[whispering] I know that, so be quiet.
You're such a ninny.
*Nancy Stratemeyer was the precocious daughter of author Edward Stratemeyer.
Nancy Stratemeyer was born between January and February 1900[1] as the daugther of Edward Stratemeyer, author of Tom Swift and Nancy Drew.[2] When the Joneses returned to Princeton in October 1914, Indiana Jones attended junior high school[3] and eventually started dating Nancy,[2] who became his girlfriend. Invisioning their future together, they planned to have two children, Henry Jones III and Sally; while Nancy planned to go studying at maybe Radcliffe or Vassar.[4]
n February 1916, in occasion of the upcoming[2] Valentine Dance[4] junior prom, Indiana was going to borrow Mr. Stratemeyer’s electric Bugatti car to take Nancy. As the car needed a new generator. Indy took it to John Thompson at Edison Laboratories in West Orange, N.J. Important plans for a long-lasting, powerful battery were stolen alongside the Bugatti generator, forcing Indy and Nancy to search for it. At first, German spies are suspected, but they discovered that Thompson was involved, backed by a big oil company. They managed to retake the generator and to fix the car. At the prom Indy and Nancy arrived on the Bugatti in triumph, much to the consternation of his rival Butch.[2]
On March 1916, one day before departing for New Mexico, Indiana Jones revealed to Nancy that he was going to be away for the next couple weeks for the spring break.[5] On March 9 Nancy sent a letter to Indy.[6]
Despite promising to see each other after, Nancy lost touch with Indy shortly,[5] when the young adventurer quit high school to briefly participate in the Mexican Revolution then left for Europe[7] to enlist in the Belgian army and fight in World War I.[8] Indy himself met and dated several women during his war years.[8][9][10]
Back at Princeton, Nancy eventually warmed up to Butch[3] and they were married in June 1917.[3] By September 1919 they had a son. Around that time, Jones returned and the first person he encountered was Stratemeyer herself, from whom he discovered that in his absence she had married his old rival and became a mother.[11]*