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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Winona of the Camp Fire
+
+Author: Margaret Widdemer
+
+Release Date: August 26, 2011 [EBook #37207]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THEY DESCENDED IN A BODY ON ADELAIDE’S TENT _Page 125_]
+
+
+
+
+ WINONA OF THE
+ CAMP FIRE
+
+ By MARGARET WIDDEMER
+
+ Author of
+ “Winona of Camp Karonya,” “Winona’s War
+ Farm,” “Winona’s Way.”
+
+ A. L. BURT COMPANY
+ Publishers—New York
+
+ _Published by arrangement with J. B. Lippincott Company_
+
+ Printed in U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ONE
+
+
+The room they called the Den in Winnie Merriam’s house was dark, except
+for the leaping wood-fire in the big stone fireplace. Around the fire
+sat and lay five girls. They had been toasting marshmallows, but they
+were past the point where you eat the toasted ones with pleasure, or
+even steal the raw ones—which don’t taste burnt—to eat
+surreptitiously.
+
+“Helen Bryan, you’ve been feeding Puppums all your marshmallows for the
+last ten minutes,” accused Winnie, sitting up. She had been draping
+herself along a pile of cushions for the last fifteen minutes—thinking,
+evidently, for she had been quiet—a very unusual thing for chattering
+Winnie.
+
+Winnie Merriam was fourteen, but people usually took her for a year
+older, because of her slim height. She had big blue eyes in a face that
+was not regularly pretty, perhaps, but so gay and pink-cheeked and
+quick-smiling that people always _said_ she was pretty—which does quite
+as well.
+
+Her chum, Helen, defiantly fed a last marshmallow to the fat
+near-fox-terrier in the centre of the circle, who didn’t particularly
+seem to want it.
+
+“I’ve got to be polite to my hostess’s dog, haven’t I?” she retorted.
+“And he asked for them so pathetically!”
+
+“I expect the poor old pup will look more pathetic this time to-morrow,”
+said Winnie. “He’ll probably look like Buster Brown’s Tige in the last
+pictures—both paws up over his aching head. Then you’ll have to come
+back here and hold ice on his fevered brow, won’t she, Puppums?”
+
+“Or yours, maybe,” suggested Marie Hunter, the quiet brown girl in the
+corner. “What’s the matter, Win? You haven’t said a word for ages. I’ve
+been watching you.”
+
+“I’ve been _thinking_!” explained Winnie, nodding her curly brown head
+with dignity.
+
+“For the first time?” suggested Helen. “Don’t do it if it hurts, honey.”
+
+“No,” said Winnie placidly, “I’ve often been known to do it.”
+
+“Well, what were you thinking?” asked Edith Hillis, lifting her yellow
+curls from Marie’s lap. Edith was the fluffy member of the crowd, small
+for her age, yellow-haired and blue-eyed and rather too much dressed.
+She was supposed to care more for her complexion than for anything else
+on earth except Marie Hunter, but she was as sweet-tempered as she could
+be, and everybody liked her. “You looked as if you were thinking about
+something awfully interesting.”
+
+“Well,” said Winnie slowly, “I was thinking about _us_. We know each
+other very, very well, and go together, and have gorgeous times—I was
+thinking that it would be nice if we made ourselves into a club, or some
+sort of a society.”
+
+“Oh, say! That’s a perfectly gorgeous idea!” exclaimed chubby,
+red-haired Louise Lane, from behind Helen. “I vote we _be_ a club, right
+away!”
+
+“But is five enough?” asked Marie doubtfully. Marie was always the one
+who thought of things. She was a good deal of a bookworm, and did a
+great deal of beautiful embroidery, and never said much. But she was the
+one the girls were apt to ask advice of if they needed it badly. She was
+nearly a year older than Winnie and Edith. Louise wasn’t quite fourteen,
+and Helen would be fifteen in two months.
+
+“I think five’s plenty,” said Louise.
+
+“I don’t, exactly,” demurred Winnie. “Seems to me there ought to be
+seven or eight anyway, or we’d be like an army all major-generals.”
+
+“All right,” came from Helen sleepily. “But that can wait. I think the
+thing to make up our minds about first is—what would it do if it was a
+club? I mean clubs have to have some object.”
+
+“Why!” exclaimed Winnie blankly, “I never thought of that!”
+
+“Well,” still opposed Louise, “I don’t see why we have to have an
+object. Just meet, and have a president and secretary and things, and
+enjoy ourselves.”
+
+“What about an embroidery club?” suggested Edith. “Marie and I like to
+embroider.”
+
+“I _don’t_,” said Louise flatly.
+
+“Nannie was telling me about a walking-club she belonged to,” Helen
+suggested pacifically.
+
+Nannie was Helen’s step-mother—not at all like the step-mothers in the
+fairy-tales, but a pretty, gay woman of about twenty-eight, who was
+great friends with her step-daughter and the step-daughter’s chums.
+
+“A hiking-club?” asked Winnie. “That would be fun. Why couldn’t we
+combine both those things in one?”
+
+“Lovely!” jeered Louise. “I can see myself trotting along up a mountain,
+embroidering as I go!”
+
+“Listen to Louise being sarcastic!” said Helen. “I think the idea of
+combining two or three things is a splendid one.”
+
+“What’s splendid?” asked a bright voice from the darkness at the other
+end of the room.
+
+“Oh, are you there, Nannie?” called Helen. “We’re planning a club—a
+very fine combination club where you do everything.”
+
+“It sounds like a Camp Fire,” said Nannie. “Your father’s downstairs,
+Helen. I ran up to tell you that we’re ready to go whenever you are.”
+
+“Oh, not yet, please!” begged Winnie. “What is a Camp Fire, Mrs. Bryan?
+Do come sit down by us, and have some marshmallows.”
+
+“It corresponds to the Boy Scouts,” Mrs. Bryan explained, dropping down
+among the girls, “and it includes doing about everything there is to do.
+It’s national, though, and you’re affiliated with headquarters.”
+
+[Illustration: THEY MADE HER TELL THEM ALL SHE KNEW ABOUT CAMP FIRES]
+
+“Regular dues and meetings?” asked Helen, pricking up her ears. “Oh,
+stay here, Nannie, and tell us all about it!”
+
+They surrounded Mrs. Bryan, and made her tell them all she knew about
+Camp Fires, which was a good deal.
+
+“I like it!” announced Louise when Mrs. Bryan was done. “Me be heap big
+chiefess—wahoo-oo!”
+
+She jumped up as she spoke and waved Helen’s best hat above her head for
+a hatchet.
+
+“Oh, my hat!” cried Helen, making a wild dive for it. Puppums thought it
+was all a game for his special benefit, and dived after them—and the
+meeting broke up in disorder. But not before the girls had decided to
+_be_ a Camp Fire, and made Mrs. Bryan promise to act as their Guardian.
+
+Winnie, after the girls had gone, returned alone to the fire, and sat
+down by it, thinking over the things she had been hearing.
+
+“It’s going to be heaps of fun,” was the first thing she thought, and
+then, “It’s going to take lots of time!”
+
+Then she got up and shook herself. “Anyway, I love it!” she decided.
+Then she put the lights out and went to bed.
+
+Helen Bryan was over early next morning.
+
+“Oh, Winnie!” she called up to her friend’s window.
+
+“Come on up!” called Winnie back. “I’ve just had my bath, but I haven’t
+finished dressing.”
+
+Helen came in by the open back door, spoke to Mrs. Merriam, who was
+getting breakfast, and tore up the stairs to Winnie’s room.
+
+“Oh, there’s such heaps to tell!” she announced before she was well
+inside the room. “Rings and bands and dresses and ceremonies
+and—everything! Only we will have to take more girls in. You have to
+have at least seven to start with.”
+
+Helen stopped for lack of breath, and dropped on the bed. Winnie, who
+was doing her hair before the mirror, turned around.
+
+“It’s like the Boy Scouts, only it’s girls,” she decided thoughtfully.
+“Helen, I don’t see why we can’t have just as good times as they do.
+Tom’s always telling about the glorious times his patrol had last
+summer, camping up near Wampoag. I don’t see why we shouldn’t go
+camping, too, and have heaps of fun!”
+
+“Why, of course we can!” agreed Helen. “None of your mothers will mind
+if Nannie goes along, and she’ll have to if she’s Guardian.”
+
+“Come on down and have breakfast with us,” invited Winnie, straightening
+up from her last shoe-lace. “You haven’t told me half the things there
+are to tell.”
+
+“Well, I’ve had breakfast,” said Helen, “but——”
+
+“Oh, you can eat some more,” insisted Winnie. “We’re going to have
+flapjacks and maple syrup.”
+
+“Well, all right,” said Helen, weakening. Flapjacks and maple syrup did
+sound good. So they went down together to the breakfast table.
+
+Winnie’s family, her father and mother and her brother Tom, and
+eight-year-old Florence, had to be told all about it.
+
+“Can’t I be a Fire Camp Girl, too?” demanded Florence on the spot.
+
+“I don’t know yet,” said Helen. “We’ll have to find out.”
+
+“I will be, whether you find out or not,” said Florence, who was a
+determined young person, and something of a tagger.
+
+“Well, thank goodness, to-day’s Saturday,” and Winnie changed the
+subject cheerfully. “We have all day to find out in, and there’s
+scarcely any home-work to do. Have you any, Helen?”
+
+“Only a little history,” said Helen, “and I can do that to-night.”
+
+“Such heaps of good times coming!” sang Winnie rapturously as she sprang
+up from the table, to get a fresh supply of flapjacks.
+
+“If you have as good a time as the Scouts do you’ll have fun, all
+right,” said Tom. “But I don’t see how you can—just girls!”
+
+Helen laughed, but his sister flew up.
+
+“We can, and better, too,” she flashed. “Just you wait and see!”
+
+“Seeing’s believing,” said Tom mischievously, passing his plate for the
+flapjacks as Winnie brought in the heaping plate that had been keeping
+hot in the oven.
+
+“That’s true,” said his father gravely, putting a pile of buttered
+quarter-sections on his son’s plate. “At least, nobody who hadn’t seen
+it would believe you could eat so many flapjacks and not explode!”
+
+Everyone laughed; but Tom calmly went on eating.
+
+“They’re awfully good, mother,” he said. “I’ll tell you, Winnie, if you
+could learn to make as good flapjacks as mother with your Fire Camping,
+as Florence calls it, you’d be doing something worth while.”
+
+“Oh, I don’t suppose there’s anything about flapjacks in it—do you
+think there could be, Helen?” asked Winnie.
+
+Mrs. Merriam laughed a little.
+
+“Well, do you know, my dears,” she said, “I have a strange feeling that
+there _is!_”
+
+“I don’t see how,” doubted Winona. “But maybe, if I get time, Tom, I’ll
+learn how to make them. Come on, Helen, let’s go back to Nannie and ask
+her all the questions we can think of.”
+
+The two girls ran out hand-in-hand.
+
+“Are there flapjacks in it, mother?” asked little Florence.
+
+Mrs. Merriam laughed again as she began to clear the table.
+
+“There are, and a great deal besides, or I’m much mistaken, dear!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWO
+
+
+Within the next week Mrs. Bryan had sent for and filled out and returned
+the application blanks, and now the girls were merely waiting for the
+return of the blanks and their charter. Meanwhile, out of school hours,
+Winnie helped her mother about the house.
+
+“I mayn’t have time for much housework when I belong to the Camp Fire,”
+she thought, “and I’d better do all I can now.”
+
+So she learned a good deal about cooking, and helped regularly with the
+dishes—and with the supper-getting and tidying. Finally—it was almost
+the end of May by then—the charter came, and material for the
+ceremonial dresses, and various other things; and the girls held their
+first Camp Fire. It was at Winnie’s house, with its big fireplace, that
+they had it. Mrs. Bryan invited two other girls to join, to make up the
+number; Dorothy Gray and Adelaide Hughes. Dorothy the girls all knew and
+liked—she was everybody’s choice for one of the vacant places—but
+nobody knew much about Adelaide, who was a newcomer in town, except that
+she had no mother, and lived with her father and her younger brother and
+little sister in one of the few apartment-houses that were beginning to
+be put up in the little town where the girls all lived. She was a quiet,
+rather sullen girl, and she dressed badly—almost untidily. The girls
+were surprised at her joining, for she seemed to keep away from people
+almost as if she did it on purpose. But Mrs. Bryan wanted her in, and
+the girls would any of them have done anything for Mrs. Bryan. Only they
+confided to each other that they hoped Adelaide wouldn’t spoil the fun.
+
+As each girl came, the night of the first meeting, she was taken, not
+into the living-room, but to a little room beside it, and asked to wait
+there for the rest. Edith Hillis was the last to come, and then they
+were summoned into the other room. It was lighted only by the blaze of
+the fire.
+
+Helen explained things to the girls, as her step-mother had explained to
+her.
+
+“When the drum begins to beat we are to come in, Indian file,” she
+reminded them, as a soft, measured beat began to be heard in the next
+room.
+
+Putting herself at the head of the line, she led the seven girls into
+the room to the rhythmic beating. They circled around it once, then sat
+down in a ring about the fireplace, and looked at Mrs. Bryan with
+admiration.
+
+She had on a straight brownish gown, with deep fringes at its bottom.
+She sat on the floor by a curious drum, of a sort most of them had never
+even seen pictures of. She was beating it softly, Indian fashion, with
+her closed fist.
+
+“Welcome,” she spoke clearly, rising as the girls came to a halt around
+her. “Have you come desiring to make a Camp Fire and tend it?”
+
+“Yes,” answered all the girls. It was then that they dropped into their
+places, in a semi-circle around the fire and their Guardian.
+
+Then each of the girls, in turn, rose and repeated her wish to become a
+Camp Fire Girl, and follow the Law of the Fire. When they had all
+finished Mrs. Bryan leaned back in her corner, and talked to them about
+the Law—what each of the seven parts of it meant.
+
+“Why—it covers everything!” said Winnie.
+
+“It certainly does!” seconded Louise. “All I have to do, it seems to me,
+is to go on living, and I’ll acquire unnumbered honor beads.”
+
+“You may think so,” Helen warned her, “but you’ll find there’s plenty to
+learn about it. I’ve been studying it out.”
+
+“Oh, that’s all right!” said Louise airily. She caught up the manual as
+she spoke, and ran her eye down the list of honors by the firelight.
+“Wash and iron a shirtwaist—I love to wash things. Make a bed for two
+months—I’d be hung with beads if I had one for every two months I’ve
+made my bed. Abstain from gum, candy, ice-cream—oh, good gracious!”
+
+“That counts as much as the rest,” said Winnie mischievously, “and think
+how good it will be for you!”
+
+“I’ll get thin,” Louise remarked thoughtfully. “What are you going to
+start with, Winnie?”
+
+“Health-craft, I think.” Winona had taken the book in her turn, and was
+looking through the pages. “I’ve always wanted to learn horseback
+riding, and I think perhaps father’ll let me, now it’s in a book as
+something you ought to do.” Then she remembered what her brother had
+said about the flapjacks, and she shook her head as she passed on the
+book. “No,” she corrected herself, “I don’t believe that will be the
+first thing I’ll do. I think I need home-craft quite as much as I do
+learning to ride.”
+
+“What about you, Helen?” asked Louise.
+
+“Why, clay-modelling and brass-work, or things like that,” was the
+prompt answer. “I want to take up art-craft when I get older, and I
+might as well begin.”
+
+“Can you clay-model in camp?” asked Louise.
+
+“Just as well as you can make a shirtwaist,” replied Helen, unruffled.
+
+“I like the hand-crafts, too,” said Edith Hillis. “I think I shall
+specialize on fancy-work.”
+
+“Always a perfect lady!” teased Louise, who was something of a tomboy,
+and frankly thought it was silly of Edith to refuse to get her hair wet
+in the swimming-pool, and wear veils for her complexion.
+
+The other three girls, Marie Hunter and Dorothy Gray and Adelaide
+Hughes, did not say what honors they were going to work for. Everybody
+was pretty sure that Marie was going to write a play, and Dorothy did
+beautiful needle-work. But as for Adelaide, silent in her place, nobody
+could guess.
+
+“You mustn’t any of you forget that there’s sewing to do, right now,”
+warned Mrs. Bryan. “And I want all of you to look at my dress, because
+each of you will have to make one like it.”
+
+She stood up again, and they all examined the straight khaki dress with
+its leather fringes.
+
+“That won’t be especially hard to make,” concluded Marie, who did most
+of her own sewing. “There’s a pattern, isn’t there, Mrs. Bryan?”
+
+“Oh, yes, and I have it. And there’s one more thing, girls—two, rather.
+We must each choose a name, and a symbol to go with the name. Then we
+have to name the Camp Fire.”
+
+“A name—how do you mean?” asked Winnie.
+
+“I mean that, of course, our Camp Fire has to be called something.
+Beside that, so does each Camp Fire Girl. I like birds and bird-study,
+so I am going to call myself ‘Opeechee,’ the Robin, and take a pair of
+spread wings for my symbol. It’s to put on one’s personal belongings
+like a crest—see? as I have it on this pillow-top.”
+
+The girls clustered around her to see the symbol, stencilled on the
+pillow-cover on her lap. She told them she was going to burn it on her
+shirtwaist box as well, and showed them where she had woven it into her
+headband, a gorgeous thing of brown and orange-red beads.
+
+“It would go on a paddle-blade, too,” said Helen thoughtfully.
+
+“It shall on mine to-morrow,” declared Marie. “That is, if I’ve thought
+of a symbol by then,” she added prudently.
+
+“I think this new name idea is perfectly gorgeous!” cried Louise
+enthusiastically. “I’ve always hated my name—you’d expect a Louise to
+be tall and severe and haughty—and look at _me!_”
+
+She jumped up in the firelight and spread out her plump arms tragically.
+
+“We see you!” nodded Helen calmly, and Louise sat down again.
+
+“You’ll be glad you have red hair when you’re grown up,” consoled Edith.
+“It’s supposed to be very beautiful.”
+
+“Well, it _isn’t_,” said Louise energetically, “with people always
+asking after the white horse. I wonder why red-haired girls and white
+horses are supposed to go together?”
+
+But nobody could tell her. They were all clustered about Mrs. Bryan and
+the manual, choosing names, and planning symbols, and you couldn’t hear
+yourself think. Winnie and Helen and Mrs. Bryan had planned to finish
+the evening by playing games, but all the girls were so busy talking
+that it was impossible to get a game in edgewise.
+
+Presently Mrs. Merriam and little Florence came in with cocoa and
+sandwiches. And then, at about ten-thirty, the meeting broke up, after
+planning a bacon-bat for the next Saturday.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Winnie Merriam sat, as she loved to sit, by the dying fire. Her mother
+began to clear away the dishes, but Winnie stopped her with:
+
+“Please wait a little while, and talk to me, mother. I haven’t had half
+enough sandwiches, and besides, the nicest part of a party is talking it
+over afterwards.”
+
+“Very well,” said Mrs. Merriam, sitting down across from her daughter
+and helping herself to something to eat. “I didn’t get much chance at
+the refreshments either, I was so busy helping you serve them. What was
+it you wanted to say particularly, dear?”
+
+“I wanted to ask you about my name, mother. I wasn’t christened
+‘Winnie,’ was I?”
+
+“Why, no, dear—you know that. You were christened ‘Winona,’ after your
+grandmother—only somehow, we never called you that.”
+
+“It’s a real Indian name, isn’t it?” asked Winnie.
+
+“It certainly is,” her mother assured her. “Why, dear, I’ve told you the
+story of it many a time.”
+
+“Not for a long time now,” persuaded her daughter. “I think I’ve
+forgotten some of it. Didn’t a real Indian give it to grandmother?”
+
+“The Indian didn’t exactly give it to her, it belonged to the Indian’s
+baby.”
+
+“Oh, tell me the story!” urged Florence sleepily. “I want to hear, too!”
+
+Mrs. Merriam made room for Florence in her lap, and went on above her
+with the sandwich and the story.
+
+“Your great-grandfather was an Indian missionary, and when he and your
+Great-grandmother Martin went out to live among the Indians, they took
+with them their little baby daughter, so young they had not named her
+yet. Well, one day, while your grandmother was sitting on the steps of
+the log house where they lived with her baby on her lap, a squaw came
+along with _her_ baby. She had it strapped to her back, the way they
+carry them, you know. She was a stranger, not one of the mission
+Indians, and oh, so tired and ragged and dusty!
+
+“Great-grandmother Martin couldn’t understand her language, but she
+beckoned her into the house and gave her food for herself and milk for
+the baby. And then, by signs, she asked the baby’s name. And the Indian
+woman said ‘Winona—papoose Winona—yes.’ It seemed she could speak a
+very little English. So then Great-grandmother Martin asked the woman
+what the name meant—for all Indian names have meanings, you know. But
+the woman hadn’t enough English words to answer her. So she got up from
+the floor where she had been sitting and took the bright steel
+bread-knife that lay where great-grandmother had been cutting bread for
+her. She held it in a ray of sunlight that crossed the room, and shook
+it so the light flashed and was reflected, bright and quivering, in the
+room.
+
+“‘That Winona!’ she explained.
+
+“After she was rested she wouldn’t stay. She went on her travels,
+wherever she was going,—great-grandmother never saw her again. But she
+didn’t forget the name, and as soon as she could she asked the Indian
+interpreter what ‘Winona’ really meant. He told her that it was the name
+of another tribe for ‘ray of light that sparkles,’ or ‘flashing ray of
+light.’
+
+“So Great-grandmother Martin named her own little girl Winona. The name
+was pretty, and the meaning was prettier still. And she grew up and
+married Grandfather Merriam—and when you came we named you for her.”
+
+“Then it really is a sure-enough Indian name,” said its owner. “And the
+meaning is lovely. ‘A ray of flashing light’—you couldn’t ask to be
+anything better than that, could you, mother? I believe if I can I shall
+keep my own name for the Camp Fire. It is prettier than anything I could
+make up or find.”
+
+“It certainly is,” said her mother.
+
+“Why didn’t I have a Nindian name, too?” clamored Florence aggrievedly,
+sitting up and rubbing her eyes.
+
+“Because your other grandmother didn’t,” said her mother, kissing her.
+“One Indian maiden in a family is enough. What names have the other
+girls chosen, Winnie?”
+
+Winona began to laugh.
+
+“Louise says she is going to call herself ‘Ishkoodah’—don’t you
+remember, in Hiawatha, ‘Ishkoodah, the Comet—Ishkoodah, with fiery
+tresses?’ she says she thinks she can make a lovely symbol out of it.
+It’s funny, but Louise is always doing funny things. I think she’s
+really in earnest about this. And Helen says she’s going to call herself
+‘Night-Star.’ We don’t know the Indian for that yet, but we’re going to
+hunt it up at the library. She thinks she will specialize on
+astronomy—learn what the constellations are, you know. I’d like to do
+that, too. All I know is the Big Dipper, and that the slanty W set up
+sidewise is Cassiopea’s Chair. I learned that from the little Storyland
+of Stars you gave me when I was seven.”
+
+“I want to know chairs, too,” said Florence drowsily.
+
+“All right, dear, you shall,” soothed Winona. Then she went on talking
+to her mother.
