of a conspicuous

social group that she was, had been working in the machine-shop of

the Spencer munitions works at the time of the explosion was in itself

sufficient to rouse the greatest interest. When a young reporter,

gathering human-interest stories about the event from the pitiful

wreckage in the hospitals, happened on Clare Gould, he got a

feature-story for the Sunday edition that made Audrey's own world,

reading it in bed or over its exquisite breakfast-tables, gasp with

amazement.

For, following up Clare's story, he found that Audrey had done much

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more than run toward the telephone. She had reached it, had found the

operator gone, and had succeeded, before the roof fell in on her, in

calling the fire department and in sending in a general alarm to all the

hospitals.

The reporter found the night operator who had received the message. He

got a photograph of her, too, and, from the society file, an old one

of Audrey, very delicate and audacious, and not greatly resembling

the young woman who lay in her bed and read the article aloud, between

dismay and laughter, to old Terry Mackenzie.

"Good heavens, Terry," she said. "Listen! I had heard the explosion,

but did not of course know what it was. And then I got a signal, and

it was the Spencer plant. A sweet Southern voice said, very calmly,

'Operator, this is important. Listen carefully. There has been an

explosion at the Spencer plant and the ruins are on fire. There will

probably be more explosions in a minute. Send in a general fire-alarm,

and then get all the ambulances and doctors--' Then there was another

explosion, and their lines went out of commission. I am glad she is not

dead. She certainly had her nerve."

"Fame at last, Audrey!" said old Terry, very gently.

"It's shameless!" But she was a little pleased, nevertheless. Not at the

publicity. That was familiar enough. But that, when her big moment came,

she had met it squarely.

Terry was striding about the room. His visits were always rather

cyclonic. He moved from chair to chair, leaving about each one an

encircling ring of cigaret ashes, and carefully inspecting each new vase

of flowers. He stopped in front of a basket of exquisite small orchids.

"Who sent this?" he demanded.

"Rodney Page. Doesn't it look like him?"

He turned and stared at her.

"What's come over Clayton Spencer? Is he blind?"

"Blind?"

"About Rodney. He's head over heels in love with Natalie Spencer, God

alone knows why."