+
+“So all the girls said they’d take sky names, and we decided to call our
+camp by the Indian name for the sky, because we want to camp out as much
+as we can.”
+
+“I think that is a good idea,” said Mrs. Merriam.
+
+“It was mine,” said Winona. “But Mrs. Bryan remembered an Indian name
+for it—Karonya. We’re Camp Karonya—isn’t that pretty? And then Marie
+remembered the Indian name for South-Wind, one of them, Shawondassee,
+and took it. But the rest couldn’t think of Indian names, so we waited
+to hunt some.”
+
+“Do the names have to be Indian?”
+
+“Oh, no,” Winnie answered sleepily, “but it’s better.”
+
+“Come!” said her mother, setting Florence, who was fast asleep, on her
+feet. “We’d all better go to bed, or we’ll be too sleepy to go to church
+to-morrow.”
+
+“And the sooner I go to sleep the sooner next Saturday will come, as you
+used to say when I was a little girl,” added Winona. “Oh, I can scarcely
+wait to find out what a bacon-bat really is on its native heath—or
+anywhere, for that matter.”
+
+“Didn’t they tell you what it was?”
+
+“No—Marie is planning it, and she wouldn’t say, except that it would be
+heaps of fun, and I was to bring a dozen rolls and some salt and a
+jack-knife. I’ll have to borrow Tom’s. Good-night, mother dear.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THREE
+
+
+“Have you got everything, Winnie?” asked Helen anxiously, as they met
+half-way between Winnie’s gate and Helen’s, about ten o’clock on
+Saturday morning.
+
+“I think so,” answered Helen a little uncertainly. “Marie told me to
+bring a pound of bacon—that’s all. What are you bringing?”
+
+“Two dozen humble, necessary rolls,” said Winnie, “and salt. I had to
+buy a knife, because Tom lost his yesterday. He loses it regularly, once
+a week.”
+
+“Pity he picked out to-day,” commented Helen as they fell into step. “Do
+you suppose we’ll be late?”
+
+“Mercy, no!” said Winnie, “We’re more likely to be the first!”
+
+“We won’t be”—and Helen laughed—“Louise is always the earliest
+everywhere. She says she’s lost more perfectly good time being punctual
+than any other way she knows.”
+
+“Well, we’ll be ahead of Edith, anyway,” Winnie remarked cheerfully. She
+adjusted the two dozen rolls more easily, for that many rolls, when you
+have far to carry them, have a way of feeling lumpy.
+
+“It’s a good thing it isn’t far to the trolley!” said Helen. “I didn’t
+know how nubbly this bacon was going to be.”
+
+“So are my rolls! Let’s trade,” suggested Winnie brilliantly.
+
+“Almost human intelligence!” gibed Helen; so they traded, and each found
+her load much more comfortable than the one she’d had before—which says
+a good deal for the powers of imagination.
+
+“Don’t let’s sit up on the benches of that trolley-station—they’re the
+most uncomfortable things in town!” objected Winnie. “Come on, Helen.
+Let’s be real sports, and sit on the grass.”
+
+“I do believe we’re the first!” was Helen’s sole reply, as she eyed the
+little trolley-station worriedly.
+
+“Oh, we _can’t_ be,” said Winnie confidently, “unless Louise has died or
+gone West. If she’s in the land of the living I know she’s here. Once I
+asked the crowd over in the afternoon to make fudge, and she got there
+just as I was in the middle of sweeping out the kitchen, at one
+o’clock!”
+
+“You never told me about that!” reminded Helen interestedly. “What did
+you do?”
+
+Winona laughed. “Do! I didn’t have to do anything. Louise did the
+doing—she took the broom out of my hands, and sent me flying upstairs
+to dress, and did the sweeping herself! Oh, and there she is!
+Lou-i-ise!”
+
+“Here I am!” Louise answered placidly, rising up in her white blouse
+from the very centre of the field by the station, and looking, with the
+sun shining on her brilliant hair, like a large white blossom with a red
+centre. “I got here long ago. Come on over here on the grass. It’s
+horrid on the benches, and I’m making friends with the nicest little
+brown hoptoad.”
+
+“Ugh—no!” shuddered Helen, who did not care for hoptoads. “Here’s
+Nannie, with Adelaide and Dorothy.”
+
+So the girls ran over to meet their Guardian, and the hoptoad was
+averted. Just behind the newcomers arrived Marie and Edith, Marie
+dignified and neat, as usual, in her dark-blue sailor-suit, and Edith in
+a fluffy pink dress that did not look as if it could stand much
+strenuous picnicking.
+
+“Did you bring the rolls, Winnie?” called Marie.
+
+“Certainly I did, and Helen has the bacon.”
+
+“And I have the hard-boiled eggs,” said Louise gayly, “and here is the
+trolley—it sounds like a French lesson. We mount the trolley that we
+may go to the picnic. Come on, girls.”
+
+The girls were bound for a little wood, five miles out, where nearly
+everybody that went on picnics had them. They sat down on a rear seat in
+a giggling row, while Marie went ruthlessly on counting supplies.
+
+“Adelaide, did you bring condensed cream? And who was to bring
+cake—were you, Edith? Dorothy has knives and forks and a kettle.”
+
+“Cake?” from Edith blankly. “Why, no, Marie, I brought eggs. I thought
+you said to—I thought we were going to fry them with the bacon.”
+
+A howl of laughter went up, in which Edith joined in spite of herself.
+
+“How did you think we’d do it, dear?” Mrs. Bryan asked at last, trying
+to straighten her face.
+
+“That’s easy,” promised Louise cheerfully. “You just peel the eggs
+carefully, throw away the shell, poke the raw egg on the point of a
+stick, and toast it over the fire till it’s all gone.”
+
+Edith giggled. “Well, I don’t see how you could expect me to get it
+straight over the ’phone, anyway. If I’d known you expected me to bring
+a cake—I don’t believe it was me you—ow!”
+
+For a lurch of the car had sent the satchel in which Dorothy had the
+knives and forks smashing against the raw eggs they had been talking
+about; and as Stevenson said of the cow when they asked him the immortal
+question about the cow meeting the locomotive—it was “so much the worse
+for the eggs.” They broke promptly, and one fatal corner of the bag that
+held them began to leak on Edith’s pretty pink dress.
+
+Dorothy tried to repair damages with her handkerchief, but there was a
+yellow smear on the front breadth, for all they could do. As it proved
+afterwards, it was poor Edith’s hoodoo day.
+
+“Poor little eggs!” Louise lamented pensively. “Nobody’s wasting any
+sympathy on them—and they’re all broken up.”
+
+“Oh, what an awful pun!” cried everybody; but Louise went on. She lifted
+the limp bag gingerly, and looked at it as if she was very sorry for it
+indeed.
+
+“Let’s serenade the eggs, girls!” she said. “Just follow me!”
+
+And the people in the front seats of the trolley heard a hearty chorus
+of young voices ringing out from the two back seats:
+
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye—
+ Don’t cry, little eggs, don’t cry;
+ Although you break for our sweet sake
+ While we’re marching away upon a picnic—
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye—
+ By and bye, little eggs, by and bye
+ We’ll be eating up our lunch, but we won’t have
+ you to crunch—
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye!
+
+The girls were in fits of laughter by the time they had done singing
+Louise’s doggerel.
+
+“And yet—it really is silly!” said Marie consideringly when they were
+done.
+
+“Don’t insult my beautiful, high-brow pome,” said Louise cheerfully,
+hopping out of the trolley, for they were at their journey’s end. “Who’s
+going to fetch water? Don’t all speak at once.”
+
+“We’ll get the water,” Edith promised, speaking for herself and Marie.
+“It won’t be as hard on my poor clothes as frying bacon.”
+
+So the two of them took the kettle and started off.
+
+The place the girls had chosen for their bacon-bat was a little wood at
+the end of the trolley-line, which possessed a spring, and an open,
+sheltered sort of ravine where picnickers were wont to build their
+fires. The girls sauntered along in ones and twos till they reached this
+ravine, set down the things they carried, and scattered to look for
+sticks.
+
+Winnie and Helen, peacefully gathering wood as they went, suddenly heard
+screams, and dropped their wood and ran toward the sound.
+
+“It’s—it’s near the spring,” panted Winona to Helen. “Oh, I do hope
+nobody’s fallen in!”
+
+They arrived at the spring just as Adelaide Hughes and Mrs. Bryan
+reached it from another direction.
+
+Now the spring was not an untouched, wildwood affair at all. The
+authorities had done things to it which made its water a great deal
+better for drinking purposes, but much less picturesque—and deeper. Its
+bed had been widened and lined with concrete, and barred across at
+intervals, whether to keep the earth back or the concrete solid nobody
+but the Town Council that had done it knew. And although falling between
+the bars didn’t seem very easy even for a slim, small girl, Edith seemed
+to have accomplished it. She was wedged between two of the bars across
+the water, and what was more, she had managed to drag Marie Hunter down
+with her in her fall. Marie only had one foot in the water, and she was
+struggling to get out, though the force of the stream was making it hard
+for her, for the pool was about four feet deep. But Edith, wedged
+between the bars, was devoting her energies exclusively to screaming for
+help. The reason was apparent when the rescuing parties came closer. One
+arm was caught down beside her, so that she could balance herself, but
+not get out. Winona took one look at the situation.
+
+“We’ll get Edith out!” she called to Mrs. Bryan. “Can you manage Marie?”
+
+Mrs. Bryan was a slender, delicate-looking woman, but she was stronger
+than Winona realized.
+
+“Certainly!” she encouraged. And Helen and Winona began eagerly trying
+to extricate their friend.
+
+It was impossible to reach Edith and take her free hand to pull her out
+by—the bank each side the sluice, or stream, or whatever you choose to
+call it, was too deep. Winnie thought a minute. Then she took off the
+long, strong blue silk scarf she wore in a big bow at the neck of her
+blouse.
+
+“Can I have yours, too, Helen?” And Helen handed hers over promptly.
+Either alone was long enough, but Winnie wanted the two to twist
+together, for fear one would not bear Edith’s weight.
+
+“Can you get around to the other side with your end, Helen?” she said.
+
+Helen scurried around up back of the source. Then she and Winnie, each
+holding an end of the scarf-rope, walked down either side of the stream
+till they were parallel with Edith. They knelt down and lowered the
+scarf till Edith could slip her free arm over it, and pull herself up.
+With its aid as a brace, she managed to free the caught arm, jammed
+against her side. After that it was easy enough, and in a few minutes
+she extricated herself entirely, and half dragged, half pulled herself
+up the steep bank. By the time the girls were done pulling her out she
+and they were pretty well worn out, and they dropped on the grass, Helen
+and Edith on one side and Winnie on the other, and took time to find
+their lost breaths.
+
+Mrs. Bryan and Marie came up to them now—getting Marie out of the water
+had been a fairly easy matter—and made the others get up.
+
+“Edith and Marie must go straight and get off their wet things!” the
+older woman advised. “And Adelaide’s feet are wet, too.”
+
+“Where had we better go?” asked Marie, calm as ever, though nobody could
+have been much wetter than she was up to her waist.
+
+“Old Mary’s is the quickest place,” said Mrs. Bryan. “Hurry, now—run,
+or you’ll catch cold. Adelaide and I are coming, too.”
+
+The whole party—for Winnie and Helen wanted to see the finish—set off
+at a brisk trot for Old Mary’s.
+
+Old Mary was an elderly Irishwoman who earned her living mostly by
+taking in washing, but also by selling ginger-ale, cookies and
+sandwiches to such picnics and automobile parties as came her way. Her
+little house was close to the picnic-woods.
+
+“They’re sure of a good fire to change their things by, that’s one
+comfort,” said Winnie to Helen as they ran along in the rear of their
+dripping friends.
+
+“Yes, but——” Helen began to laugh. “What are they going to change to?”
+she inquired. “We didn’t any of us bring our trunks—it isn’t done on
+picnics!”
+
+“They’ll have to go to bed!” was Winnie’s solution, and they both began
+to laugh again.
+
+“It’s a shame, though, to have them miss all the picnic,” said Winnie,
+sobering down.
+
+But when they arrived on the scene they found the victims hadn’t the
+least intention of going to bed.
+
+“Sure, I’ll iron their bits of clothes dry,” said Old Mary, “an’ who’ll
+be the worse if they borry a few clothes from me ironin’ horse till the
+others are dry? The people that own ’em ’d never mind—I’ve an elegant
+trade in the washin’ of clothes, an’ there’s plenty to fit yez all on
+the horse.”
+
+It was not half-past eleven yet, and the girls would not be going home
+for some hours, so there would be plenty of time for the things to dry.
+So Edith and Marie accepted Old Mary’s offer on the spot. Among the
+various family washes that she was doing were some things of their own.
+They managed to pick out enough dry clothing for all their needs—all
+but dresses. There were shirtwaists and blouses galore, but it was too
+early for many wash-skirts to be going to the laundress.
+
+However, there was an ample red cotton wrapper, the property of Mary
+herself, which at least covered Marie. But Edith was little, and there
+was nothing which came near fitting her but an expensively trimmed white
+organdy party-dress, which Mary said frankly she did not feel she could
+lend.
+
+“What shall I do?” asked Edith in desperation. “I can’t sit here all day
+till my dress dries!”
+
+“I dunno, darlin’. Sure ’tis too bad. Wait a minute, though.” She
+hurried out of the room, and presently returned waving something blue.
+“If ye wouldn’t mind these overalls, now,” she said, “they’re just
+washed an’ ironed for little James Dempsey to wear. An’ the beauty of
+overalls is they fit anybody.”
+
+“_Overalls!_” said Edith mournfully.
+
+But overalls were better than a day in bed, and the end of it was, that
+out of Old Mary’s hospitable cottage walked a tall Irishwoman with two
+long braids over her trailing red wrapper, and a small Irishman with
+yellow curls over very baggy and much turned-up overalls, instead of
+neat Marie and fluffy Edith. They and Adelaide had put on dry stockings,
+and had many thicknesses of newspaper on their shoes till they could get
+to the fire to dry them.
+
+“Good-mornin’!” said Marie cheerfully to her astonished friends, as she
+sailed majestically up to the freshly-made fire.
+
+“Sure we’re the world-renowned vaudeville team, Hunter an’ Hillis.”
+
+“Just back from doing their justly-famous diving stunt!” added Winnie.
+“Better come near the fire, girls, and try to get your shoes dry.”
+
+The fire, which the rest had made during the “diving-stunt,” was burning
+beautifully. The girls laid down waterproofs and blankets, and disposed
+themselves comfortably around it, for the fire-makers were tired, and
+the rescuers and rescued were particularly glad to lie down and be warm
+and dry and limp.
+
+“Two long hours to dinner-time!” from Winnie presently in a very sad
+voice. “I don’t feel as if I could stand it.”
+
+“Nor I!” several voices chimed in.
+
+“Then why do you?” suggested Mrs. Bryan sensibly. “If everybody’s hungry
+we might as well have dinner now!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOUR
+
+
+At the mention of dinner everybody became energetic as by magic. Winnie
+split her two dozen rolls neatly down the middle, and set them in rows
+on a newspaper, ready for the broiled bacon. Marie, with her red wrapper
+pinned up out of harm’s way, banked the fire, while Edith mixed cocoa
+and condensed milk industriously in the bottom of a gigantic kettle
+which was discovered, too late, to have been intended to boil the water
+in. It occurred to Winnie that Edith in overalls was much more fun than
+Edith in fluffy ruffles that she had to remember to take care of, as she
+watched her flying around with her curls waving in the wind, looking
+like a stage newsboy. Helen, on her knees by the heap of provisions, was
+unwrapping her bacon, and somebody else was peeling all the hard-boiled
+eggs.
+
+“Didn’t anybody bring cake?” asked Louise plaintively. “Have we nothing
+but rolls, bacon and eggs?”
+
+“Why, what else do you want?” asked Marie with a dignity rather
+interfered with by the way her scarlet draperies flapped in the breeze.
+“All the bacon-bats I ever heard about they just had rolls and bacon—we
+have a lot of things extra.”
+
+“Glad I never attended one of the just-rolls-and-bacon kind,” Louise
+rebelliously declared.
+
+Winnie, who liked cake herself, and thought she had seen some, went back
+to the heap of provisions and began to dig at it like a small dog at a
+mole-hill.
+
+“Marie!” she called triumphantly in a minute, “There _is_ cake! And a
+lot of bananas!”
+
+“That’s good,” Marie serenely remarked. “Bring them along.”
+
+Winnie reappeared in a minute, very flushed and triumphant, with a hand
+of bananas under her arm, and a huge chocolate cake, with almost
+undamaged icing, poised carefully before her.
+
+“Oh, I remember!” said absent-minded Dorothy, “I brought that cake. It
+was in the satchel with the knives and forks.”
+
+“You certainly saved all our lives,” said Louise feelingly, and went on
+whittling toasting-sticks for the bacon. “Here, Winnie, take a stick and
+start in to be useful.”
+
+“How do you do it?” Winnie wondered—“cook bacon, I mean? I never did it
+this way before.”
+
+“Just string it on the stick any way at all,” Marie advised, and speared
+a slice scientifically as she spoke.
+
+“Easy when you know how!” laughed Winnie, sharpening her own stick a
+little more and threading some bacon on it.
+
+In a few minutes everybody had slices of bacon frizzling gayly, and
+getting more or less charred. When they were done enough they were
+popped between the opened rolls, and—eaten, cinders and all. The water,
+though it was boiled in something else than its own proper
+kettle—something remarkably like a dish-pan cunningly slung over the
+fire by a wonderful system of forked sticks—came to a boil without
+accident, and was poured on the cocoa. Each girl had brought her own
+drinking-cup, so there was no difficulty about crockery. It seemed to
+Winnie, balanced on one elbow on her rug, that nothing had ever tasted
+so good as the bacon sandwiches and hard-boiled eggs, washed down by all
+the hot cocoa you could drink.
+
+By the time the cake and bananas came the girls felt as if they couldn’t
+eat another thing. But they did. It was delightful lying around the fire
+talking and eating and laughing. It was one of those mild days which
+come in May sometimes, bright, with a little breeze. After awhile
+somebody started a Camp Fire song, and one by one they all joined in.
+After that they lay quiet for awhile, talking and being lazy.
+
+When they began to clear away Edith declared that she didn’t dare go
+near the spring again. So it was Winona and Louise who took the few
+things there were to wash, the cocoa-kettle and dish-pan and
+drinking-cups and the silver, over to the spring. It was pleasant, lazy
+work, not a bit like home dish-washing. Louise splashed the things up
+and down in the running water, and Winona dried them.
+
+“Isn’t it nice?” sighed Winnie. “Oh, I do wish we could camp outdoors
+all this summer, instead of living in hot houses! Don’t you always hate
+to sleep indoors when it’s hot?”
+
+Louise rolled over on her back and looked at the sky.
+
+“Yes, I think I do,” she spoke thoughtfully. “You have to, though. Out
+in California they say everybody has sleeping-porches, and never thinks
+of going inside at night. I wish people had them here.”
+
+A brilliant idea came to Winona—which, by the way, she afterward
+carried out. “Our side-porch is almost all screened. I wonder if mother
+wouldn’t let me sleep there? I’m going to ask her, anyway.”
+
+“I wish I could, too,” breathed Louise, “but our side-porch is where
+everybody goes by—that’s the worst of living on a corner. I know I
+never could break the milkman and the baker of contributing rolls and
+milk on top of me in the early morning!”
+
+“What a splendid idea! Then you could have ‘breakfast in your bed,’ like
+Harry Lauder,” said Winnie, and both girls stopped to giggle. “But
+honestly,” began Winnie again, as she reached out for some long grass
+near her and began to plait it, “don’t you think we can all camp out
+this summer?”
+
+“Here?”
+
+“N-no, not here—at least, I don’t believe they’d let us, the people who
+own it, I mean. But there must be somewhere that we could go, somewhere
+not too far off to cost a lot to get there.”
+
+“I wonder!” said Louise, pulling a thick red pig-tail around in order to
+nibble its end thoughtfully. She had a habit of gnawing at her hair when
+she thought hard. “What about Cribb’s Creek?”
+
+“That’s too near,” Winnie opposed.
+
+“Well, where did the Boy Scouts go last year?”
+
+“Up on Wampoag River, a little way below Wampoag,” said Winona. “They
+said it was a cinch, because they could sell all the fish they caught to
+the Wampoag hotel-keepers, and get things they needed, and yet it was
+just as wild as it could be if you went a little way along the river.”
+
+Wampoag was a summer resort not far from them.
+
+“Well, how far’s that?” asked Louise.
+
+“About ten miles to the boys’ camp,” answered Winona. “But there would
+be plenty of good camping-ground nearer home, and quite close to that
+little village—what’s its name?”
+
+“Green’s Corners,” supplied Louise.
+
+“I wonder who Green was, and if he really _did_ have corners,” Winona
+thoughtfully remarked.
+
+Louise giggled. “He was a square man, I suppose,” she said, and Winnie
+gave her a shove. “Oh, don’t!” she said. “That’s an awful pun.”
+
+“I thought it was a very good one. Well, to come back to business, the
+boys didn’t go by train. Indeed, I don’t think you can, unless you go
+away round. They hiked.”
+
+“Well, why shouldn’t we, too?” asked Louise.
+
+“Or part of the way, anyway!” added Winnie,
+
+“People would take us for a band of ‘I won’t works!’ We’d look it, too,
+by the time we got to the end of the journey.”
+
+“But we needn’t do it all at once,” said Winnie. “We could break the
+journey overnight. Don’t you know, people in England have walking-tours
+that last for days and days? I’ve read about it. They stop in inns
+overnight and have adventures.”
+
+“Well, I’d like the adventures, if they didn’t mean falling into ponds
+and getting your clothes wet,” said Louise.
+
+Winnie yawned.
+
+“I suppose they think we’ve tied the cups round our necks and jumped
+in,” and she lazily started to get up. “Come on, Louise, let’s find Mrs.
+Bryan and ask her about camping. She’s sure to know about hikes and
+everything.”
+
+Finding Mrs. Bryan proved to be hard, because she was not in the kind of
+a place where you would expect to find a grown-up step-mother. They
+finally discovered her by a flutter of blue skirt that hung down below
+the branches of an old apple-tree. She was sitting comfortably in one of
+its crotches, trying to carve herself a willow whistle.
+
+“Come on up, girls!” she hailed them cheerfully. “There’s always room at
+the top!”
+
+“Where are the rest of them?” asked Winnie, beginning to climb. Louise
+followed more slowly, for Winnie was more slender and quicker in her
+movements.
+
+“Scattered all over, I suppose,” said Mrs. Bryan. “Edith went back to
+old Mary’s to see if her clothes were dry. Did you want them for
+anything special?”
+
+“No indeed,” Winnie assured her. “It was you we wanted for something
+special.”
+
+“Well, I’m here,” and Mrs. Bryan dropped an affectionate hand on the
+pretty brown head beneath her. “What is it, dear?”
+
+“It’s about camping out,” spoke Winnie and Louise in a breath. “Do you
+think we can do it?”
+
+Mrs. Bryan laughed.
+
+“‘Can we do it?’ Why, my dears, that’s just what we’re for! What would
+be the fun of belonging to a Camp Fire if we couldn’t go camping
+outdoors?”
+
+“Oh, lovely!” cried Winnie. “Then you’ll go, too?”
+
+“I certainly will!” said Mrs. Bryan promptly. “It would have to be when
+Mr. Bryan was having his vacation, though, because it would never do to
+leave, not only my own hearth-fire, but my own poor helpless husband,
+untended. And, of course, it will not be till school is through.”
+
+“Oh, oh, it begins to sound almost real!” Winnie cried with a joyous
+little jounce that shook several pink blossoms from the tree.
+
+“Just wait!” warned Louise from her lower limb. “When we start that
+twenty-five-mile hike, it will seem quite too real for comfort, take my
+word for it!”
+
+“Don’t you think we could hike to camp?” appealed Winnie.
+
+“You’ll have to practise shorter hikes first,” was the answer. “If you
+do that there’s no reason why we couldn’t all walk the distance. I
+suppose we’ll camp somewhere on the Wampoag River.”
+
+“Yes, that’s what we thought,” said the girls.
+
+“Of course, we’d have to break the journey,” Winnie went on.
+
+“Well, yes, I think so,” Mrs. Bryan answered. “Oh, here are Helen and
+Marie now. Oh, Helen! We’re up in this tree! No, don’t come up—all the
+seats are full!”
+
+“Then come down!” called Helen. “We have something to show you.”
+
+The something proved to be a small and very scared garter-snake, that
+Helen was carrying in a forked stick.
+
+“Poor little snakelet!” said Louise. “Do let him go home, Helen—I’m
+sure he’s not grown-up yet.”
+
+So Helen put down the snake and off he went.
+
+“Did you find your clothes?” Louise asked Marie rather superfluously,
+for she had on her sailor-suit, rather fresher-looking than it had been
+before.
+
+“It was all done when we got there,” said Marie, “but Edith’s dress was
+harder to do—all those ruffles, you know—so Mary’s still ironing it.”
+
+“Then we’d better sit here and wait for her,” suggested Louise. “And oh,
+girls, we have a plan.”
+
+“A real plan, all hand-made?” mocked Helen. “Do tell us about it.”
+
+So then the camping-trip was discussed and votes taken about it. Helen,
+of course, could go. Marie was sure she would be allowed to.
+
+“Mother says I stay in the house and read too much anyway,” she said.
+
+The other girls, drifting up one by one, were all wild over the idea.
+Edith, in her freshly-laundered frock, was a little doubtful about the
+hike, but as she said, if she fainted from exhaustion she could take a
+train or a carriage or something the rest of the way.
+
+They talked camping till it was time to go back and pack up things for
+the return trip. So the girls rose up from around the apple-tree, and
+stowed everything away in the baskets and satchels they had brought, and
+walked back to the trolley. First, though, they gave old Mary all the
+provisions they had left; cocoa, six rolls, and a generous half of the
+chocolate cake.
+
+“That certainly was a life-sized cake!” breathed Winnie as she set it on
+Mary’s kitchen table. “But it won’t be as hard to eat as it was to
+carry, will it?”
+
+“Sure ye needn’t worry but what it’ll get et,” laughed Mary. “Many
+thanks, an’ good luck to yez all.”
+
+They piled into the trolley, rather sleepy with the long day in the
+wind, and, except for Marie and Edith, rather crumpled. Winnie’s blouse
+had a grass-stain, and Louise’s was marked neatly across the back, like
+a Japanese stencil, with a wet brown bough-mark. There were also burrs,
+more or less, on everybody. But what were burrs?
+
+Everybody heaved a sight of contentment as they settled down in their
+seats.
+
+“It certainly was a lovely picnic!” they said.
+
+“How beautifully fresh and clean Edith Hillis keeps her dresses!” said
+Mrs. Merriam to Winnie, as Edith turned to wave good-bye at the Merriam
+gate, and went down the street with Marie and Helen. “You’d think that
+pink dress had just been washed and ironed, and yet she’s been out in
+the woods with the rest of you tousled-looking children all day!”
+
+And Winona laughed so that it was at least two minutes before she could
+explain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIVE
+
+
+“I’d advise you girls to hurry up with those squaw dresses,” hinted Tom
+Merriam darkly, as he fled through the sitting-room on his way back from
+Scout-practice.
+
+Winnie looked up. She and Helen and Louise were sitting in a row on the
+window-seat, sewing for dear life on their ceremonial gowns.
+
+“We are hurrying all we can,” she smiled. “These have to be done by
+to-night anyway.”
+
+“They are, nearly,” chimed in Louise, shaking out her garment and
+observing its fringes with satisfaction. “What’s he talking about, Win?”
+
+“Tommy! Tom! Come back and tell us!” called his sister.
+
+“Can’t!” shouted Tom down the stairs. “You’ll find out in time—you’re
+going to need ’em, that’s all!”
+
+“What on earth do you suppose he means?” wondered Helen, as the last
+glimpse of Tom’s khaki-clad form vanished up the stairs.
+
+Winnie laughed as she finished off a seam.
+
+“I don’t believe it meant anything,” she said. “Tom’s always trying to
+get up excitements.”
+
+“_I_ think it means something!” said Louise, beginning to take out
+bastings. She was the best seamstress of the three, and consequently was
+done first. “Here, Helen, let me finish that sleeve for you while you do
+the other one.”
+
+She took up the sleeve, and jumped up and began to dance with the sleeve
+for a partner.
+
+ Something’s goin’ to happen, honey,
+ Happen, honey, happen mighty soon!
+
+“Oh, thank you!” said Helen gratefully, referring not to the song and
+dance, but to the aid. She hated sewing, and nothing but the Camp Fire
+requirements would ever have made her persevere till her gown was done.
+Winnie did not mind sewing one way or the other, and by a queer
+contradiction harum-scarum Louise loved it.
+
+The girls worked on, and discussed on. Winnie was sure Tom meant
+nothing, and the others were just as sure that he had some reason for
+saying what he had.
+
+That night the girls were to hold their first Council Fire. That was why
+they were hurrying so to finish their dresses.
+
+When it came Winnie’s turn to answer the roll-call, she rose, slim and
+graceful in her khaki dress, before her turn was reached.
+
+“Opeechee, Guardian of the Fire, may I speak before my turn comes to
+answer to my name?” she asked.
+
+“Speak,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+“Opeechee, I do not want to change my name. May I not be known in the
+Camp Fire as Winona? The name is one that an Indian gave one of my own
+people many circles of moons ago, and it is mine by inheritance.”
+
+“Will you tell the Camp Fire about it?” asked Mrs. Bryan.
+
+So Winnie told the Camp Fire the story her mother had told her, of the
+weary Indian woman her grandmother had helped, and whose papoose had
+been called “Winona,” “Flashing Ray of Light.”
+
+“Could anything be better than to be a ray of light in dark places?”
+asked Winona. “I like the meaning of my name, and if the Camp Fire will
+let me keep it I promise to be a brightness wherever I can, always, that
+will light the dark places for people who need it.”
+
+“What do you say, Daughters of the Camp Fire?” asked Mrs. Bryan when
+Winona was done.
+
+“If we all have different Camp Fire names, won’t it seem strange for
+Winona to have the same name straight through?” objected Marie. “It is a
+beautiful name with a beautiful meaning, if it weren’t that it is her
+every-day name.”
+
+“Nobody ever calls me anything but Winnie,” said Winona.
+
+“Why not use the translation?” suggested Helen. “‘Ray of Light’ is
+pretty. And then Winnie could keep the meaning.”
+
+“You have spoken well!” said Mrs. Bryan. “What do you say to that,
+Daughters of the Camp Fire?”
+
+“Good!” from all the girls.
+
+“Kolah, Ray of Light!” spoke Mrs. Bryan.
+
+Then she went on with the business of the evening.
+
+“Two of our Camp Fire Girls are to become Wood-gatherers to-night. Will
+they rise?”
+
+Winona and Marie had qualified, and they stood up.
+
+“Ray of Light,” Mrs. Bryan went on, “will you tell us how you chose your
+name?”
+
+“‘Flashing Ray of Light’ is the name my fathers gave me,” clearly spoke
+Winona, “and I have told the Camp Fire the reason of its choosing. But I
+keep it because I intend to carry out its meaning. I have tried to earn
+my right to it by being bright, and helping all I could, no matter how
+dark the days were, nor how much nicer it would have been to be cross.
+As my symbol I have chosen the firefly, because it lights dark places.”
+
+“Flashing Ray of Light brings brightness to our Camp Fire,” said the
+Guardian. “We welcome you to your place in our Camp Fire Circle.”
+
+She gave Winona her pretty silver ring with its raying fagots, and
+repeating the formula which went with it.
+
+When the girls had welcomed her rank and sung her a cheer, Winona sat
+down, she hoped, for the last time.
+
+“How does it feel?” whispered Louise, who sat next her. “I wish I’d
+collected my requirements as quickly.”
+
+“It feels partly awfully proud and partly awfully relieved,” Winona
+whispered back. “And I feel as if I oughtn’t to have picked out such
+awfully easy honors to take. Anybody could make a shirtwaist and know
+about their ancestors and trim a hat——”
+
+“No, they couldn’t!” contradicted Louise, who admired Winona very much.
+“You just happen to be cleverer than the rest of us, that’s all.”
+
+“I’m _not!_” said Winona as vehemently as it could be said in a whisper.
+“Marie’s getting her Wood-gatherer’s ring to-night, too.”
+
+Mrs. Bryan’s voice rose again in the same formula.
+
+“Shawondassee, tell us how you chose your name.”
+
+“Shawondassee means ‘South Wind,’” answered Marie’s steady voice. “I
+chose the name because the South Wind coaxes instead of scolding, and I
+thought it was a good name to remind me to do the same thing. As my
+symbol I have chosen the willow shoots, because they come up year after
+year, no matter how often they are cut down, and I wish to have their
+perseverance.”
+
+“Perseverance and cheerfulness!” whispered Louise. “Who would have
+thought Marie needed either of them?”
+
+“You can’t tell much about Marie, because you never can get to her to
+talk about herself,” answered Winona. “But she certainly is one of the
+hardest workers in the class at school.”
+
+At this point the girls had to stop talking, to join in the
+Wood-gatherer’s verses for Marie.
+
+Nearly all Marie’s required honors were Patriotism, for she was the
+student of the crowd.
+
+“It fairly makes me shiver to think how much that girl knows,” whispered
+Louise. “My honors are going to be plain home-craft—making pies and
+chaperoning ice-chests and massaging floors, and so forth.”
+
+“Will your mother let you?” asked Winona; for Mrs. Lane kept two maids,
+having the money to do it, and a big family.
+
+“Let me!” exploded Louise. “She’ll weep tears of joy if there’s any
+prospect of my getting thinner!”
+
+Just as Louise spoke there fell one of those uncanny silences which have
+a way of occurring at the worst possible times. Louise’s statement
+pealed cheerfully through the room, and poor Louise, blushing scarlet,
+tried to make herself very small—a hard matter.
+
+The girls could not help laughing, but Mrs. Bryan had mercy on her
+embarrassment, and went on with the awarding of the honor beads each
+girl had won since the last meeting. Winona’s were rather various—a few
+from each class. Helen’s were nearly all hand-craft—stencilling and
+clay-modelling. She had brought along a bureau-scarf she had done, to
+show, and a beautiful little bowl she had modelled and painted and
+fired. Louise had only three beads so far, one for identifying birds,
+one for preserving, and one for making her ceremonial dress.
+
+Edith Hillis, to everybody’s surprise, was given an honor for
+folk-dancing, and proceeded, when she was asked, to get up and
+demonstrate. This held up the regular course of the meeting for quite a
+little while, because when she showed them the Highland Fling all the
+girls wanted to learn it. So for at least a half-hour they practised it,
+till the floor over Mr. Bryan’s head, in his study beneath, must have
+seemed to be coming down.
+
+After they had all tired themselves thoroughly they sang for awhile.
+About midway of the second song Mrs. Bryan evidently remembered
+something, for she gave a start as if she were going to speak. As soon
+as they had finished she raised her hand for silence, and said:
+
+“I have a message for Camp Karonya. It should be delivered at the
+business meeting, I suppose, but—it won’t keep till then. The Boy
+Scouts, Camp No. Six, of this town, invite the Camp Fire Girls to a
+dance given by them in the school-house assembly-room next Wednesday
+night.”
+
+“Oh, how perfectly lovely!” cried Edith. “Of course we’ll go!”
+
+A confused noise of voices broke out, all speaking at once. You could
+catch an occasional word—“blue messaline,” “white organdy,”
+“orchestra,” “how perfectly dandy!”—but for the most part it was just a
+noise.
+
+Mrs. Bryan waited placidly till it had quieted down.
+
+“What is your pleasure in this matter, Daughters of the Camp Fire?” she
+asked then.
+
+“Oh, we’ll go!” cried everybody at once.
+
+“Then you’d better instruct the Secretary to write them to that effect,”
+suggested Mrs. Bryan gravely, for the tumult seemed inclined to break
+out again.
+
+Winona jumped up and put it in the form of a motion that the Secretary
+should reply, and actually induced the girls to second and ratify it.
+
+“I’ll write the acceptance right away!” declared Helen with enthusiasm.
+
+She went into the next room, got paper and ink, came back, sat down in
+the middle of a ring of interested suggesters, and wrote a very pleased
+acceptance.
+
+Winona, robbed of her usual confidante, turned to the girl on her other
+side, to talk clothes.
+
+“I’m going to wear my blue organdy, with the Dresden sash and
+hair-ribbons,” she said without looking to see to whom she was talking.
+
+“Are you?” said the other girl, hesitating a little.
+
+Winona looked at her, at the sound of her voice. She had thought she was
+speaking to Louise. But Louise was on the other side of the room, and
+the girl next her was Adelaide Hughes, one of the two girls Mrs. Bryan
+had brought into their Camp Fire.
+
+It was two months now since Winona and Adelaide had begun to meet each
+other weekly at the Camp Fire good times and Ceremonials, but when you
+have all the bosom friends you want it is hard to see such a very great
+deal of other people. Winona realized now that she had scarcely
+exchanged two consecutive sentences with Adelaide all the time she had
+known her.
+
+Adelaide was a thin, tired-looking girl of about thirteen, with big blue
+eyes and a sensitive mouth, and hair that had curious yellow and brown
+lights. She did not join very heartily, ever, in the frolics, but she
+seemed to enjoy everything with a sort of shy, watching intensity.
+
+“And what are you going to wear?” Winona asked, more out of friendliness
+than curiosity.
+
+Adelaide colored.
+
+“I—I don’t know,” she said. “I—a white dress, I think.”
+
+“Voile?” asked Winona.
+
+Adelaide shook her head.
+
+“No, lawn—if I come. But maybe I won’t be there.”
+
+“Why, what a shame!” said Winona with the bright friendliness that was a
+part of her. “Of course you must be there. Helen accepted for all of
+us.”
+
+“I know, but—but maybe I can’t come,” repeated Adelaide.
+
+“Of course you can!” insisted Winona.
+
+Adelaide’s eyes filled with tears, and she shook her head.
+
+Winona slipped one arm around her. The two girls were sitting a little
+apart from the rest by now, in a dusky corner.
+
+“There’s some reason why you think you can’t, some horrid reason,” she
+coaxed. “Now, just tell Winona what it is.” She spoke as if she were
+petting her own younger sister, though Adelaide was only a year younger
+than she was.
+
+Adelaide’s eyes overflowed, and she felt gropingly for her handkerchief,
+to dry her eyes.
+
+“Here’s one,” whispered Winona, slipping her own into Adelaide’s hand.
+“Now, tell me, dear. It isn’t very bad, is it? Maybe I could help.”
+
+“You _can’t!_” said Adelaide fiercely, “and I won’t tell you a thing
+unless you promise not to.”
+
+“All right,” said Winona cheerfully, “I promise.”
+
+“I—I haven’t any party dress, and father can’t afford to get me one,”
+choked Adelaide, “and all I have is an old white lawn I wear afternoons,
+and it’s _horrid_. And—and, Winona Merriam, if you offer to loan me a
+dress I’ll never speak to you again!”
+
+“I wasn’t going to,” comforted Winona, stroking poor sobbing Adelaide’s
+shoulder, while her own quick, friendly mind cast about for a way out.
+
+For Adelaide must come to the dance, and evidently she wouldn’t borrow
+anything from anybody.
+
+“Not borrow—how queer!” said Winona, voicing her thought. “Why, I don’t
+know any of the girls I wouldn’t borrow from, if I needed to, or they
+from me. Don’t you ever borrow anything, Adelaide—except trouble?”
+
+“No, I don’t,” said Adelaide chokily but proudly. “It’s—it’s different
+when you _have_ to!”
+
+“I don’t see why!” said sunny, friendly-hearted Winona, who always took
+it for granted that she liked people, and of course that they would like
+her! She had never known what it was to be rich, but never either what
+it was to be painfully poor. “Well, let’s think of some other way. I
+suppose you haven’t time to earn the money for a dress for this party.
+Opeechee was telling us last week that we ought to try to earn so much
+money apiece, and that there were lots of ways for doing it.”
+
+“No, there wouldn’t be time,” answered Adelaide mournfully; but she
+stopped crying and began to look interested.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIX
+
+
+The two girls sat and thought hard for a moment; then Winnie suddenly
+thought of something.
+
+“Just a minute, Adelaide!” she whispered, and she went over to the
+corner where Mrs. Bryan and Marie Hunter were discussing business
+together. The rest were still all talking dance excitedly by the
+fireplace.
+
+“Opeechee,” she said, “may I ask you something? Would there be any
+reason why the girls couldn’t wear their ceremonial dresses to the
+dance?”
+
+Mrs. Bryan thought for a moment.
+
+“There’s no actual reason why we shouldn’t,” she said. “Only the idea is
+that the dresses should be kept for rather intimate and private things.”
+
+“But it would be such a good idea if we wore them,” insisted Winona
+eagerly. “You see, perhaps—perhaps some of us mightn’t be able to
+afford new party dresses, and maybe we mightn’t have any old good ones,
+either.”
+
+“Why, Winnie, you have that blue——” began Marie, and checked herself
+as she saw a light.
+
+“Some of us mightn’t have any new party dresses,” repeated Winona
+obstinately, but with an appealing look at Mrs. Bryan. She did so hope
+she would understand! “Anyway, the boys expect us to,” she went on
+eagerly. “Tom said this afternoon that we’d better get the dresses
+ready, only we didn’t know then what he meant.”
+
+Mrs. Bryan looked at Winona’s vivid, earnest face, and—understood.
+
+“I think you are quite right, Ray of Light. I’ll speak to the girls.”
+
+She stood up and struck lightly on the little Indian drum to call the
+girls’ attention.
+
+“Girls!” she said, “as the dance that the Scouts have asked us to is an
+affair to which we have been invited as an official body, it seems to me
+that it would be only courteous for us to wear our ceremonial gowns. So
+I am going to ask that you all do it.”
+
+There was a murmur of approval all over the room. When you have just
+acquired a beautiful new costume it’s human nature to want to wear it
+early and often. There was only a plaintive wail, which Marie
+suppressed, from Edith Hillis:
+
+“Oh, my lovely new green messaline!”
+
+Winona crossed over to the place where Adelaide still sat.
+
+“Well?” she said triumphantly.
+
+“Did you tell Mrs. Bryan anything about me?” Adelaide demanded
+suspiciously.
+
+“No, I didn’t,” replied Winona rather indignantly. “What do you take me
+for, when I said I wouldn’t?”
+
+“Well, I didn’t know,” apologized Adelaide. “And—thank you, ever so
+much, Winona! You—you don’t _know!_”
+
+Winona laughed.
+
+“Why, yes, I do. At least, I’ve often wanted new clothes when I couldn’t
+have them. But mother says if you can’t the next best thing is to go on
+wearing what you have, and be so cheerful nobody has time to think what
+you have on!”
+
+“Nobody ever told me that,” pondered Adelaide, as if it were an entirely
+new idea to her. “But my mother’s dead, you see. And, anyway, it doesn’t
+sound as if it could be true. Did you ever try it?”
+
+“Yes,” Winona said, and laughed. “I did—it was funny, too. I was
+visiting some cousins of mine. I hadn’t expected to stay, and I hadn’t
+brought a single party thing, and none of their clothes would fit me.
+They had perfectly lovely dresses. And suddenly we were all invited to a
+party, and I had nothing but a blue linen; and all the rest of them in
+the fluffiest clothes you ever saw!”
+
+“Well,” said Adelaide, “didn’t it feel _horrid_.”
+
+“Yes, it did for awhile,” owned Winona. “But everybody was sitting
+around as stiff as stiff—you know, some parties are like that at first.
+And somebody just had to say something. And pretty soon I thought of a
+game that just fitted in, and asked them to play it. After that I was so
+busy thinking up games that I never remembered a thing I had on till we
+got home that night. And I only did then because my cousin Ethel said,
+‘Oh, I’ve torn my dress!’ and I said it was queer I hadn’t torn mine,
+too—and then I remembered that it was linen and wouldn’t tear. We
+certainly had a good time at that party!”
+
+Adelaide looked at Winona’s shining eyes and flushed cheeks enviously.
+
+“Yes, you could do that,” she said, “and people would be so busy
+watching you that they wouldn’t know whether you had a flour-sack on or
+a satin. But I can’t, because I keep worrying all the time about what
+people think of me.”
+
+“Oh, I should think that _would_ be horrid,” Winona sympathized.
+
+“It is,” said Adelaide, “only I——”
+
+The rest that Adelaide had been going to say was drowned, because just
+then came the signal for the closing song, and soon the Council Fire was
+over.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“What on earth were you talking to Adelaide Hughes so long about?”
+demanded Louise curiously as they walked home, for their ways lay
+together.
+
+“Oh, just things,” was Winona’s answer. “I think she’s awfully shy, and
+a little afraid of the rest of us, Lou.”
+
+“And you think we ought to make a special fuss over her?” said Louise
+mournfully. “I knew that was coming. Well, I suppose we will—Helen and
+I always do what you tell us to. I wish I were shy, and people ran
+around saying, ‘we really must make an effort to draw poor little timid
+Louise out!’”
+
+Winona burst out laughing—the idea of “poor, little, timid Louise” was
+so irresistibly funny.
+
+“It’s going to be a gorgeous dance, though.” Louise went on. “Wasn’t it
+splendid of the Scouts to think of doing it? And what about my being
+right?”
+
+“You certainly were right,” Winona admitted. “Are you sure you don’t
+mind going on alone?”
+
+For they had reached the Merriam house.
+
+“Not a bit,” said Louise cheerfully. “It’s only a block, anyway.
+Good-night, honey.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Oh, it’s lovely!” exclaimed Winona next morning when she ran
+downstairs. She flung herself on Tom bodily and hugged him hard as she
+spoke.
+
+“What’s lovely?” asked Tom, detaching himself, or trying to. “Go easy,
+Winnie; it was just sheer luck that you didn’t break any ribs or my
+collar-bone or something. Affection’s all right in its place, but——”
+
+“But its place isn’t on you, you mean?” retorted Winona, unwinding
+herself cheerfully from her brother. “Why, I mean the dance, of course.”
+
+“Oh, that!” said Tom. “That’s nothing! It ought to be pretty good fun,
+though, don’t you think so?”
+
+“Oh, I know it will!” cried Winona fervently. “Are the boys going to
+wear their uniforms?”
+
+“Well,” said Tom doubtfully, “we don’t know. You see, we’ve hiked in
+’em, and rolled around on the grass in ’em wrestling, and done about
+everything to those poor old uniforms that you can do to clothes, and
+they really aren’t fit for civilized society.”
+
+“Meaning ours?” said Winona. “Thanks for the compliment! Why don’t you
+have them cleaned? I suppose even khaki cleans!”
+
+“I don’t know,” said her brother, “I’ll ask mother. Maybe we can manage
+it. But—oh, say, Winnie, there’s something I wanted to speak to you
+about. You know, there are new people moved in next door. They’re
+Southerners, here for the mother’s health or something. There’s a boy
+about my age, and a girl somewhere around yours. I don’t know much about
+the girl, but Billy Lee’s an awfully decent fellow, and we’ve got him in
+the Scouts. Now what do you think about taking his sister into your Camp
+Fire? She’d just about fit in as far as age goes, and it would be nice
+and neighborly. We’ll have to ask her for the dance anyway, because
+there aren’t enough of you Camp Firers yet to go around. The girl must
+need something to do, because Billy seems to worry about her rather.
+Stands to reason it isn’t natural for a fellow to fret about his sister
+having a good time unless she needs it pretty badly.”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know,” said Winona. “When you come to a strange place
+things are bound to be stupid till you get to know people. We’ve lived
+here always, you know. But I’ll go over and see her as soon as I’ve done
+the breakfast dishes.”
+
+Accordingly, when the breakfast dishes were done and the dining-room
+tidied, Winona washed her hands over again very carefully, and put
+cold-cream and talcum powder on them, for she did not like the smell of
+dish-water, especially when she was going calling. Then she made her way
+to the house next door.
+
+All the houses on that block stood in deep yards, which went all around
+them. Winona crossed the path and went up the porch, feeling a little
+shy. She had not asked anyone to join the Camp Fire before. They were to
+take in five new girls at the next monthly meeting, just before they
+went camping, but all of them had let the girls know that they wanted to
+join. Winona was a moving spirit in Camp Karonya, and she knew that
+anyone she vouched for would be welcome. But she did hope the next-door
+girl would fit in with the rest of them.
+
+The door was opened by a colored maid, but before she could say whom she
+was, a dark, handsome boy of about fifteen, in a Scout uniform, came
+running down the stairs.
+
+“You’re Winnie Merriam, aren’t you?” he asked eagerly. “I’m Billy Lee. I
+asked your brother to send you over to see Nataly.”
+
+Winona liked Billy on the spot, he was so friendly and natural and nice,
+and very good-looking besides.
+
+“If his sister’s like him she’ll be splendid to have in the Camp Fire,”
+she thought, and her spirits went up with such a bound that she was able
+to smile brightly, and say enthusiastically as she held out her hand to
+Billy Lee:
+
+“Yes, indeed, I’m Winona Merriam, and I’m so glad Tom did send me. I
+know your sister and I are going to be friends.”
+
+“Well, I do hope so,” said Billy as confidentially as if he had known
+her for years. “I’m having a gorgeous time in the Scouts—went on a hike
+yesterday, and we never got back till nine o’clock, and three of the
+fellows got all stung up with a hornet’s nest.”
+
+This didn’t sound much like a fine time to Winona, but she supposed boys
+knew what they liked. She couldn’t help laughing, though.
+
+ If that’s your idea of a wonderful time
+ Take me home—take me home!
+
+she hummed. She thought she’d sung it under her breath, but it was
+evidently loud enough to be heard, for Billy Lee burst out laughing,
+too.
+
+“Well, I didn’t mean that getting stung was a pleasure exactly,” said
+he, “but we do have dandy times.”
+
+All this time they had been standing in the hall. Suddenly it seemed to
+occur to Billy that Winona had come to see his sister, not him. He
+ushered her hurriedly into the living-room.
+
+“I’ll send Nataly down to you,” he promised. But in another minute he
+came tearing downstairs again.
+
+“She says, would you mind coming up to her room?” he panted. “She hasn’t
+felt so awfully well to-day, and she isn’t exactly up.”
+
+Winona followed him, consumed with curiosity as to what could ail a
+girl, not to be up on a beautiful spring morning, and what “not exactly
+up” meant. She found out in another minute.
+
+The bed-room where Nataly was had all its windows closed, and there was
+a close scent of toilet-water and sachet-powder and unairedness through
+the whole place.
+
+“Here’s Winnie Merriam, that I told you about, sister,” said Billy Lee,
+and bolted. He never seemed to walk, only to run.
+
+Nataly Lee rose from the couch where she had been lying, and came toward
+Winona.
+
+“I’m very glad to see you,” she greeted Winnie languidly. “I think I
+have seen you—out in your back garden yesterday.”
+
+“I shouldn’t wonder,” said Winona. “I was playing tag there with my
+sister Florence and little Bessie Williams.”
+
+“Do you still play tag?” asked Nataly, gesturing her visitor to a seat,
+and lifting one weary eyebrow.
+
+“Not as a confirmed habit,” said Winona mischievously. “But you can’t
+play it well with only two, and the children wanted me to, so—well, I
+just did, that was all. Don’t you like tag?” she added. (“I was morally
+certain she’d faint,” she confided to Tom afterwards, “but she didn’t.”)
+
+As a matter of fact, Nataly pulled closer the blue brocaded negligee
+that was obviously covering up a nightgown, and said, “I don’t know much
+about games. I like reading better.”
+
+“Oh, do you?” exclaimed Winona, interested at once. “I love reading,
+too, but somehow there’s so little time for it except when it’s bad
+weather. Don’t you do anything but read?”
+
+“Not much,” replied Nataly languidly. “Sports bore me.”
+
+Winona gave an inward gasp of dismay.
+
+“Mercy!” she thought, “what a queer girl!” But outwardly she persevered.
+“Don’t you ever dance?”
+
+Nataly opened her heavy hazel eyes with a little more interest.
+
+“Oh, yes, I dance, of course.”
+
+“So do I,” said Winona. “I love it.”
+
+“Do you?” said Nataly. “I shouldn’t think so—you seem so—athletic.”
+
+“Oh, I’m glad,” said Winona innocently, beaming with pleasure. “But I’m
+not, particularly. I can swim, of course, and row and paddle a little,
+and play tennis a little. But I’ve never played hockey or basket-ball,
+either of them, much. Or baseball.”
+
+“Do girls play baseball up here?” demanded Nataly, sitting up and
+letting a paper novel with a thrilling picture on the cover slide to the
+floor.
+
+“They do,” averred Winona solemnly, but with sparkling eyes. She was
+tempted to go on shocking her hostess by thrilling stories of invented
+boxing-matches between herself and her little schoolmates, but she
+thought better of it. “But that wasn’t really what I came about,” she
+went on, looking longingly at the closed window, for the airless room
+was beginning to make her cheeks burn. “Next week the Scouts are giving
+us Camp Fire Girls a dance, you know—and you are coming, aren’t you?”
+
+“Yes, I think so,” Nataly spoke slowly, lying back on the sofa and
+beginning to finger her paper novel again.
+
+“Well”—it came out with rather a rush—“would you like to join the Camp
+Fire? I think you’d like it.”
+
+She went on enthusiastically telling Nataly all about it, till she was
+brought up short by a genuine and unsuppressed yawn on Nataly’s part.
+
+“All that work?” said Nataly plaintively. “Oh, I couldn’t do any of
+those things—I’d die!”
+
+“Oh, I’m sorry,” Winona was a little taken aback. The idea of
+considering whether things were too much trouble or not was a new one to
+her. She had always gone on the principle that—why—you _wanted_ to
+plunge into things head-foremost, and do them with all your might—that
+was the way to have fun! So the idea of lying on a sofa and shuddering
+at the idea of work was a great surprise.
+
+“No, I really couldn’t join,” said Nataly, with the first energy she had
+shown. “But I’m very glad you came to see me.”
+
+“Yes, so am I,” said Winona politely. “And you will come and see me as
+soon as you can, won’t you?”
+
+“Yes, indeed,” promised Nataly. She threw up her hand and pressed a
+button back of her sofa as she spoke, for Winona was rising to go.
+
+“Emma will show you the way downstairs,” she said languidly, “and don’t
+you want this? It’s very interesting—I’ve just finished it.”
+
+“This” was the paper novel with the melodramatic cover.
+
+“Why, thank you!” said Winona, taking it politely. “It’s very kind of
+you. And you will come over?”
+
+“Oh, yes,” responded Billy Lee’s sister, “I shall be very glad to call.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Well, how was it?” demanded Tom of his sister that evening.
+
+Winona laughed and shrugged her shoulders.
+
+“Why, very nice. Only Nataly Lee’s about a million years older than I
+am, and she made me feel as if I were seven instead of fourteen. And she
+certainly is the _queerest_ girl! She doesn’t seem to want to do
+anything for fear it will be too much trouble!”
+
+“What about joining up with your Daughters of Pocahontas?” inquired Tom.
+
+Winona didn’t stop to rebuke him for his flippancy.
+
+“Well, about that,” she replied, “she reminded me of one of the haughty
+ladies in the Japanese Schoolboy’s housework experiences—don’t you
+remember? ‘I have not the want to,’ she sniffed haughtily with
+considerable frequency! But she’s coming to the dance.”
+
+“Queer,” said Tom. “There’s no nonsense about Billy—he’s a good
+all-around fellow. Well, you never can tell.”
+
+“No,” acquiesced Winona philosophically, “you can’t, and it’s rather a
+good thing, too!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVEN
+
+
+“You certainly are taking it easy, considering there’s going to be a
+dance!” declared Tom. “Usually when anything like that is going to
+happen you run around like a hen with its head cut off!”
+
+“No reason why I should, this time,” said Winona, laughing. “You Scouts
+are giving the dance, not we. Though perhaps it’s because my dress is
+off my mind. You always have to press a frock out and clean your white
+shoes, and be sure your sash is all right, when you’re wearing anything
+festive. But thanks to your suggestion about wearing the ceremonial
+dress, you’ll see ‘ten little Injuns’ walking in to-night, headbands,
+moccasins and all—and I have nothing to worry about.”
+
+Winona stretched herself out in the Morris-chair and looked provokingly
+comfortable and unoccupied.
+
+“I heard about it,” said Tom.
+
+Winona flushed.
+
+“What did you hear?”
+
+“About you and your ceremonial dresses. But I guessed, too.”
+
+“Who told you—and what did they tell?” demanded Winona, sitting up and
+looking ruffled.
+
+“Marie—that all the girls mightn’t have party clothes,” Tom placidly
+replied.
+
+“Marie hadn’t any business to!” said Winona.
+
+“Well, I guessed the rest. You see, Lonny Hughes is in the Scouts, too,
+and he—well, he tells me things sometimes. And I know Adelaide felt
+pretty badly for awhile because she couldn’t keep up with some of
+you—Edith mostly, I guess. He said he had to fairly bully his sister
+into joining you girls, even after Nannie’d coaxed her. You certainly
+were a good sport, Win! You know, there’s just Lonny and Adelaide and a
+younger sister, and the father. They have one of those little flats over
+James’s drug-store, in the Williamson Block, and Mr. Hughes doesn’t get
+an awful lot of salary. Anyway, the kids keep house, and Adelaide has to
+look after herself all the way round. So she takes this hard, the money
+end, I mean.”
+
+“I think she’s silly!” said downright Winona.
+
+“Maybe!” said Tom wisely, and went on bestowing loving care on his
+repeating rifle, the joy of his life.
+
+Winona retired into a book, and Tom, looking up a second later, caught
+sight of its cover.
+
+“Great Scott!” he ejaculated, eying it. “Where did you get _that?_”
+
+“Where did she get what?” asked Louise, walking unceremoniously in.
+“Hello, Tom. Oh, Winnie, I want you to show me about this headband. I
+can’t get the colors matched right—you know you have to be rather kind
+to beautiful golden hair like mine. It won’t stand every color there
+is.”
+
+“No rest for the wicked!” said Winona cheerfully, sitting up and
+abandoning her book. “You don’t mean you’re going to try to get this
+done for to-night?”
+
+“I certainly am,” said Louise doggedly.
+
+“All right.” And Winona, pulled up a little table between them.
+“Here—this is the way.”
+
+The two girls bent over the little loom, their heads close together.
+Tom, meanwhile, finished cleaning his gun, wrapped it carefully in oiled
+red flannel, and looked around for more worlds to conquer.
+
+The first thing his eyes lighted on was the paper novel Winona had
+reluctantly laid down—the one Nataly had loaned her.
+
+“For the love of Mike, where did you get this?”
+
+“Your friend’s sister, next door,” said Winona mischievously. “Don’t you
+like her taste in books?”
+
+“Crazy about it!” said Tom. “‘Beautiful Coralie’s Doom; or, Answered in
+Jest,’” he read from the vivid cover. “Say Louise, this hero was a
+dream. You ought to hear the amount of things he’s called the heroine,
+and this is only the first chapter!”
+
+“Go ahead,” urged Louise, while Winona tried vainly to get the book away
+from her brother, “I guess I can bear it!”
+
+“Let’s see. Child, sweetheart, angel, cara-mia, little one—I’ll have to
+start on the other hand, I’ve used up all my fingers on this one—loved
+one, petite, schatzchen—wonder what that is? The only thing he’s left
+out so far is ‘kiddo.’ I suppose we’ll come to that further on.
+‘Lancelot looked down at her through his long, superfluous eyelashes,’”
+Tom went on, reading at the top of his strong young voice. “Those were
+well-trained eyelashes all right. I’ll bet he hung by ’em every day to
+get ’em in shape to use so much. I’ve found six sentences about those
+lashes on one page, and every one the same.”
+
+“You wouldn’t expect him to have a new set every time, would you?”
+inquired Louise sarcastically.
+
+“It’s a wonder he didn’t have to. One set must have been pretty well
+worn out by the end of a chapter. ‘Ah, you wicked fellow,’ Coralie said
+archly,” he went on, sitting down on the floor with the book. Winona
+made a dive for it, but she wasn’t quick enough. “This wicked part’s
+what gets me. There’s an average of twenty-five ‘wickeds’ to every
+chapter, and the poor fellow’s never even forgotten to return an
+umbrella!”
+
+“Or a book his sister was reading,” suggested Louise.
+
+“And what’s a ‘saucy meow,’ Winona? Coralie did ’em all the time. Can
+you?”
+
+But here Winona threw herself bodily on him, and this time she managed
+to recover her book, which she sat on.
+
+“Well, this literature class is very interesting, but my happy home
+wants me,” said Louise, rising and taking up her loom and the headband,
+which was in a fair way to be properly finished now. “Thanks, ever so
+much, Ray of Light. You’re the best girl as ever-ever-was. See you
+to-night, Tommy.”
+
+“Now, _that’s_ some girl,” said Tom admiringly. “No nonsense about her.
+Do you want me to take you over, Winnie?”
+
+“That would be awfully nice of you, but we thought we’d ‘attend in a
+body,’ as the papers say,” answered Winona. “Aren’t you boys going to?”
+
+“Well, you see, there are extra girls,” explained Tom. “There aren’t
+enough of you Scoutragettes to go round, so we’ve asked some other
+girls, and we have to go after them. But we’ll get them early, and be
+there to meet you when you get there.”
+
+“Well, I don’t want to croak.” And Winona arose to go into the kitchen,
+for that way lay an honor bead, and it was nearly supper-getting time.
+“But I think the boy who goes after Nataly Lee _won’t_ be drawn up to
+meet us, unless we kindly hold back the order of march for him.”
+
+“Shouldn’t wonder,” called Tom after her. “Get something good for
+supper, there’s a useful sister!”
+
+But though there was a slight delay in the order of march, it was Louise
+Lane, of all unexpected people, who was responsible for it: her headband
+went wrong after all, she explained when, flushed and panting, she
+appeared in her other one at the meeting-place.
+
+The girls fell into step and marched, two and two, out into the street
+up the short block to the school-house, where most of the public affairs
+in the town were held.
+
+“Oh, isn’t it gorgeous?” whispered Winona irrepressibly as they came
+steadily and lightly up the centre of the hall, till they faced the
+Scouts.
+
+These last were drawn up in a military formation, in the order of their
+seniority, with the Scoutmaster at their head. He was a plump, cheerful,
+middle-aged man, the father of three of the Scouts, and vice-principal
+of the High School. But you would never have thought he had seen a
+class-room, he looked so military and colonel-fied, there at the head of
+his line of erect, soldierly-looking boys.
+
+“It’s like real receptions!” whispered Helen to Winona, as the orchestra
+blared out “Hail to the Chief!” which was as near to “Welcome to the
+Camp Fire Girls” as the orchestra’s resources could come. Then Mrs.
+Bryan and Mr. Gedney gave the order to break ranks, and the orchestra
+slid with surprising ease into a Paul Jones. So did the boys and girls.
+
+“We got here first, you see,” whispered Tom to Winona as he crossed her.
+The round went on for quite a little while before the whistle blew for
+the breaking up into twos, so Winona was able to question and answer bit
+by bit as she and her brother met and parted.
+
+“What about the extra girls?” she whispered, for no extra girls were to
+be seen.
+
+“The fellows are going after them now,” explained Tom. “This was a
+dance——” Tom had to leave, and finished on the next round, “for the
+Camp Fire. The others didn’t come first, naturally.”
+
+And sure enough, by the time the first dance was over, the extra boys
+were back, bringing partners with them—girls Camp Karonya knew, and who
+were presently going to form a second Camp Fire—for Camp Karonya’s
+membership list was almost full now. The newcomers had evidently been
+asked to wear fancy costume, and the effect of the Indian dresses that
+the Camp Fire Girls wore, and the boys’ military clothes, was lighted up
+and made more beautiful by the dash of color made by an occasional gypsy
+or Oriental lady.
+
+The hall had been decorated in a half-military, half-woodland fashion,
+with tents draped against the walls, crossed rifles, green boughs and
+lighted lanterns. It was a warm night, so they had filled the big
+fireplace at the side of the room with boughs. The entrance to the
+kitchen, where the cooking-classes were held in the school every Friday,
+was covered by a tent. Behind that tent, the exciting rumor spread, was
+a real colored caterer who was going to serve refreshments of
+unparalleled splendor at the proper time.
+
+But at about ten o’clock a frenzied rapping was heard from the place
+which was supposed to hold the mysterious caterer. It rose above the
+music. Mr. Gedney hurried to the door to see what had happened. An irate
+negro appeared—the city caterer who had been imported to lend grandeur
+to the scene.
+
+“Mr. Gedney,” he said in what he may have thought was a tragic whisper,
+but which echoed through half the hall, “I’se been a-caperin’ fo’
+nineteen yeahs, an’ ah nevah had anything as shockin’ happen to me as
+dis heah befo’.”
+
+“Why, what’s the matter, Thomas?” Mr. Gedney asked, while the more
+curious of the dancers marked time gently within earshot.
+
+“Dey done stole mah ’freshments!” wailed the darky, forgetting, in his
+emotion, to lower his voice. “Ah had de ice-cream an’ de san-wiches an’
+de fruit-punch an’ de fancy-cake”—a soft moan went up unconsciously
+over the room as the hungry dancers heard of these vanished
+glories—“an’ Ah put dem out on de side poach till Ah wanted dem. Ah
+didn’t know Ah was comin’ to no thief-town. An dey’s _gone!_”
+
+Mr. Gedney rose to the occasion nobly.
+
+“We’ll find some of them, Thomas,” he said.
+
+By this time nearly everyone in the room had paused about the door. Mr.
+Gedney raised his voice. “Ladies,” he said, “if you will excuse your
+partners for half an hour they will go out on the trail of
+our—ah—vanished refection. Scouts, attention! By twos, forward—hike!”
+
+In an instant every Scout, with a hasty excuse to his partner, had
+vanished from the building.
+
+“It’s that Bent Street gang,” hissed Tom to his sister in passing. “We
+know where they hang out, and where they’re likely to have cached the
+eats.”
+
+“I only hope there’ll be something left by the time the Scouts find the
+food,” wailed Louise. “Don’t look so happy, Winnie—it’s insulting!”
+
+“She’s swelling as if she had an idea,” suggested Helen, who had come
+over. “What is it, Win?”
+
+“So I have!” said Winona, her eyes sparkling as they always did when
+Great Ideas came her way. She was rather given to them. She ran across
+to Mrs. Bryan and began to talk to her in an excited whisper.
+
+When she had done Mrs. Bryan nodded.
+
+“Splendid!” she said. “Tell the girls yourself, my dear.”
+
+So Winona stood swiftly out in the middle of the floor, a slim, gallant
+little figure in her Indian frock and the long strings of scarlet beads
+she had added to it.
+
+“Girls!” she said. “Those refreshments mayn’t ever come back. The boys
+won’t be back with them right away, anyhow. Let’s get together and make
+some more!”
+
+“Good!” called out all the girls at once, and came flocking around Mrs.
+Bryan and Winona for orders. But Mrs. Bryan wouldn’t give any.
+
+“You manage it, Ray of Light!” said she as Winona turned to her.
+
+“We want sandwiches and fruit punch and cakes, and—we can’t get
+ice-cream this late at night,” she remembered.
+
+“We can get oysters,” said Helen’s competent voice from behind a group
+of girls. “That oyster house down on Front Street is always open till
+twelve.”
+
+“Then we can make creamed oysters—good!” said Winona. “Let’s
+see—sixteen couples—about fifty sandwiches, if you count three to a
+person. Six loaves of bread, about. Marie, you belong to a big
+family—do you think you have any bread in the house your family could
+part with?”
+
+“Three loaves, anyway,” said Marie.
+
+“I’ll bring the other three,” spoke up Elizabeth Greene, one of the new
+members.
+
+They both threw on their wraps and hurried out. Fortunately, most of the
+girls lived close by.
+
+“We’ll send Thomas for the oysters,” suggested Mrs. Bryan next. “None of
+you want to go to Front Street this time of night.”
+
+She produced her purse from the pocket of her ceremonial dress, and went
+to send Thomas for the oysters.
+
+“Has anybody got anything in their house to fill sandwiches with?”
+Winona went on.
+
+“We have two pounds of dates,” offered Edith Hillis, “and some rolls of
+cream cheese.”
+
+“And I have the other half of both sketches, peanut butter and
+lettuces,” called out Louise, “three heads, and two big glasses.”
+
+“All right, go get ’em,” said Winona unceremoniously, and two more
+sisters of the Camp Fire hurried on their wraps and fled out into the
+night.
+
+“I have milk and butter, myself,” went on Winona.
+
+“Nannie,” hinted Helen to Mrs. Bryan, who had returned, “do you remember
+those three big layer cakes you made for the Presbyterian fair? I’ll
+make them over again if I can have them now.”
+
+“No you won’t, my child, because they’re my contribution,” returned her
+step-mother briskly. “Thank you for reminding me. I’ll get them, and
+pineapples and lemons for your contribution to the lemonade.”
+
+Dorothy remembered that she had some oranges and bananas, and Adelaide
+finally recalled to the rest that creamed oysters need thickening, and
+went after flour and salt and pepper.
+
+A couple of the other girls had candy at home, beautifully fresh and
+home-made. In fifteen minutes every girl was back laden down, and all of
+them invaded the little school kitchen. Fortunately most of the sixteen
+had taken cooking lessons there, and knew just where to find everything,
+even to their own aprons. So there was no time lost searching for
+matches and knives and bowls, and other such necessaries.
+
+One group of four cut and squeezed and sliced fruit for the
+fruit-punch—or fruit-lemonade, to give it the only name it was really
+entitled to. Another set prepared the sandwiches, which, what with
+pitting and chopping the dates for the date-and-peanut-butter ones, and
+cutting and spreading six big loaves of bread, was quite an undertaking.
+Another group handled the creamed oysters. This last wasn’t exactly a
+group, though, because, try as you may, it is impossible for more than
+two people to make one cream gravy, or white sauce. The rest cut cake
+and arranged plates and looked after the serving generally.
+
+Thomas the “caperer” sat in a corner and “shucked oysters,” as he called
+it, with his two attendant waiters standing statue-like behind him. It
+made a very impressive, if rather useless group.
+
+Mrs. Bryan lent a helping hand here and there as it was needed, but in
+the main she left the guidance of the affair to Winona’s generalship.
+
+“Why, I didn’t know how easy it was to have people do things!” Winona
+whispered to the Guardian, when that lady came over to her once to
+advise a little more butter in the gravy.
+
+“You happen to have executive ability, that’s all,” explained Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+Winona laughed. “Oh, it doesn’t take executive ability when people want
+to help!” she returned gayly.
+
+The boys got back in just forty-five minutes, with rather dirtier
+uniforms than they had taken away. They were panting, also, and had a
+general cheerful air of having had something happen. But with them they
+bore, triumphantly, the untouched freezer, full of beautiful molds of
+ice-cream; also a large pasteboard box full of untouched, but rather
+crumpled-looking, fancy cakes.
+
+The sandwiches, they explained regretfully, were beyond recall, and so
+was the salad. The Bent Street gang had been just about to begin their
+last course when the Scouts descended.
+
+“We had a bully time!” said Billy Lee to Winona, who emerged from the
+kitchen, trying hard to look unoccupied, as did all the rest of the
+girls. “We didn’t expect a lark like that in the middle of this. But
+it’s hard on you girls to miss half the refreshments!”
+
+“Don’t worry,” said Winona cheerfully. “We aren’t going to miss any of
+the refreshments, and neither are you! What do you think Camp Fire Girls
+are good for?”
+
+“Lots!” said Billy honestly, “but I don’t see——”
+
+“That’s because you aren’t looking,” laughed Winona.
+
+She pointed towards the little tent that draped the kitchen door. From
+out that tent issued haughtily Thomas’s two negro waiters, each bearing
+a steaming, creamed-oyster-laden tray.
+
+“You’d better sit down,” suggested Winona, “Everybody else has.”
+
+“Well, this is great!” cried Billy enthusiastically, between bites of
+creamed oysters and sandwiches, and sips of fruit lemonade that was
+really better than that the Bent Street gang had stolen. “You don’t mean
+to say you girls did all this right off the bat, while we were hunting
+the hoodlums, do you?”
+
+“Why, of course we did,” and Winona dimpled with pleasure. “There were
+such a lot of us that it wasn’t hard at all.”
+
+“Anyhow, whoever managed it was a mighty clever person,” said Billy,
+meditatively eating his last oyster. “Don’t you think so?”
+
+This happened to be a rather embarrassing question.
+
+“Why, no!” she said thoughtlessly.
+
+“Then it was you!” said Billy, jumping cleverly to his conclusion.
+
+“We all helped,” said Winona, blushing. “Everybody brought something. I
+only thought of it first—that was easy.”
+
+“Easy if you know how!” said Billy skeptically.
+
+“Winona knew how,” asserted Helen’s voice behind them. She began to talk
+to Winona and Billy very earnestly about several things that didn’t seem
+to have much to do with life in general. They had to turn half round to
+face her, which was what she wanted, for it prevented Winona from seeing
+that all the members of the Camp Fire were clustered near her place. The
+first she knew of it was Mrs. Bryan’s voice saying:
+
+“All together, girls—a cheer for Ray of Light, who saved the
+refreshments!”
+
+The girls’ voices rang out in the triple cheer for Winona, who blushed
+harder than ever.
+
+“I didn’t do anything but suggest it!” she explained uselessly. Then she
+remembered her manners and sprang up.
+
+“Thank you, Sisters of the Camp Fire—even if I _don’t_ deserve it!” she
+said gayly.
+
+Then the band started up and dancing went on.
+
+The evening ended with a riotous Virginia reel (which, by the way, meant
+an honor bead for every girl, because the boys none of them knew much
+about reeling, and had to be shown) and a final ringing cheer for the
+Camp Fire Girls by the Scouts. Then the party broke up. Though broke up
+is hardly the word, for the girls marched out, as they had come, in a
+body, with a military file of Scouts on either side of them. Altogether
+it certainly was the most festive of parties, and everybody thought so
+even next morning, when the mournful things about a party are apt to
+occur to you.
+
+The Scouts insisted, by the way, on replacing the various things that
+had been taken out of various pantries. The girls had intended to pay
+their families scrupulously back, but the Scouts extracted an exact
+account of the commandeered supplies from their sisters and cousins.
+Then they saw to it that everything, from the last loaf of bread to the
+last peanut, was redelivered by four next day. And so ended “the very
+best party,” as everybody agreed, “that we ever had.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHT
+
+
+“It _was_ a nice party!” sighed Winona, for the tenth time, next day.
+
+“It was,” admitted Tom. “I enjoyed it myself. Also the eats were good.
+Very clever of us to give a party like that. The question is, if you
+girls had to manage a real meal what would happen?”
+
+“That’s exactly what we’re going to do,” said Winona. “This very
+afternoon, at Mrs. Bryan’s!”
+
+“Oh, can’t I go?” clamored Florence.
+
+“Well, it’s just Helen and Louise and Adelaide Hughes and I,” Winona
+hesitated. “It’s the maid’s day out, and we’re going to get the supper
+and clear it away. Four of the others are going to do it a day or so
+later. And we’re all going to try to get the same supper at our own
+houses, the next night.”
+
+“Then of course I want to go!” said Florence, “so I can get the same
+supper at home the next night.”
+
+Still Winona hesitated. It certainly is a nuisance to have a small
+sister who wants to tag, when you are just starting off to have a
+particularly nice time with your most intimate friends. And to add to
+the charm of the situation, just then in rushed Puppums through the back
+door, and seeing Winona with her hat in her hand, promptly sat up and
+began to beg wildly. Winona began to laugh.
+
+“Oh, come on, then, the whole family!” she said.
+
+Florence and Puppums both yelped for joy.
+
+“Shall I send Tom over to bring you back this evening?” asked Winona’s
+mother, who was sitting near.
+
+“Oh, no—it isn’t far,” said Winona, “and it won’t be late when I get
+back. Besides, I’ll have Florence and the doggie.”
+
+“Very well,” said her mother. “And don’t try to cook things that are too
+gorgeous, my dear, because we haven’t as much money as the Bryans, and
+it might turn out to be very expensive.”
+
+“I’ll remember,” said Winona, starting off with her little sister beside
+her, and Puppums careering wildly about them both. But it was one of the
+things that never did worry the Merriams, whether or not they had as
+much money as their neighbors. The three children and the dog, as their
+friends said, “always did seem to be having such a good time!” They were
+handsome and light-hearted—that is, the children were. Puppums was more
+remarkable for brains than beauty, as Tom said; being part pug, part
+bull-terrier and part fox-terrier, with a dash of retriever suspected in
+his remote ancestry. However, as long as he had his own way and plenty
+of bones and enough laps to sit on, neither his looks nor anything else
+worried the Puppums dog. His family had intended to give him a very fine
+name, but as Puppums he started when he was a small, wriggling
+mongrel-baby, and to nothing but Puppums would he ever deign to answer.
+So the family made the best of it. It was a way they had, anyway.
+
+Florence began to career around her sister very much as the dog was
+doing, singing at the top of her voice meanwhile. So, as Winona did not
+have to talk, she began to think. What her mother had said about their
+not having so much money as the Bryans set her to wondering, not about
+herself, but about Adelaide Hughes. She had noticed that Mrs. Bryan
+seemed to want Adelaide to make friends with the other girls, and that
+Adelaide herself was very apt to leave the first advances to them. And
+the reason, she supposed, was that Adelaide felt she was too poor to
+keep up with them, or so Tom had said.
+
+“But I don’t ever feel as if I had to keep up with Helen, and she has
+twice as many dresses and twice as much money to spend as I have,”
+meditated Winona. “I wonder if I could ask Adelaide about it without
+hurting her feelings. I will if I get the chance.”
+
+About this time Winona and her caravan reached the Bryan house, and
+Florence ran ahead so quickly to ring the bell that Winona had to run,
+too, to be there when the door opened.
+
+“I’ve brought my family, Mrs. Bryan!” said Winona. “I hadn’t any
+choice—they simply would come. It’s really your fault for being so
+popular with them.”
+
+“Your family’s very welcome!” said Mrs. Bryan. “If it’s willing to be
+useful. What about it, Florence,—will you run errands for us if we want
+you to?”
+
+“Course I will!” said Florence, flinging herself bodily on Mrs. Bryan
+and hugging her hard. “I want to work!”
+
+“Puppums wants to help, too,” said Helen.
+
+“Well, you can’t help that way, you little villain,” said Louise,
+appearing aproned in the doorway and making a dash for the dog. He had
+his paws on the table, and was most ill-manneredly trying to find out
+what was wrapped up in the paper with the lovely meaty smell. Louise
+rescued the package, and carried it out to the kitchen.
+
+“Is everyone here?” asked Mrs. Bryan. “No, I miss Adelaide.”
+
+“She’s just coming now,” said Helen from the living-room window. “I
+wonder if she’s remembered to bring her apron?”
+
+“Oh,” cried Winona, “I never brought mine!”
+
+“I’ll go get it,” said Florence. “You see, you need me already!”
+
+She flew off, with the dog at her heels.
+
+“Truly, I’m sorry, Mrs. Bryan,” apologized Winona again, “but she would
+have felt so badly if I hadn’t let her come!”
+
+“You ought to sit on her more,” suggested Louise, popping her head out
+of the kitchen door again. “I do on mine.”
+
+“Well, you have such a lot of brothers and sisters you have to,” said
+Winona, for Louise was the oldest of six.
+
+“Bessie wanted to come,” said Louise, “but I put my foot down.”
+
+“On Bessie?” laughed Winona, as she ran to open the door for Adelaide.
+“I hope you didn’t hurt her.”
+
+“Did you bring your apron, Adelaide?” called Helen anxiously.
+
+“There! She’s asked every one of us that question in turn,” said Louise,
+coming out into the living-room for the fourth time in five minutes. “I
+do hope you did!”
+
+“Oh, yes, I did,” said Adelaide. “I have it here under my arm.”
+
+“And here’s Florence back with mine!” said Winona. “Now may we start?”
+
+“It isn’t quite time yet,” said Mrs. Bryan. “If we plan for supper at
+six, one hour is a great plenty of time for supper-getting, especially
+with all of us at it. It’s only four-thirty now, and I want to tell you
+a plan I have. Come here, Florence. It’s about you and your friends.”
+
+“Oh, a plan about me!” said Florence. “That is nice!”
+
+“You see, girls,” went on Mrs. Bryan, “there are always little sisters
+or cousins of Camp Fire Girls, like Florence and Bessie and the rest,
+who want to play, too. They aren’t old enough to belong to Camp Fires of
+their own, so the way we do is to make them an annex to ours, under the
+name of Blue Birds—the Blue Bird stands for happiness, you know. And we
+help them, and show them how to have good times, too, and—they don’t
+have to tag any more.”
+
+“I didn’t mean to tag,” said Florence, looking a little ashamed. “I just
+wanted to—to come, too!”
+
+“Well, if you will go and find Bessie Lane, and—Adelaide, you have a
+little sister about their ages, haven’t you?”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Adelaide. “Frances is nine.”
+
+“Well, Florence, get Bessie and Frances if you can find them, and we’ll
+discover something for our nest of Blue Birds to do.”
+
+“I think it’s lovely, being a Blue Bird,” said Florence, very much
+impressed by belonging to a society of her own.
+
+“Well, if you’re a bird, fly!” said Louise, giving her a little push.
+
+The girls talked for a while longer, then donned their aprons and went
+out into the kitchen, where they stood and waited for further orders.
+
+“There are four of you,” said their Guardian. “There’s the table to set,
+salad and dressing to make, meat and potatoes to prepare, and dessert.
+Cocoa and cake, too. You’re welcome to anything in the ice-box, but the
+game is to get supper without buying anything extra, unless something
+like bread or sugar gives out—some staple.”
+
+“That will be more fun,” said Winona, who had had some experience lately
+with cooking. “It’s much more interesting thinking out ways to make
+things out of other things, than when you cook straight ahead!”
+
+Adelaide stared as if Winona had said a very strange thing. But then
+Adelaide always did look at Winona more or less that way.
+
+“I think the most fun is eating out of paper bags,” said Louise. “No
+washee dishee. However, I only think that—I wouldn’t dare say it.
+How’ll we divide?”
+
+“Decide that yourselves,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+“Let’s see what there is in the ice-box, first,” Winona suggested
+prudently, when Mrs. Bryan had left them alone. So they investigated.
+
+“Eight large baked potatoes!” counted Louise. “How on earth did you
+miscalculate so badly as that, Helen, or are they there for our special
+benefit?”
+
+“No, it just happened,” said Helen. “Father was going to bring a friend
+home to dinner last night, and neither of them could get here after
+all.”
+
+There was also a large piece of cooked beefsteak, a head of lettuce, a
+dish of cooked peas and some beets. There were other things in the
+ice-box as well, but these were what the girls chose. They brought some
+apples up from down cellar, too, and stacked them in a row on the table
+with the other things.
+
+“Now, Nannie said that the game was to use as many leftovers as possible
+and do everything as inexpensively as we could and yet have everything
+taste good and not seem warmed over,” said Helen.
+
+“That’s something a lot of grown-up women never do,” said Louise. “My
+aunt——”
+
+Mrs. Bryan came from the living-room to say. “I’ll show you anything you
+don’t know about, girls, but you must do the actual work yourselves, or
+you won’t know how.”
+
+“Yes!” said Louise. “Choose your poison, Ladies and Gentlemen!” She
+pulled her cooking-cap close down over her hair. “I’m going to do the
+potatoes. I think I know how to fix them.”
+
+“Cold baked potatoes?” said Helen. “There isn’t anything, except
+creaming them.”
+
+“They’re all right that way,” said Louise, “but that isn’t what I’m
+going to do.”
+
+“Well, I’ll take the cake,” said Helen. “I saw some sour milk in the
+ice-box, and spice-cake is the cheapest cake I know.”
+
+“I’ll take the meat,” said Winona. “There must be something I can do
+with a beautiful piece of steak like that, even if it is cooked.”
+
+Adelaide had not said anything.
+
+“That leaves the salad for you, Adelaide,” said Mrs. Bryan cheerfully.
+“Louise, you’d better see about some fruit for supper, for your potatoes
+won’t take you long.”
+
+Then Mrs. Bryan introduced them to the ways of the gas-range, and went
+back to lie in wait for her Blue Birds.
+
+Helen collected spice and molasses and flour and shortening around her
+corner of the table, and went systematically to work on her spice-cake.
+
+“It looks like gingerbread,” said Winona, getting the bread-crumb jar.
+
+“It is, really, only it hasn’t much ginger in,” explained Helen. “Lots
+of people don’t like ginger. What are you going to do with your steak,
+Winnie?”
+
+“Frame it!” advised Louise frivolously. “They say they have a four-pound
+steak under glass at the Metropolitan Museum, as a relic of the days
+when each family had at least one in a lifetime.”
+
+“If you want to frame your share of it you may,” said Winona. “I’m going
+to eat mine.”
+
+“They’re supposed to be eaten,” put in Helen mildly. “But really,
+Winnie, I think you have rather a hard job. There’s not nearly enough
+steak there for eight people. It was only intended for five in the first
+place.”
+
+“That’s the game, isn’t it?” said Winona placidly. “Besides, I’m going
+to send Florence home to supper. It’s all right for her to attach
+herself to the party for the afternoon, but I draw the line at her
+inviting herself to a meal—don’t you think so, Louise?”
+
+“I’m wid yez,” called Louise back from the gas-range, where she was
+doing something with sugar and water. “Bessie goes back, too.”
+
+Winona got the chopping-machine, divided a big stalk of celery with
+Adelaide, made another excursion to the shelf over the ice-box for some
+peppers and onions, and began to grind her beefsteak.
+
+“Croquettes?” inquired Louise curiously.
+
+“No, scalloped meat,” answered Winona. “The croquettes won’t go as far,
+and there’ll be the cream gravy extra, and we’ll need milk for the
+cocoa. Besides, the deep fat to fry them would be another horrible
+extravagance.”
+
+She put in a layer of meat as she spoke, then the ground celery and
+peppers and seasoning, and a generous layer of bread-crumbs.
+
+“But aren’t celery and peppers an extravagance, too?” put in Adelaide,
+looking faintly interested. She was the only one of the four girls not
+busy. She had not started on her salad.
+
+“They would be if they weren’t in the house,” said Winona carelessly,
+“though I don’t think they are costly this time of year. But I’m using
+them for their bulk. Mother flavors with celery seed when celery’s too
+high.”
+
+She continued to build up her edifice of meat and crumbs and so forth,
+and finally drenched it with cold water and put it in the oven.
+
+“Be careful of my cake when you look at your meat,” reminded Helen,
+coming and tucking her spice-cake in beside the meat as she spoke. “How
+are you getting on, Adelaide?”
+
+“Not at all,” said Adelaide ashamedly. “I don’t believe I know how to
+make salads.”
+
+“Come help me set the table, then,” invited Helen.
+
+“All right,” said Adelaide, getting up slowly from her kitchen chair,
+and flinging her long, untidy braids back over her shoulders.
+
+“No, Helen, please!” said Winona. “Let me show Adelaide. I think we can
+make a perfectly lovely salad in a few minutes.”
+
+“All right, Winnie!” said Helen cheerfully, and vanished into the
+dining-room alone.
+
+“I don’t see how!” said Adelaide. “I thought you had to have chicken or
+lobster or such things for salad—and I’m sure I’d curdle the dressing.”
+
+“Of course you will if you expect to,” said Louise, setting her syrup on
+to boil, and beginning to pare and quarter apples and drop them in cold
+water so they wouldn’t brown. “Why don’t you make boiled dressing?”
+
+“I didn’t know about it,” said Adelaide.
+
+“Good gracious!” said Louise. “How on earth do you manage at your
+house?”
+
+“Well, there’s just father and Lonny and France and I, and mostly father
+brings home things from the delicatessen. And sometimes we roast meat
+and just eat at it till it’s gone. I’m not old enough to know much about
+housekeeping, father says. But Lonny cooks sometimes.”
+
+Winona and Louise both stared at her.
+
+“I’d go crazy,” said Louise frankly. “I should think you’d get so you
+never wanted to eat anything.”
+
+“Anyway, you can ‘try this on your piano’ when you go home,” Winona
+threw in hastily, giving Louise a furtive, if thorough, pinch as she
+passed her, for she had seen Adelaide color up. “Boiled dressing’s easy.
+You know how to make drawn butter, don’t you—white sauce?”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Adelaide, rising.
+
+“Well,” explained Winona, “when you melt the butter in the pan to mix
+with the flour, you add some mustard, just a pinch, and salt and pepper.
+Then when you’ve put in the flour, and the milk, and it’s just going to
+thicken, you put in the yolk of an egg. When it’s cold you thin it with
+vinegar. That isn’t hard, is it?”
+
+Adelaide was swiftly following directions as Winona talked.
+
+“Thin the egg with milk, and beat it a little—that’s right,” said
+Winona. “There—now take it off. The egg only wants to cook a minute.
+Now all you have to do is wait till it cools and add the vinegar,
+and—there’s your dressing!”
+
+“Why, it isn’t a bit hard!” said Adelaide wonderingly.
+
+“Nor a bit expensive,” said Winona. “As for the salad, you can make
+salad out of any kind of vegetable that will cut up.”
+
+“Let me see if I can work it out alone,” said Adelaide.
+
+She washed the lettuce and set it on the individual salad plates Helen
+found for her. Then she began to combine peas and beets and celery quite
+as if she knew how.
+
+Winona watched her for a minute, then went over to see what Louise was
+doing. While she had been helping Adelaide Louise’s syrup had cooked
+enough to have the quartered apples dropped into it, and now it was
+bubbling on the back of the stove. Just as Winona came over Louise took
+off the apples, cooked through, but not to the point of losing their
+shape, and put them outdoors to cool. Then she turned her attention to
+the baked potatoes of yesterday.
+
+She had heated them through, and now she cut off the tops and scooped
+out the inside, and was mixing it with milk and butter and a little
+onion, and beating it till it was creamy.
+
+“They’re harder to do than if they were fresh,” she said, pounding
+vigorously, “but I guess they’ll come out all right, when they’ve been
+browned a minute.”
+
+“They’ll be browned just about the time my scalloped meat’s done,”
+responded Winona, dropping to her knees before the oven. “Oh, Helen,
+come take out your cake! It’s all done—I’ve tried it with a straw.”
+
+“Oh, it isn’t burned, is it?” cried Helen, dashing in.
+
+It wasn’t. She put it on the shelf over the range, to keep warm, and
+headed a party bound upstairs to tidy up.
+
+“You didn’t set places for those little taggers?” called Louise to Helen
+on the way up.
+
+“Not at our table,” said Helen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINE
+
+
+When the four girls came down and put on the supper they found a
+surprise waiting for them. Beside the large table the little
+sewing-table had been moved in, spread with a white cloth and set; and
+around it, very flushed and important, sat Florence, Bessie Lane,
+Frances Hughes, and Edith Hillis’s little sister Lucy. Before Frances,
+who was the oldest, sat a big dish of creamed potatoes, a platter of
+Hamburg steak, and in front of each girl steamed a bowl of tomato soup.
+
+“Well, where——” began everybody. All the small sisters answered at
+once.
+
+“We cooked ’em on the gas-stove in the back parlor!”
+
+“All but the soup,” added conscientious little blonde Lucy. “We dumped
+that out of a can.”
+
+“Well, we cooked it, too, didn’t we?” inquired Frances.
+
+“So that was what was in the package Puppums wanted!” said Winona.
+“Where _is_ Puppums, anyway?” she added as she set down her scalloped
+meat.
+
+“I d’no,” said Florence carelessly.
+
+But just at that moment Puppums accounted for himself. He came in from
+the direction of the half-open back door, in his mouth a neatly done up
+package.
+
+“_Oh!_” cried Winona and Florence in one despairing voice, “he’s been
+stealing again! Drop it, you little wretch!”
+
+Mrs. Bryan went around to Puppums, who was proudly sitting up on his
+haunches over his spoils.
+
+“It isn’t ours,” she said, opening the bundle.
+
+“What is it?” asked Winona. “I might as well know the worst.”
+
+“Chops,” answered Mrs. Bryan briefly. “Two pounds of very nice lamb
+chops, with nothing at all to tell where they belong!”
+
+“Oh, Puppums!” said Winona and Florence together tragically. The rest
+were all laughing but to Puppums’s family it was far from a laughing
+matter.
+
+Puppums Merriam was a splendid watch-dog. He was sweet-tempered and
+intelligent and obedient and cheerful, and everything a family dog
+should be. But he had one fault. He would occasionally snoop around back
+porches in search of anything the butcher might have left. The fact that
+he got three good meals a day, and was losing his figure far too fast
+for such a young and sprightly dog did not matter to him at all. Neither
+did he mind the fact that he got a good whipping every time Tom caught
+him at it. Happy indeed was the week wherein the Merriams did not have
+to apologetically return roasts or steaks to furious owners; or—if the
+condition of the prey made it necessary—buy new ones. But this last did
+not happen very often, for Puppums rarely brought home the bills with
+him, and it is hard to trace anonymous meat.
+
+So when he proudly presented his contribution to the feast there was
+nothing to do but to pick up the chops and put them away.
+
+“I can’t spoil the fun by whipping him, and he always thinks my
+whippings are fun anyway, and wags his tail!” mourned Winona. “And we’ll
+never know whose chops they were!”
+
+“They’re Puppums’s chops now,” said Louise. “Go on, give ’em to him,
+Winnie. If you went out and gathered chops you wouldn’t want to be
+scolded.”
+
+“Well, I suppose he may as well have them,” said Winona still sadly. So,
+although it was very wrong, and as she explained to the dog, it didn’t
+create a precedent, soon the collector of chops was happily crunching
+them outside the back door, while the Camp Fire Girls ate made-over meat
+within.
+
+“What about our camping out?” Louise demanded, after the first pangs of
+appetite were over. “What’s the use of being us if we can’t camp?”
+
+“We _can_ camp,” answered their Guardian as she helped Helen to some
+more salad. “This is lovely dressing, Adelaide. I didn’t know what good
+cooks all of you were. I have been looking things up, and I don’t see
+why we shouldn’t go in a short time now, if all of your parents are
+willing and can spare you.”
+
+There was a great commotion over at the table where the Blue Birds sat,
+and then hurried whispers—
+
+“You ask, Lucy.”
+
+“No, you ask, Frances!”
+
+Finally Florence spoke up.
+
+“Can’t the Blue Birds go camping, too?”
+
+“Why, of course they can!” said Mrs. Bryan cordially. “That is, just as
+with the Camp Fire Girls, if their mothers are willing.”
+
+“Oh, then I can go, if we take Frances,” said Adelaide relievedly.
+“Father and Lonny can get along all right by themselves, but Frances
+couldn’t. Oh, I’m so glad!” Which was quite a good deal for reserved
+Adelaide to say.
+
+“So are we glad,” said Helen heartily.
+
+“I wonder whether we couldn’t go to that place up on the Wampoag River.
+Have you thought of any place, Mrs. Bryan?”
+
+“None but there or thereabouts,” she said. “It’s the best camping-place
+for a long distance, and only about twelve miles off.”
+
+“But won’t the boys want to camp there, too?” asked Helen.
+
+“There’s plenty of room for everybody,” said her step-mother. “I’ve been
+talking it over with Mr. Gedney, the Scoutmaster, and he says their camp
+will be about two and a half miles from the place I’d thought of our
+going. Wampoag River is very long, you know, and there must be five
+miles of woodland along both sides. So we needn’t interfere with each
+other at all.”
+
+“Then that’s all right,” said everybody.
+
+“And oh, let’s hike there!” cried Louise. “We can do it in two days as
+easily as anything. Please, dear, nice, kind Guardian, let us hike
+there!”
+
+“I think it would be a very good thing to do,” approved Mrs. Bryan. “But
+it isn’t for me to settle. You’ll have to have a business meeting to
+decide that, and to decide another thing that nobody’s thought of.”
+
+“Ways and means?” ventured Adelaide, perhaps because they had been in
+her mind, too.
+
+“Exactly,” said Mrs. Bryan. “We haven’t enough in the treasury to pay
+expenses, even if we only stay a little while. It’s for you all to
+decide whether you want to get the money from your parents for the
+provisions, or whether you will earn it.”
+
+“Earn it?” asked Winona, “How could we, in such a little while?”
+
+“You’ll have to work that out yourselves,” replied Mrs. Bryan, as she
+usually did.
+
+“Well, I can’t ask dad for _much_ money,” Louise frankly confessed.
+“Times are hard, and me poor father needs his gold for the lit-tul ones
+at home!”
+
+“Well, of course it’s premature,” hesitated Helen, looking up, “because
+the rest aren’t here.”
+
+“Go on, anyway,” said the others eagerly.
+
+“Well, I don’t see why we shouldn’t have a bread and cake and preserve
+sale,” she went on. “I’m treasurer, you know, and I’m sure we have
+enough money on hand for materials. People will buy things to eat when
+they won’t buy anything else. I’m sure, too, that we could get Black’s
+drug-store to sell in.”
+
+“We’d need more than one cake-sale, wouldn’t we?” asked Winona.
+
+“We could have two—or even four!” asserted Louise boldly. “We needn’t
+go for two weeks yet, anyway. It will only be the last of July then. We
+could have sales Wednesdays and Saturdays.”
+
+“And get orders beforehand, and make what people want!” said Louise,
+“Oh, I’d love to do that!”
+
+“Will it cost much?” asked Adelaide.
+
+“The sale?” said Louise.
+
+“No, the trip.”
+
+“Not a good deal,” said Mrs. Bryan. “We have the land free, of course.
+We shall have to buy tents—let me see, there are twelve in the Camp
+Fire, aren’t there? And there will be six or eight Blue Birds. We’ll
+need ten tents, and then there’ll be the provisions. What they cost will
+depend on how long you decide to stay. If you hike there and back there
+won’t be any railroad fare. As for clothes, you’ll need blouses and dark
+skirts or bloomers, and tennis shoes—but all that can wait till the
+business meeting. Marie is secretary—she and Edith and Dorothy and Anna
+Morris are going to be here getting luncheon to-morrow. There had better
+be a meeting here to-morrow afternoon. I’ll telephone Marie after
+supper.”
+
+Eight very happy girls of assorted sizes cleared away the supper and
+washed the dishes and made the kitchen shine. Even Puppums, bulging with
+contraband chops, was more amiable than usual, and slept placidly in all
+the places where he was most in the way.
+
+“I’m going to take my banjo,” planned Louise.
+
+“I shall take pounds and pounds of modelling clay,” said Helen
+enthusiastically.
+
+“Edith has a mandolin,” volunteered Lucy Hillis.
+
+“Everybody that has a musical instrument had better bring it,” said Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+“We’ll contribute a very fine dog with a stunning howl!” said Winona
+mischievously.
+
+“That dog isn’t a musical instrument, he’s a famine-breeder!” said
+Louise; then paused, for Mrs. Bryan went into the dining-room to
+telephone Marie Hunter. Edith Hillis was at Marie’s, and both girls were
+as excited over the cake-sale idea as the rest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next afternoon the whole Camp Fire had a business meeting at Mrs.
+Bryan’s. Besides the girls who had originally belonged, five others had
+joined. It was a very pleasant meeting, helped out with afternoon cocoa
+and sandwiches that the lunch-getters had prepared. They discussed ways
+and means till they could scarcely hear themselves think. Never was
+there such an unanimous meeting. For everybody wanted to go camping, and
+to go camping money is needed. So three committees were appointed, one
+to buy materials, another to borrow an eligible drug-store for Saturday,
+and a third to attend to advertising. The girls were to meet Friday, and
+each take home what materials she needed. Saturday morning the materials
+were to be returned to the drug-store in the shape of salable things to
+eat. It even occurred to one genius to allot to each girl a certain
+thing to make.
+
+“It’s a good thing to do,” she said modestly—it was Dorothy. “Once our
+Sunday-school class gave a sale, and every single girl brought chocolate
+cake.”
+
+“I remember that,” said Marie. “But it turned out all right.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Dorothy laughing. “We hung a sign in the window,
+‘Chocolate cake sale!’ and it all went. But it mightn’t have!”
+
+So Marie made out a careful list of what each girl was to make.
+
+“I don’t see how we’ll ever sell all those!” she said, looking worried.
+
+But they did. People always will buy bread and cake and muffins. At the
+end of the first sale, on Saturday, Edith Hillis, who was on duty, put
+seventeen dollars in her hand-bag to take up to Helen.
+
+“There are orders, too,” she reported. “We have eight dozen parkerhouse
+rolls and two dozen and a half biscuits promised for different lunches
+and suppers next week, beside jam orders. Here’s the list.”
+
+“That ought to be five dollars more,” counted Helen.
+
+Edith forgot for once to smooth her dress and pat her curls in the
+excitement of success.
+
+“Three more as good and we’ll have all the money we need!” she declared.
+
+And, as a matter of fact, the three following sales were better than the
+first. Adelaide developed a real talent for jelly-making, and the orders
+for that alone helped a good deal. At the crowning sale, the next one to
+the last, they made twenty-one dollars, and eighteen and nineteen at the
+other two.
+
+Mrs. Bryan went off to the city to buy tents, and was understood to have
+come back with ten that were marvellous bargains. The Camp Fire darned
+all its stockings, and tidied itself, and was collectively very good at
+home, so as to leave a pleasant last impression.
+
+Mrs. Merriam lamented that she was going to be very, very lonely, for
+Tom was going out camping with the Scouts only a day or so later than
+Winona and Florence were to go with Camp Karonya. As for Puppums, there
+were many arguments about him, for Tom thought he would make a fine
+mascot, and so did Winona and Florence. It was finally settled by the
+fact that another of the Scouts owned a collie and was going to take
+him; and Puppums, while he was a friendly dog in the main, and indeed
+had quite a social circle of his own, bit collies whenever he saw them.
+So there were bound to be fights if Puppums went with Tom, and it was
+decided that the girls should have him.
+
+Nobody thought there were going to be any more members added to the
+Camp. But one afternoon, while Winona was out in her back garden with
+Louise and Helen and a medicine ball, Nataly Lee from next door came
+calling. The three girls were dusty and tousled; Helen’s braid was
+half-undone, the ribbon was off Winona’s curls, and Louise, who had just
+fallen full-length across the nasturtiums in a vain effort to get the
+ball, had a streak of mould and grass-stain from her shoulder to the hem
+of her skirt. Altogether, they were as badly mussed a trio as you could
+wish to see, when Tom came out the back door toward them.
+
+He said nothing whatever, but he bore high in his hand the very largest
+tray the house afforded, and in its black and banged centre reposed a
+small calling-card which said “Miss Nataly Lee. The Cedars.” He made a
+low bow, and held the tray toward his sister.
+
+Winona took off the card, and the three girls looked at it together.
+
+“Where do you suppose she keeps the cedars?” asked Louise in a stage
+whisper. “There aren’t any next door.”
+
+“Sh-h. That must be her ancestral estate,” surmised Helen respectfully.
+“Oh, dear, Winnie, I can’t go in this way, to a call that has a card and
+all that!”
+
+“Of course you can,” said Winona cheerfully. “I did worse than that when
+I went calling on _her_. I didn’t take any card at all. To be frank with
+you, I haven’t any. Anyway, she received me with her wrapper on, and
+that’s no better than grass-stains.”
+
+“Come on—be sports!” urged Tom, waving his tray. “I think she’s come to
+say that she’s willing to be welcomed in your midst.”
+
+“How do you know?” asked all three girls at once.
+
+“I don’t know—I only think so, because Billy told me,” said Tom.
+
+“We certainly look dreadful!” mourned Helen, but they all brushed each
+other off and straightened each other, and trotted into the house.
+
+Nataly did not look as if she had ever seen a negligee. She had on white
+gloves and a veil, and carried a card-case, and altogether, except that
+her hair was down and her skirt short, she might very well have been
+grown up.
+
+“It’s a charming day,” she began when she had been introduced to Helen
+and Louise.
+
+“It certainly is,” agreed Louise, “and a lot too nice to stay in the
+house. Don’t you want to come on out in the back yard with us and play
+ball?”
+
+But Nataly declined. She said she didn’t think it would be good for her
+gloves.
+
+Then there was a pause, because nobody could think of anything to say.
+Finally Winona began:
+
+“Tom says you think you might like to join our Camp Fire, after all. Do
+you think you would?”
+
+Nataly looked as if she was about to take a dreadful plunge, but she
+said, “Yes, I believe I would like to. The doctor says I ought to be out
+in the open air, and you are, aren’t you?”
+
+“We certainly are!” said Louise. “That’s where we were when you came to
+call. Want to come?”
+
+Louise was visibly fretting at having to stay indoors, and finally
+Winona had to lead the way out to the back garden again. And, naturally,
+the first thing to meet their eyes was the big black tray, with Nataly’s
+own card fatally conspicuous in the very middle of it. Winona tried to
+steer her around it, but it was no use. Your own name is one thing you
+are sure to see or hear before anything else. Winona, talking sixteen to
+the dozen about everything she could think of, picked up the card
+furtively and put it in her pocket. Unfortunately it wasn’t possible to
+pocket the tray.
+
+However, they arranged with Nataly that she go camping with them. She
+could not join till the next monthly ceremonial meeting, but there was
+to be one soon after camp was pitched. So it was settled.
+
+“I wonder who she’ll be friends with specially?” said Helen after she
+had gone. “She doesn’t seem to fit into us, somehow.”
+
+“We’ll have to make her fit,” said Winona gayly. “To tell you the truth
+Helen, she reminds me of a kitten I knew once. It belonged to three old
+maiden ladies. It didn’t know how to be a kitten at all—the poor little
+thing thought it was a cat!”
+
+“Well, perhaps Nataly’ll turn out a kitten, but I doubt it, even with
+you helping,” said Louise. “Come on, let’s finish our game.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TEN
+
+
+As the clock struck eight-thirty Monday morning, on the last week in
+July, one Guardian, one dog, thirteen big girls and seven small ones
+lined up for their long-anticipated hike to Camp Karonya. They planned
+to walk half the distance that day, sleep at a farmhouse about half-way
+to the woods, and finish the next day at their destination. They were
+all in middies, with dark skirts, and the most comfortable slippers
+money could buy—it hurts to hike in tight shoes. They had hats, of
+course, but Edith Hillis, in addition, carried a parasol. Each girl
+carried her own night-things and drinking-cup and luncheon. The
+provisions, and the rest of the baggage, had gone over to the
+camping-place in Mr. Bryan’s automobile and Louise Lane’s father’s
+delivery-wagon.
+
+Early as it was, quite a lot of people were out to see the girls off,
+and even Puppums curvetted proudly as he noticed the attention he was
+getting, for he was a very vain dog. He might well be vain, because
+Louise had attached a large label to his collar which said “Camp Fire
+Dog,” and he was not allowed to chew it off.
+
+They walked slowly, and it felt very much like going to a picnic
+guaranteed to last forever. Presently someone started a marching song,
+and everyone joined in. They walked easily on, having a very good time
+as they went; and before they knew it noon had come, and it was time to
+have lunch.
+
+They were near a meadow by this time, a big green meadow with trees at
+its edge, and they all sat down under the trees and unpacked their
+sandwiches and ate. Some of the girls had thermos bottles with them,
+with hot cocoa, but most of them preferred the concentrated lemonade
+Mrs. Bryan had brought along, mixed with water from a nice little brook
+which had been kind enough to flow quite near them.
+
+“If it’s all going to be like this, won’t it be lovely?” said Winona,
+her eyes shining, as she took a large bite of sandwich, and then fed a
+generous share of the rest to Puppums, who lay quiveringly near her.
+
+“It is nice,” said Helen more quietly. “I hope we’ll have weather like
+this the whole time ... gracious, what’s that?”
+
+“That” was a distant squeal. Winona looked hastily around her to see
+what the Blue Birds were doing. But there were no Blue Birds there. The
+seven little girls were out of sight, but not out of hearing, for it was
+evidently one of them who had made the noise.
+
+Winona and Adelaide jumped up and ran, but Louise and Edith sat placidly
+on.
+
+“They _will_ howl,” said Louise. “There’s no use always chasing after
+them.”
+
+But when Winona and Adelaide arrived at the place the squeals had come
+from they were very glad they had done the “chasing.”
+
+Florence, with little Lucy Hillis holding her, was sitting on the ground
+screaming steadily. The other girls were huddled together in a
+frightened group a little way off.
+
+“What is it? What is it, Lucy?” cried Winona, frightened. Florence was
+making such a noise that it was no use asking her. Lucy Hillis, who was
+one of those quiet, old-fashioned little girls who always keep their
+heads, looked up, still holding Florence’s wrist.
+
+“Florence’s cut herself,” she said. “I’m afraid it’s a bad cut. I don’t
+dare let go of it.”
+
+Winona flung herself down by Florence and put her hands above Lucy’s
+shaking little ones, which then, and not till then, let go.
+
+“Get me a stick, Lucy, quick—a strong one!” she said.
+
+Lucy was back with the stick before Winona was through speaking. Winona
+pulled off her tie, that useful silk scarf of hers which had helped
+Edith out of the water, and bound it above Florence’s cut, twisting it
+tight with the stick. Then she asked Adelaide to tie Florence’s wrist
+again, below the cut. She did not want to take any chances, and she did
+not know yet whether it was a vein or an artery that Florence had hurt.
+
+Then she sent Lucy flying for Mrs. Bryan, while she and Adelaide made
+Florence keep still.
+
+“That Lucy child keeps her head,” said Adelaide approvingly.
+
+“It wasn’t _her_ wrist that got cut!” said Florence indignantly,
+stopping her sobs.
+
+“How did it happen, Florence?” asked her sister. “Tell us—but don’t
+stir. Nobody knows what will happen if your wrist starts bleeding
+again.”
+
+“Well, we were being Indian chiefs,” began Florence, “an’—an’ I was out
+on the warpath, going to scalp Molly Green. And I ran, and Molly ran,
+an’ I fell over a tree-root and the knife cut my wrist.”
+
+“The knife!” said Winona, for nobody had mentioned a knife before.
+“Where did you get a knife?”
+
+Florence hung her head.
+
+“I—I borrowed your penknife out of your knapsack when you laid it on
+the grass to get lunch out of it.”
+
+“The knife? I didn’t.”
+
+“No; the knapsack,” said Florence meekly. “An’—an’ oh, _dear_ sister,
+I’m so sorry!”
+
+Winona could scarcely help laughing, worried as she was. When Florence
+had been naughty she always became suddenly very affectionate. At other
+times she wasn’t, especially.
+
+“I’m sorry, too,” she said gravely. “I don’t know what Mrs. Bryan will
+say to you, nor mother, when she hears about it.”
+
+“Let me see,” said Mrs. Bryan behind them. She had hurried over at
+Lucy’s summons.
+
+“Oh, is it—is it an artery?” breathed Winona, as Mrs. Bryan bent over
+the wounded arm.
+
+Mrs. Bryan laughed. “Nothing of the sort, you foolish child,” she said.
+“It’s only a deep cut. It didn’t even strike a large vein.”
+
+“Oh, I’m _so_ glad!” said Winona, drawing a long breath.
+
+She ran off to get her First Aid kit out of her knapsack, and, coming
+back, presently had Florence bandaged up scientifically, and much
+impressed with the importance of what she had done.
+
+“Will I have to be carried on a stretcher?” the little girl wanted to
+know.
+
+“Not a bit of it,” said Mrs. Bryan briskly. “You will have to walk on
+your own two feet, like any other naughty little girl.”
+
+“Oh, was I naughty?” said Florence cheerfully. “I forgot that!”
+
+“Yes,” answered Mrs. Bryan, “you were very naughty. I think we shall
+have to confine you to camp for two days, when we get there.”
+
+“All right,” said Florence complacently, “but now please can’t I be
+carried on a stretcher? I should think I might!”
+
+“All right, let’s,” said Louise, who had come up along with the rest of
+the girls, in Mrs. Bryan’s wake. “Only remember, Florence Merriam, once
+you get up on that stretcher you have to stay there.”
+
+“Of course!” said Florence indignantly.
+
+By this time all the girls were clustered about the interesting invalid,
+and the stretcher idea struck them all as a very fine one. It would help
+them to put the Wood Craft they had been learning into practice. Winona
+picked up her gory penknife, and began to wash it in the brook before
+she started to cut wood with it.
+
+“Oh,” said Florence plaintively, “I thought you’d always keep it that
+way, to remember me by!”
+
+“I’ll have chance enough to remember you without that,” replied Winona
+feelingly, and went off to look for poles with the others. Edith Hillis
+pulled her embroidery out of her knapsack and mounted guard over the
+Blue Birds, who were, however, a rather subdued flock by now.
+
+Meanwhile the rest of the girls picked out four saplings which grew at
+the edge of the wood beyond the meadow, and nicked them at the bottom
+patiently till they fell. The next thing was to tie them together. But
+nobody had anything to do it with, till Mrs. Bryan remembered a bunch of
+leather thongs she carried.
+
+“I always have at least two along for extra shoe-laces, when I’m
+camping,” she explained, “and they always come in use for something else
+before the time is over. An old guide up in the Adirondacks told me to
+do that, and it’s always a good thing for campers to do.”
+
+The thongs bound the saplings into a frame, and Louise secured them to a
+knot that was newly learned, and the pride of her life.
+
+“That can’t come out,” she said, surveying it with pleasure, for
+learning to do it had earned her a much-valued bead.
+
+For the covering of the stretcher Adelaide produced an old gray shawl
+from her knapsack.
+
+“Father made me bring it,” she explained rather shamefacedly.
+
+“Just the thing!” said Mrs. Bryan heartily.
+
+They wrapped it round the frame, and it went around three times, being
+large, so that a couple of pins held it fast. Then they lifted the
+gratified Florence on to it and started off down the road again. They
+had cleared up the fragments of their luncheon first, and buried neatly
+all the scraps and debris, so that there were no excursiony-looking
+boxes and crusts littering their resting-place.
+
+The girls took turns carrying the stretcher, and as there were fourteen
+of them, counting Mrs. Bryan, many hands made light work. As Louise had
+prophesied would happen, after a little while Florence became restless.
+The other Blue Birds were having lovely times frolicking all over the
+road, chasing butterflies and picking flowers and playing with the dog.
+Florence found it rather stupid to sit in solitary grandeur on a
+stretcher, and listen to what Winona and Adelaide, before her, and Marie
+and Edith, behind her, were saying about their own affairs. So at the
+first stop to change bearers she wanted to get down. But Mrs. Bryan was
+firm.
+
+“No, indeed,” she said, “the first thing Blue Birds must learn is to
+obey orders and keep promises. You promised to stay up there till
+evening, Florence, and you must do it.”
+
+Florence pouted, but she stayed. She really had lost quite a little
+blood in her adventure with her sister’s penknife, and, though Mrs.
+Bryan did not tell her so, the walk might have been too much for her.
+She wriggled and yawned, and once sat up straight, till her bearers
+requested her to lie still. But presently she had a companion in misery.
+
+It was nearly the end of the journey, and the farmhouse where the girls
+planned to stay the night was in sight. Winona, strolling on ahead, saw
+a small gray kitten prowling along the side of the road. It was a most
+unhappy kitten; it looked as if it hadn’t had a square meal since it
+could remember, and there was an ugly-looking place on its side as if
+something had worried it. It limped a little, too, poor little cat, and
+altogether a more forlorn animal would have been hard to find. But
+Winona pounced on it.
+
+“Oh, you poor little cat!” she cried. “Look, Helen, some horrid dog has
+hurt it.”
+
+“Oh, don’t pick it up!” said Marie. “It may have something awful.”
+
+“Smallpox, maybe?” inquired Winona sarcastically. “Nonsense, Marie, the
+poor little thing’s been worried by a dog, and it hasn’t had enough to
+eat, that’s all. I’m going to adopt it.”
+
+And in spite of Marie’s protests she picked it up and wrapped it in her
+handkerchief, and carried it back to Florence, who was wriggling on her
+stretcher, and wishing that she hadn’t demanded that evidence of
+invalidism.
+
+“Here, Florence,” said Winona, “hold this kitty till we get to the
+farmhouse.”
+
+“Oh, a kitty! Poor little thing!” cried Florence, adopting the cat on
+the spot, and letting it cuddle down by her, which it was willing enough
+to do, for it seemed to be as tired as it was hungry.
+
+“Are you sure——” began Marie again.
+
+Marie’s father was a professor in the high-school, and as a result she
+knew about more kinds of germs than the rest had ever heard of.
+
+“Mother lets us bring in hurt animals, always, and look after them,”
+said Winona. “Germs can’t get you if you’re careful. We can wash our
+hands in disinfectant as soon as we get to the farmhouse. I have some in
+my first-aid kit.”
+
+“And what are you going to do with the cat?” asked Louise, coming up to
+the other side of the stretcher and surveying the much-discussed animal
+without great affection.
+
+“Keep it, if Mrs. Bryan doesn’t mind, as it doesn’t belong to anyone,”
+said Winona coolly. “It ought to make a good camp mascot.”
+
+Louise eyed the kitten again—they were nearly at the farmhouse by this
+time.
+
+“It isn’t exactly my idea of a mascot,” she said candidly. “What about
+Puppums? I thought he was elected to the position.”
+
+“Well, then, the kitty can be the under-mascot,” said Winona
+undauntedly. “Anyway, when I get through nursing her she’ll be a
+perfectly good cat—see if she isn’t!”
+
+“I doubt it!” said Louise and Marie together, as if they had been
+practising a duet.
+
+“Wait!” said Winona as they mounted the steps.
+
+There were plenty of rooms, for the farm people took boarders all
+August; but even so, there were not enough for nearly twenty people.
+However, Mrs. Norris, the farmer’s wife, had been prepared beforehand
+for the descent, and she had extra cots made up and ready in all the
+rooms, and unlimited hot water for baths.
+
+Winona did not come in when the others did. She sat down on the porch
+floor, pulled out her first-aid kit for the second time that day, sent
+Florence in for a basin of warm water, and set about doctoring the
+kitten. She sponged off the torn place in its side, and the little hurt
+in one of its hind legs that had made it limp. This last was only a
+scratch, but it had stiffened. She rubbed salve in the hurt places. Then
+she bandaged the cat’s leg very successfully. But when it came to tying
+up the side—for the cat would certainly have licked the salve off if
+she could—it wasn’t so simple. There wasn’t anything to fasten the
+bandage to. Finally she wound it round and round the meek little animal,
+and sewed it up on top. The cat looked as if it had on a large and
+fashionable sash, but it did not object. Then Winona gave it some
+evaporated cream out of a can in her knapsack, watched it while it ate,
+which it did till the belt tightened dangerously, and took it into the
+house with her. Florence took the basin back to the place she had gotten
+it from.
+
+“Does this kitten belong to you?” Winona asked the landlady, who was
+hurrying about a long table in the dining-room, putting dishes full of
+steaming things on the table.
+
+“Bless my soul, no!” she answered, stopping with a pan of baked beans
+poised in mid-air. “Why, I do believe that’s the kitten that belonged to
+Medarys, down the road, and they moved away last week. Well, poor little
+thing, the dogs must have got after it. It’s a mercy it got away at
+all.”
+
+“People who abandon cats that way ought to be left out in a wilderness
+themselves, without anything to eat,” said Mrs. Bryan warmly, as she
+came up behind them.
+
+“Ain’t it so?” said the landlady. “I’ll get somebody to drown the poor
+little thing to-morrow.”
+
+“Oh, no! I’ll keep it if it’s nobody’s,” Winona said eagerly. “You don’t
+mind, do you, Mrs. Bryan?”
+
+“If it hasn’t mange,” said Mrs. Bryan prudently.
+
+“It hasn’t,” Winona and Florence assured her together. “It’s only hurt.”
+
+“Very well,” said the Guardian; and the Merriams ran off to wash their
+hands in disinfectant and straighten themselves generally for supper.
+They left the cat in their room.
+
+That certainly was a supper. When you have walked all day in the open
+you feel as if you could eat a house, if nothing tenderer offers itself.
+Even Nataly Lee, who was genuinely tired to death, was hungry. The girls
+stood behind their chairs for a moment, saying one of the Camp Fire
+graces softly in unison. Then they sat down, and ate as if lunch had
+been only a dream.
+
+After supper the hostess showed them her long parlor and invited them to
+make themselves at home. But they were all too sleepy to frolic. Louise,
+who was untirable, did indeed unsling her banjo from across her shoulder
+and try to sing, but she interrupted herself in the middle of “Nellie
+Gray” with a gigantic yawn. The Blue Birds were all asleep in their
+chairs, and had to be marched off to bed half conscious. It was only
+eight, but the elder sisters and cousins who took them up liked the
+looks of the white cots very much, and—well, it seemed so useless to go
+downstairs again, some way. So Winona and Adelaide and Louise and
+Elizabeth, and Marie, who was looking after such Blue Birds as had not
+sisters along, simply went to bed, too, when they had attended to their
+charges. The other girls sat sleepily downstairs for awhile, waiting for
+their friends to come back. And then they, too, came upstairs and went
+to bed—and by eight-thirty there was nothing to be heard of seven Blue
+Birds, thirteen Camp Fire Girls, a dog and a cat, but twenty even
+breathings from as many cots, an occasional snore from the back porch
+where Puppums was tied, and a loud, ecstatic purr from the corner of
+Winona’s cot, where the Medary’s late kitten was privately spending the
+night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ELEVEN
+
+
+Next morning by eight Camp Karonya was up and eating a large breakfast.
+The girls sang a cheer to Mrs. Norris when they were done, and formed
+for their march again. Most of them had brought enough food for two
+lunches, but Mrs. Norris could not be brought to think so, and insisted
+on piling up provisions enough for a regiment. They compromised, on
+several slices of roast lamb apiece, and enough bread and butter to go
+around and leave some over.
+
+Winona slipped into the little general store near the farmhouse, and
+bargained for some more cans of evaporated milk for her under-mascot,
+the kitten. It was travelling in Florence’s knapsack to-day, and
+Florence’s things were distributed between Winona and two of the other
+girls. It proved to be a very frisky kitten by nature, now that its
+fears of being hungry and homeless were gone. Winona had to sew its
+bandage on again at noon.
+
+“I don’t know how it is,” she said perplexedly. “It’s certainly a fatter
+kitten, and yet its bandage is too big!”
+
+“Poor thing! Take it off altogether!” advised Helen. “Pussy will get
+well just as soon without it.”
+
+So they ripped off the bandage, and the kitten seemed very grateful. Its
+hurt looked like scarcely more than a scratch now.
+
+“If she’s going to be a camp mascot she ought to have a name,” suggested
+Florence.
+
+Winona laughed. “I’m going to call her Hike,” she said. “She was hiking
+when we met her, poor pussy, and so were we.”
+
+So Hike the Camp Cat she became. And—to anticipate—when she had been
+living on evaporated cream and other luxuries a few days, she turned
+into a plump and handsome Maltese kitten with charming manners.
+
+The girls arrived at their camping-place at about five that day. The big
+limousine that belonged to Helen’s father, and the big electric delivery
+wagon which Louise’s father had contributed, stood waiting for them on
+the road nearest the clearing in the woods, where they were to make
+their camp.
+
+“Do you mean to say we’re going to eat all that?” asked Edith Hillis
+helplessly, as she caught sight of the piled provisions in the delivery
+wagon.
+
+“Well, we shan’t have to eat the tents and cots in the limousine,” said
+Winona. “At least, I hope not. But I think we will manage the rest. I
+was on the committee that figured out how much we would want for three
+weeks of camping, and I’m sure there’s no more here than we ordered.”
+
+“I have the list,” said Helen.
+
+“Then check the things off, dear, as the men lift them out,” said Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+So Helen read from her list as the barrels and boxes were carried away,
+and the girls listened in awe, for this is what she read:
+
+ One and a half barrels of flour.
+ Fifteen pounds shortening.
+
+(“It’s a special kind,” explained Helen. “You can use it for cakes, as
+well as frying and other things.”)
+
+ Fifteen pounds rice.
+ Fifteen pounds beans.
+ Five pounds baking-powder.
+ Three sides of bacon.
+ Sixty-five pounds of sugar.
+ Ten pounds of cocoa.
+ Case and a half of evaporated milk.
+
+(“And the extra cans Winnie bought to support the cat on,” interrupted
+Louise. “We can steal those if the worst comes to the worst.”)
+
+ Two barrels of potatoes.
+ Six jugs of molasses.
+ One dozen cans each peas and corn.
+ Eight pounds of salt pork.
+
+“All present and accounted for,” said Mrs. Bryan, as the men who had
+been loaned with the wagon rolled the barrels and carried the boxes off
+to a little tarred shack near the spring. “We’ll have to buy butter and
+eggs and fresh fruit and vegetables as we go along. They’ll keep in the
+spring, for it seems to be ice-cold.”
+
+“And did just things to eat for us cost all that beautiful eighty
+dollars we made at all the cake-sales?” asked Florence indignantly. She
+had helped make fudge for those sales, and she felt as if they had been
+her personal venture.
+
+“It came to about fifty-five dollars, wholesale,” said Helen, looking
+down at the itemized list she held. “We figured out that the other
+thirty dollars would just about keep us in the green things and dairy
+things we had to have. The corn and peas are in case we’re weatherbound
+and can’t get fresh vegetables.”
+
+“And how long did you say we could live on that perfect mountain of
+food?” inquired Nataly Lee’s mournful voice from where she was lying on
+the grass with her knapsack under her head.
+
+“Three weeks, no more,” said Helen briskly. “If we want to stay we shall
+have to earn more money.”
+
+“I think we could,” mused Winona thoughtfully.
+
+“But what about the tents?” asked Elizabeth curiously. She was a quiet,
+competent little thing. “I don’t see where the money for them comes in.”
+
+“That’s the most splendid thing of all,” smiled Mrs. Bryan, as the men
+began to slide ten dusty-looking tents out of the wagon. “Mr. Gedney,
+the Scoutmaster, called up Mr. Bryan just before I was going shopping
+for tents, and told me about these in case we wanted them. They belonged
+to the National Guard, and the State had condemned them, because they
+were shabbier than some politician or other liked them to be. So the
+Scouts were offered them at a ridiculously low price, if they would only
+take enough. Rather than let such a bargain go by the Scouts took them
+all, though there were more than they needed. And Mr. Gedney says we may
+use these, and needn’t pay for them till next winter.”
+
+The girls agreed that it certainly was luck, and followed on down to see
+the tents put up—ten little brown tents in a row, with two cots and a
+box-dressing-table in each.
+
+“You’ll have to stow your clothes underneath the cots,” explained Mrs.
+Bryan. “And I expect each of you to learn how to put up and take down
+her own tent.”
+
+“Beads!” exploded Louise.
+
+“Exactly,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+“We only have extra under-things,” said Marie, “and one dress-up frock
+apiece, besides our camp clothes and ceremonial dresses. We don’t need
+much room.”
+
+By the time the tents had been assigned and the cots made up, supper was
+ready, and Mrs. Bryan summoned them to it by blowing a clear little
+whistle she wore. The girls had expected to turn to and get their own
+supper. So they were very much surprised to find Mrs. Bryan’s black maid
+Grace, and Mrs. Hunter’s Jenny smiling behind the long trestles in the
+mess-tent, setting steaming dishes up and down the table.
+
+“This is a special treat,” explained Mrs. Bryan. “We’re all tired
+to-night, and we hadn’t time to do any cooking ourselves anyway, so I
+let Grace and Jenny do it. But to-morrow morning camp life begins. We’ll
+draw lots for assignment to duties, after supper.”
+
+The girls stood up behind their seats for a moment and said grace, then
+sat down, and ate as if they had never seen food before. It was a very
+civilized meal, soup, roasts and dessert, all sent over by the mothers
+in the tonneau of the Bryan car, as the cooks and the provisions had
+been. It tasted good, but everyone looked forward with joy to real camp
+cooking.
+
+“Wait till you see how I can broil venison steak,” threatened Louise, as
+she ate a very large helping of despised roast beef from a mere
+unromantic cow.
+
+“Where’ll you get the venison? Pick it?” called back Winona from the
+other side of the table.
+
+“No, she’s going to grow it!” said Elizabeth.
+
+“Nothing of the kind!” said Louise cheerfully. “All you do is to go out
+with a gun, and stalk till you find a magnificent moose feeding
+peacefully among the underbrush.”
+
+“Suppose there isn’t any underbrush?” inquired Edith’s languid voice
+from the table’s other end.
+
+“Then you carry some out with you and scatter it around for the deer to
+eat out of,” said Louise undisturbed. “Don’t interrupt the lesson on
+natural history, please. You stand, moved by the beauty of the sight,
+for a long time. Then, recalled to yourself by the thought of the seven
+starving little Blue Birds at home, you draw your revolver to your
+shoulder and are about to fire.”
+
+“Sure it’s a revolver?” asked Winona skeptically.
+
+“Well, your pistol, then—they’re all the same thing. Just then the
+moose lifts his head and looks at you mournfully out of his large,
+deer-like eyes. You almost relent. But you nerve yourself and fire—one
+crashing shot between the eyes. Then you throw the moose across your
+shoulders and carry it home—and there’s your venison steak.”
+
+“It sounds more like a venison mis-steak to me,” said Winona. “I suppose
+you’re going hunting to-morrow morning, Louise?”
+
+But Louise had just arrived at her dessert.
+
+“I scorn to reply,” was all she said as she retired into her ice-cream.
+
+After supper the girls lay about on the grass, while Winona and Marie
+and Mrs. Bryan put slips of paper in a double boiler. The girls drew
+lots to decide which should be camp cooks and camp orderlies for the
+first week: four for the cooking, four for buying provisions and
+policing the camp, and four for the dish-washing and preparing
+vegetables.
+
+“That leaves one girl over,” spoke up Adelaide, sitting up under a tree.
+
+Mrs. Bryan shook her head. “No,” she said, “it doesn’t, because somebody
+has to look after the Blue Birds every week. I’m going to appoint Marie
+Hunter, because she hasn’t any small sisters, and it won’t be such an
+old story to her to look after little girls. So there are just enough
+people to go around. Rise up and draw lots out of the boiler, girls!”
+
+“I’d rather wash every dish in camp than chaperon the infants!” said
+Louise aside; and drew a slip marked “Dish-Washing” on the spot. “If I
+got all my wishes as quickly as that, how nice it would be!” she sighed,
+and lay down with her arm around little Bessie. Louise had not a passion
+for washing dishes.
+
+Then Adelaide drew a cooking slip. So did Winona and Elizabeth and
+Lilian Brown, one of the girls who had joined later. Anna Morris,
+Dorothy Gray and Edith Hillis drew the other dish-washing slips and
+Helen Bryan, Nataly Lee, Gladys Williams and the other Brown sister,
+Gertrude, were assigned the police and provision duty. At the end of the
+week everybody was to shift to something else.
+
+“It seems to me the camp orderlies have the best of it,” said Helen,
+yawning. “What do we do, Nannie?”
+
+“You see that everyone remembers to make up her bed in the morning, you
+sweep out the camp, carry water from the spring. You have to see, too,
+that the camp is kept in fruit and vegetables—in other words, walk to a
+farmhouse about a mile away every other day to buy provisions. We
+mustn’t break into our canned goods except in an emergency. You are
+really the people who are responsible for the camp’s running smoothly.”
+
+“Carry water!” said Nataly with a gasp. “Won’t we get our clothes wet?”
+
+“Wear a waterproof, love,” said Louise. “I’m going to ask to have Nataly
+assigned to bring me all my water for dishes,” she whispered to Winona,
+beside her. “I’m sure it will have an elevating effect on her
+character.”
+
+“Oh, don’t, Louise!” whispered Winona back. “Suppose you’d spent your
+young life on a sofa, reading ‘Beautiful Coralie’s Doom,’ you wouldn’t
+feel able to carry water either!”
+
+“Then I wouldn’t go Camp Firing,” said Louise conclusively.
+
+Next morning the camp cooks were up at six. Breakfast was to be at
+seven-thirty, but the girls were so afraid of being too late that they
+devised an elaborate system of strings, whereby the earliest awake was
+to jerk her strings, and wake all the others. Winona, Lilian Brown and
+Elizabeth were on the ground by a quarter past six, but, although they
+had all jerked their strings faithfully, no Adelaide appeared. Finally
+they descended in a body on the tent which held Adelaide and her little
+sister Frances.
+
+“Well, would you look at that!” said Winona in an indignant whisper.
+
+The other girls cautiously lifted the tent-flap and stuck in their
+heads.
+
+Frances slept placidly on one cot, her little freckled face half buried
+in the pillow. On the other, quite as fast asleep, lay Adelaide—and
+there was not a string tied to her anywhere!
+
+“Well, if that isn’t the _limit_!” said Elizabeth and Lilian in one
+breath, and Elizabeth reached down to the pail of water which the
+orderlies had faithfully set outside each tent door before they went to
+bed. She tilted the cold water on her handkerchief, and dropped it wetly
+on Adelaide’s face. It wasn’t a wet sponge, but it did nearly as well,
+as an awakener.
+
+“What—where—nonsense, Lonny, _don’t_!” said Adelaide, waving her arms,
+and finally sitting up.
+
+“It isn’t Lonny; it’s us,” said Winona coldly, “and why on earth did you
+untie the strings, when all the rest of us had them to get up by?”
+
+Adelaide looked ashamed.
+
+“I couldn’t sleep all tied up that way,” she confessed. “I felt like a
+spider or a fly or something. So I tied them on the cot. But I thought
+when you pulled them the cot would jar, and wake me!”
+
+“It might have,” said Winona, “if you’d tied them on your own cot!”
+
+Adelaide, looking in the direction of Winona’s pointing finger, found
+out why she had not wakened. In her sleepiness the night before, she had
+fastened her strings to a large twig that grew out of the ground beside
+her bed!
+
+“I ought to be drowned!” said Adelaide ashamedly. “But if you girls will
+wait till I get bathed and dressed, I’ll wash all the dishes to pay for
+this!”
+
+“You won’t do any such thing,” said the others.
+
+So they sat sociably outside Adelaide’s tent till she was dressed and
+joined them. Then they started out valiantly for the cooking-place.
+
+When they reached it a very cheering surprise awaited them, for there
+was Mrs. Bryan seated on a pile of kindling, with a box of matches on
+her lap and a pleasant smile on her face.
+
+“I thought you mightn’t know just where to begin,” she said, “so I
+thought I’d come help, this first morning. The first thing is the fire.
+Do any of you know how to make a cooking-fire in the open?”
+
+Adelaide didn’t, neither did Elizabeth. Winona thought she knew, but
+wasn’t sure, and Lilian had once seen it done, but had forgotten how.
+
+“I’d better show you all, then,” said their Guardian briskly. “The first
+thing you do is to get together two big green logs that won’t burn. Roll
+them together so they form a big V.”
+
+“Logs that _won’t_ burn! What a queer beginning!” said Winona, whose
+idea of building a fire was heaping a bonfire up with sticks till it
+flamed high.
+
+But they tugged and pushed till they had a couple of newly-felled trees
+at angles to each other, in a hollow place protected from the wind.
+
+“Now, you build your fire inside that V,” explained Mrs. Bryan, “and,
+you see, you can put the cocoa-pan up at the beginning of the crotch,
+and the portable oven and the frying-pan down where the division is
+wider.”
+
+“Simple as anything,” said Winona, “once you know how.”
+
+And they scattered to find wood. The sticks lay about in plenty—later
+they were hard to find without going into the woods which encircled the
+camping-place—and Mrs. Bryan showed them how to commence a fire by
+laying small pieces of brushwood criss-cross at the bottom, and piling
+on heavier wood till all was aflame. Presently they had a solid, roaring
+fire. They sat back and let it burn down to coals. By then they had the
+flour-barrel opened, the bacon sliced, and the water ready to put on the
+cocoa. Winona made biscuits, it seemed to her, in mountains, while
+Elizabeth got out the butter and knives and forks, and set the table.
+
+“You can’t cut out biscuits enough for twenty people with a cutter,
+child!” advised Mrs. Bryan.
+
+“Just take the butcher-knife, and cut the whole mass of dough into
+squares, after you’ve laid it on the floured floors of the oven!”
+
+But the bacon had to be sliced, and this took longer; and Adelaide’s
+job, looking after the cocoa, proved nerve-racking, because cocoa will
+burn at the slightest chance. But everything came right, and by the time
+the other girls were astir their breakfast was awaiting them, piping
+hot; crispy bacon, hot biscuits and butter, with jam they had made
+themselves, and cocoa.
+
+“Jam’s an extra,” Mrs. Bryan warned them. “It happened to be left over
+from the sales, so I brought it. You’ll have to go to work and make some
+more out of berries you pick.”
+
+After breakfast, Marie, the keeper of the Blue Birds’ Nest, said that
+she was going to put two Blue Birds to work at each of the camp shifts,
+and leave the odd one to be Mrs. Bryan’s personal Bird and attendant.
+Mrs. Bryan was to choose her attendant, who was to run her errands for
+her and help her generally. But she refused to do it.
+
+“I like them all so much,” she said, “that I can’t pick out a special
+one.”
+
+So they counted out for the honor, and the choice for the first week
+fell on little Lucy Hillis. The others, as far as it could be done,
+worked with their own sisters.
+
+After breakfast, while the dish-washing brigade wrestled with the cups,
+plates and spoons that twenty people leave behind them, the cooks held a
+council. They decided that it would be easier if two girls got each meal
+in turn: Winona and Adelaide the dinner, Elizabeth and Lilian the
+supper, and so on. The camp police divided off the same way, and so,
+eventually, did the dish-washers. Helen, who had the Camp funds in her
+charge, talked with the girls who were going to market that day. There
+was twenty-five dollars for three weeks of camp, she explained, and she
+thought that the safest way would be to allow so much a day, which gave
+them about a dollar twenty a day to spend. They thought so, too, and
+presently Nataly and Helen went off in search of the farmhouse which had
+promised to keep them supplied with perishable provisions.
+
+Winona and Adelaide, freed of any further duties till supper-time, went
+off exploring. It was a perfect day, bright and breezy and not too hot.
+Winona half-danced along, singing under her breath. The sun glinted on
+her pretty hair and lighted up her blue eyes. Adelaide looked at her
+wistfully.
+
+“I do wish I were you!” she said abruptly.
+
+Winona looked at her in surprise. “Wish you were me? Why, on earth?” she
+asked. “Isn’t it just as nice to be you?”
+
+Adelaide shook her head. “I don’t like it much!” she said rebelliously.
+
+“Why not?” asked Winona.
+
+Adelaide shrugged her shoulders.
+
+Winona slipped her arm about her, and pulled her down on a comfortable
+looking log.
+
+“Let’s sit down and talk about it,” said she cheerfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWELVE
+
+
+Adelaide turned and faced Winona.
+
+“Well, go ahead and talk,” she said. “It won’t make things any less so.”
+Then suddenly she burst out, “You don’t know what it’s like. You don’t
+know how it feels never to have anything extra. If I go to a party I’m
+likely to be the worst-dressed girl there. If I go to school and the
+girls treat I have to say I don’t want any because I can’t pay back. I
+can’t invite anybody to meals, because I can’t give them extra nice
+things to eat. And, anyway, the flat’s horrid—even the furniture and
+the carpets are shabby. Lonny and Frances are good, and help, but
+everything drags. And I just hate _everything_.”
+
+“Hate everything!” said Winona soothingly. “Why, of course you
+don’t—you just think you do!”
+
+“It’s all right for you to talk,” murmured Adelaide miserably.
+“Everybody’s crazy over you—of course they would be. I am myself, and I
+don’t like people generally. You have something about you that would
+make people like you even if you weren’t sweet to them. Everything turns
+out right for you. I don’t see what you wanted to join the Camp Fire
+for—its rules stuck out all over you before you ever joined.”
+
+“Oh, _don’t_!” said Winona, blushing. “What rules do you mean? I never
+kept any rules.”
+
+“You know the Law of the Camp Fire: ‘Seek beauty; give service; pursue
+knowledge; be trustworthy; hold on to health; glorify work; be happy.’”
+
+“I don’t do all those things,” said Winona. “Wish I did! But anybody
+seeks beauty, and as long as you have to work the only way to get fun
+out of it is to glorify it. As for the rest, I think they’re only rules
+for getting all there is out of living. I’ll tell you,
+Adelaide,”—Winona sat upright, as if a new thought had struck her—“why
+don’t you see how many of the rules would apply to getting fun out of
+the things that worry you? When things go wrong at our house mother
+always says to Florence and Tommy and me, ‘Can’t you turn it into a
+game?’”
+
+“Turn shabby furniture and stews and no money into a game?” said
+Adelaide, as if she thought Winona was crazy.
+
+“Yes!” said Winona undauntedly. “To begin with the stews—well,
+Adelaide, you don’t know one single thing about cooking. There’s any
+amount of things beside stew that you can make out of stewing meat. And
+don’t you remember the cold things we got out of Mrs. Bryan’s
+refrigerator? That was a good supper, wasn’t it? If you know how,
+cooking’s fun, or nearly anything.”
+
+“If we have more cooking-classes I suppose I could learn how to do more
+things with the meats and vegetables, or maybe market better,” said
+Adelaide. “But that would only help that one thing.”
+
+“You can figure out keeping house just like anything else,” said Winona.
+“All you have to do’s to _think_!”
+
+Adelaide laughed. “Do you suppose I could think the furniture new?” she
+asked. “You ought to see it—horrid old brown rep, and a carpet that’s
+worn into white spots!”
+
+But though she laughed, she looked to Winona for the answer with real
+eagerness.
+
+“Well, I’ll tell you what I’d do,” suggested Winona thoughtfully—“I
+don’t suppose you would, you’re such a haughty Lady Imogene—I’d make a
+furnishing bee of it, and have a party, and invite all the girls to help
+you do the flat over. Your father and Lonny would help, wouldn’t they?”
+
+“Oh, I guess so,” she said.
+
+“Well, then, the girls would help you cover the furniture and stain the
+floor, and even paper, maybe. And if your father or Lonny could paint
+the wood-work—or would the landlord?”
+
+“No,” said Adelaide, “he won’t make repairs. It’s not in the lease. And
+where would I get money for the paint and paper and stain and covers?”
+
+“Earn it!” said Winona. “There are lots of ways. That jam you made for
+the sales—you could get heaps of orders for that, I know. Oh, I should
+think it would be lovely to do. I tell you, Adelaide, you may think I’m
+crazy—but everything’s fun, if you’ll only remember that it _is_ fun!”
+
+“I wonder!” said Adelaide. “But I believe I could make money with jams
+and preserves if I worked hard at it.”
+
+“We’ve all got to earn some more money soon if we want to stay in the
+camp longer than three weeks,” said Winona, “unless Louise can feed us
+all on the venison steaks she was talking about last night. If you can
+make money for the camp you can for yourself!”
+
+Adelaide turned impulsively—they had risen and were going on through
+the wood—and threw her arms around Winona.
+
+“You certainly are the most comforting girl!” she said. “I don’t wonder
+everybody does what you want them to.”
+
+Winona didn’t know what to say. It’s pleasant to have people say such
+things to you, but it is embarrassing, too.
+
+“People like you just as much as they do me,” said she. “Come on, let’s
+go see if we can find the river we’ve heard so much about.”
+
+They caught hands and ran on through the trees.
+
+The river was not hard to find. Above them it was a broad stream, but
+just here it wasn’t very wide, just a pretty, clear, clean-looking
+stream, with green banks and some sort of a dock to be seen a little way
+beyond them. On the dock, when they reached it, was seen to be an
+elderly native with a pipe, and beside him was moored a rowboat which
+looked as if it could be rowed. He looked up from his fishing as the
+girls appeared.
+
+“Morning,” he said sociably, “you little girls going down to the
+village?”
+
+“Good-morning,” said Winona. “No, we hadn’t thought of it. We might,
+though. Is there anything we could get for you if we went?”
+
+“Well,” said the old man, jerking in his line with a good-sized fish on
+it, “ye-es, there is. I want an ad put in the paper. I guess I could
+trust you with a quarter to do it with.”
+
+“I guess you could,” said Winona, smiling. “Will this afternoon do? I
+don’t believe we’d have time now to get there and back before
+dinner-time.” She looked at her wrist-watch. “No, we won’t,” she said.
+“It’s eleven now.”
+
+“Well, this afternoon would do,” he said.
+
+So, while the girls looked at the rowboat wishfully, and wondered if
+they couldn’t get enough fish for supper if they had some tackle, the
+old man adjusted his spectacles, pulled an old envelope out of his
+pocket, and wrote on it laboriously.
+
+“Do you mind if I read it?” asked Winona, when he was done and had
+handed it to her.
+
+“Seein’s that’s what it’s for, I dunno’s I do,” he grunted, grinning
+pleasantly. Winona and Adelaide took each a corner, and read as follows:
+
+ For sale, one rowboat in good condition, with oars. No reasonable
+ offer refused. Apply to John Sloane, R. F. D. 3, village.
+
+They looked at each other, then at the boat. Then both girls exclaimed
+with one impulse, “Is it this boat?”
+
+“This very rowboat,” said Mr. Sloane, eying it with affection. “I don’t
+use it no more. I’ve got a motor-boat, and them Boy Scouts up the river
+has got a fine young flock of canoes, so they ain’t likely to want to
+hire it. Anyway, she ain’t so young as she was. Good boat, though!”
+
+“And what would you call a reasonable offer?” inquired Winona. “The
+reason I want to know is that I have just six dollars, and if I could
+buy a rowboat that way I would.”
+
+“Six dollars, hey?” said Mr. Sloane slowly. “That ain’t much for a good
+boat.”
+
+“It’s all I have to spend on rowboats,” said Winona placidly.
+
+“We-el,” decided Mr. Sloane, “guess I might’s well let you have it!”
+
+And he proceeded to make out a receipt on the spot, on the other half of
+the envelope he had used for the advertisement.
+
+“It certainly pays to advertise!” he remarked, as he turned his
+attention again to his fishing-line.
+
+Adelaide and Winona jumped into their boat with delight, and rowed
+downstream for half a mile. There they were stopped by the beautiful
+sight of a lot of huckleberry bushes, full of fruit, along the edge of
+the stream. They both filled their hats, and when these would hold no
+more they pinned up Winona’s skirt in front and filled that—Winona
+sitting very still thereafter in order not to smash any berries. Then
+Adelaide rowed back and tied their newly-acquired property to the dock,
+the use of which was thrown in, and went back to camp with berries
+enough for dinner. Just before they came within hearing of the others,
+Adelaide whispered:
+
+“Winona, I’m going to try to—to feel that way about things.”
+
+Winona squeezed her hand, but there was no time to say anything more,
+for a horde of small pirates descended on them and carried away the
+berries.
+
+After dinner the girls lay on the grass and made plans, more or less
+wild, for getting money to prolong their vacation.
+
+“We can’t have a cake-sale,” said Marie practically, “because the
+farmers’ wives in the village make all their own baked stuff, and the
+people at the summer-resort are mostly boarders.”
+
+“Oh, please don’t let’s have any more cake-sales, whether they’re
+profitable or not,” said Louise pathetically. “I sold eats for those
+sales till I used to go to sleep at night and dream I was a wedding-cake
+myself.”
+
+“All right, then,” soothed Helen, “you shan’t ever have such dreadful
+dreams again, you poor little thing!”
+
+“Well, what shall we do, then?” asked Edith Hillis pulling her yellow
+curls over her shoulder and examining them as if she had never seen them
+before.
+
+“When you want money,” remarked Mrs. Bryan, “you have to sell something,
+either your services, or your manufactures, or your talents.”
+
+“In other words,” said Winona, “work for people, or make things to sell
+them, or have an entertainment.”
+
+“Precisely,” said the Guardian.
+
+“Then let’s start at the beginning,” offered Winona, “and everybody try
+to think what she can do best in the way of work, and whether anybody’d
+want them to!”
+
+“One thing,” reminded Marie, “we can’t live by taking in each other’s
+washing, so to speak. We’ll have to scheme to get some of their
+hard-earned butter-and-egg money away from the farmers’ wives, or else
+prey on the summer-resorters.”
+
+“We expect to give it right back to them for butter and eggs,” said
+Adelaide. “Whatever we do we might as well take it out in trade!”
+
+After that nobody seemed to have any more ideas. Everyone sat silently
+and thought very hard; till Louise jumped up with a yelp of impatience
+that woke Puppums from his after-dinner nap, and made even Hike the Camp
+Cat open one green eye.
+
+“Don’t let’s waste this gorgeous day thinking!” she said. “My head isn’t
+used to it, and it hurts. Come on, anybody that wants to—I’m going to
+walk down to the village to buy something, I don’t care what. Who’ll
+come?”
+
+Winona, Helen and Nataly dropped into step beside Louise, and the four
+marched off singing “In the Land of the Sky-Blue Water,” which they were
+trying to learn.
+
+“That song really sounds better to Opeechee’s ceremonial drum than
+anything else,” remarked Louise.
+
+“Real Indian music always sounds better if you pound something while you
+sing it, even if it’s only a dish-pan,” said Winona.
+
+“Please don’t mention dish-pans,” begged Louise, “they’re a tender
+point. I just parted from mine half an hour ago.”
+
+“All right,” said Winona good-humoredly, “I have something else
+interesting to tell you. I bought a rowboat to-day.”
+
+“Oh, good!” cried Helen. “Marie’s canoe and mine will be up in a day or
+so, but a canoe wiggles so when you try to fish from it. Now we can all
+go fishing. Elizabeth brought tackle, but we thought we couldn’t do much
+good, fishing from the bank.”
+
+“And the Blue Birds can go out in it till they learn more about canoes,
+too,” said Winona. “I’m going exploring myself in it as soon as I can.
+What are you really going to the village for, Louise—or don’t you
+know?”
+
+“Benzine for my burnt-wood outfit,” said Louise. “I had some thinks, and
+that was one. Little Louise is going to make some nice burnt-leather
+things for the neighborhood. Pillows and table-covers, and heaps of
+things for the farmers’ wives to buy. Lessons in the art if they want
+them. I brought my outfit, and some skins, and colors.”
+
+“I thought I’d model some vases and pots and bowls, and fire them,” said
+Helen. “They might sell, too. Have you thought of anything, Winona?”
+
+“Not a blessed thing, for myself,” said Winona. “You know, I’m not
+particularly clever about doing things like that, except making baskets,
+and Florence does those better than I do. But I have thought of one
+thing—how to sell our wares after they are made.”
+
+“That’s quite a useful thing to know,” said Louise. “About the most
+useful thing there is, in fact. Well, how?”
+
+“We’ll have to peddle them,” said Winona calmly. “The farmers’ wives
+won’t come out here to buy unless we advertise a lot, and we can’t
+afford that. The thing for us to do is to get some sort of a thing to
+carry the goods in, and make it look awfully arts-an-craftsy, and pull
+it round and sell things at the houses.”
+
+“A soap-box on wheels is what I _think_ you’re hinting at,” said Louise,
+“but I hope not.”
+
+“Are you really in earnest?” asked Nataly, who had taken no share in the
+talk so far.
+
+“Why not?” asked Winona. “It’s no worse than taking a horse and cart
+down through the Italian quarter and selling rummage things to the women
+there; and that’s what the Ladies’ Aid at our church did last winter.”
+
+“It’s different,” insisted Nataly, and nothing could shake her in her
+ideas. So Louise poked Winona, as a hint not to argue any more. But when
+Nataly went into the little general store to buy some picture post-cards
+Louise whispered to the other girls, “I have a glorious improvement on
+your soap-box plan, Winnie. If you girls will help me put it through
+I’ll tell you all about it.”
+
+“I’d like to hear about it first,” said Helen doubtfully; for Louise’s
+plans were always original, but not always safe and sane. Before Louise
+could answer Nataly was back again, and Louise began to tell her the
+story of the reduced English gentlewoman who had to sell shrimps for a
+living, by calling them up and down the streets. “And she was such a
+perfect lady,” finished Louise, “that whenever she called out ‘Shrimps
+for sale!’ she’d add under her breath, ‘I hope to goodness nobody hears
+me!’”
+
+“And did they?” Nataly asked innocently, while Winona tried to keep her
+face straight.
+
+“No, they didn’t,” said Louise sadly, “so she never sold any shrimps at
+all. And so she died of starvation.”
+
+But Nataly, instead of grasping the moral, said only, “Well, why didn’t
+she eat the shrimps, then?”
+
+At which Louise grunted disgustedly and went in to buy herself the
+benzine.
+
+After that day there was always a feeling in the village near Camp
+Sunrise that every Camp Fire Girl’s first object in life was cat-rescue.
+And it was Winona who was responsible. To begin with, the day the girls
+arrived at camp she had been seen by all the interested villagers,
+walking near the head of the dusty procession, leading a small,
+sash-bandaged gray kitten by a string. Hike had meowed for air and
+exercise just as the village had been neared, and Winona had taken that
+means of giving it to him, without risking his running off. The
+villagers might have let that, by itself, pass. But when it was coupled
+with Winona’s performance of this afternoon—well, you can judge for
+yourself.
+
+It was after the girls had bought everything they came for, and were on
+their way to camp. Out of a gate, across their road, bounded two small
+boys, each of whom held a wriggling black kitten.
+
+“Won’t you hurt the kitty if you hold it by just one leg?” inquired
+Winona of the nearest boy.
+
+“It don’t matter if we do hurt ’em—they ain’t any good anyhow,” he
+explained. “We’re going to drown ’em in a minute.”
+
+“Oh, _no_!” protested Winona.
+
+“Well, will you take ’em?” asked the other boy. “Mother says she can’t
+keep any more cats.”
+
+Winona took the victims on the spot, and put them into the continuous
+pocket all around the bottom of her Balkan blouse. The small boys went
+back into their yard, where they were heard announcing, “Mother! A girl
+took the kitties!” And Winona stood still with a kitten at each hip.
+
+“You’d better give them back,” said Nataly, who was afraid of cats.
+
+“Oh, I couldn’t!” said Winona. “It’s so nice to be alive, even if you’re
+a cat—and there isn’t really any Cat-Heaven, you know.”
+
+“Well, advertise them for sale, then,” said Louise impatiently. “Good
+home and kind treatment wanted for two black kittens—salary no object.”
+
+She wasn’t in earnest, but Winona was.
+
+“I will!” she said. “Not for sale, but to give away. Will one of you
+take this notice to the paper, while I take the kittens to camp for the
+night?”
+
+“I’ll take the kittens home!” volunteered Helen, Louise and Nataly with
+a touching oneness of feeling.
+
+Winona grinned. “Why, you very obliging people!” she said. “Please put
+them in a box with netting, then, so they can’t get away. I’ll go and
+advertise. I’m perfectly sure such good kittens as these will have lots
+of applications!”
+
+Louise and Helen, each with a kitten, accompanied by Nataly, kittenless,
+went slowly campward in eloquent silence, while Winona sped back to the
+office of the village paper. So the next day an advertisement appeared
+in the _Press:_
+
+ Wanted, to find homes for two black kittens, nice purrers, good
+ mousers. Can be separated. Apply Box 2, _Press_ office, or at Camp
+ Karonya, in person.
+
+“I don’t care if they do laugh,” said Winona when she got back, to find
+Camp Karonya howling at her in rows. “If they laugh they’re more apt to
+remember, and come get the kittens. I’ll put them out of the way, poor
+little things, if nobody answers in a day or two.”
+
+But—whether it was that cats who were “nice purrers” were a novelty,
+whether it is true that there’s a place for everything in this world if
+we could only get in touch with it—the very next day there were five
+applicants for those two black kittens. Indeed, Winona had great
+difficulty in holding onto Hike the Camp Cat, who had grown by now into
+a very presentable, if fat, Maltese kitten. People seemed to think that
+it was Winona’s duty to distribute cats as long as cats held out.
+
+The only drawback was that for the rest of the time it was there the
+village with one accord used Camp Karonya as a clearing-house for its
+cats!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THIRTEEN
+
+
+A couple of days later Winona took Florence and Puppums, and went
+exploring in the rowboat. Louise and Helen were very busy making a
+tree-house, but they promised to see that Hike the Camp Cat was looked
+after and no belated advertisement answerer got him.
+
+The Merriams rowed about a mile along the river, in the direction away
+from the village, without finding anything more interesting than a
+muskrat, who disappeared when Puppums barked at him. But just a while
+after this thrilling incident they rounded a bend, and there in a red
+canoe, placidly catching fish, sat Tom!
+
+His back and that of the boy with him were turned to them, but there was
+no mistaking him, nor Billy Lee. Neither of them saw the rowboat till it
+was quite close, and Florence and Puppums howled together in greeting.
+
+“Hello, kid! H’lo, Winnie—you’ve frightened the fish!” was his
+brotherly greeting: while Billy, not being a relation, took off his hat
+and said politely that he was glad to see them, and how was the camp?
+
+“Oh, never mind the fish!” said Winona, when she had answered Billy with
+equal politeness. “You can fish any day, but you haven’t seen your
+family since last week. How do you come to be up here so soon?”
+
+“Captain Gedney worked it somehow—I don’t know how,” said Tom. “Anyhow,
+we’re here. Good fishing, too. See?” He held up a string of fair-sized
+fish in proof.
+
+“Where’s your camp?” asked Florence, while Puppums almost had hysterics
+and had to be handed into the canoe so that he could love Tom properly.
+“Can I come see it?”
+
+“Sure you can,” said Tom. “No charge for the view. It’s those tents
+right over there.”
+
+“You know I don’t mean that,” said Florence, pouting. “I mean I want to
+get out and go over.”
+
+“Oh, wait a day or so, can’t you, Floss?” implored Tom, who plainly
+didn’t want to be detached from his fishing. “Wait and come over with
+the rest of the bunch, and we’ll give you a grand welcome, fifes and
+drums and things. I tell you, though, girls, why can’t you all come use
+our swimming pool? We’ve just finished damming off a little branch
+stream into a dandy pond—paved it and all. Started it last year. But
+you’d have to give us warning, so we wouldn’t be in it.”
+
+“Why, how lovely!” exclaimed Winona. “I know Mrs. Bryan will let us, and
+all of us brought our bathing-suits.”
+
+“Good enough!” said Tom.
+
+“How was mother—was everything all right at home when you left?” asked
+his sister.
+
+“Oh, fine and dandy. But what do you think, Winnie, that Children’s Aid
+child has come. Mother says she’s glad it happened while we were out of
+the way, so she’d have a better opportunity to get him running smoothly
+without our help.”
+
+“Him!” said Winona. “Do you mean they sent a boy, not a girl?”
+
+Tom laughed. “They certainly did—a darky about twelve, as black as your
+hat, and a regular Topsy.”
+
+“Good gracious!” said Winona, laughing.
+
+Mrs. Merriam had written to the Children’s Aid Society a little while
+before for a girl of about fourteen—black preferred—who could help
+with the dishes out of school hours. She had heard nothing about it, and
+the family had completely forgotten it till now.
+
+“When did he get there?” asked Winona.
+
+“The day before I came away,” said Tom. “It was wash-day, and that
+colored washerwoman mother has opened the door. First we knew she came
+back and said: ‘There’s a white woman and a young colored gemman to see
+Mrs. Merriam.’ So mother went out, and came back in a minute with the
+agent, an awfully nice sort of a girl, and the smallest, solemnest,
+black boy you ever saw. Mother didn’t want him at first, but the
+agent-girl swore he had all the virtues, and needed a good home and
+moral training. Then she walked off and left him sitting on a chair,
+staring straight ahead. I tell you, it got sort of embarrassing after
+awhile. So I asked him his name.”
+
+“What is it?” asked Winona.
+
+“He said, ‘Ah was christen’ Thomas!’” returned Tom, grinning. “So mother
+told him that I’d been christened Thomas, too, and asked him for his
+last name. And he said, ‘Ma las’ name’s Clay—but hit ain’ ma callin’
+name. Ma callin’ name’s Thomas. But yo’-all kin call me Mistah Clay if
+yo’ want to!’”
+
+“Did mother want to?” asked Winona.
+
+“She nearly exploded,” said Tom, “but I think they came to some sort of
+a compromise. I don’t think he’ll leave her time to miss us, for a week
+or so anyway!”
+
+“Well, I’m glad of that,” said Winona. “Tommy, did you ever know of
+anything I could do?”
+
+“What on earth do you mean?” asked Tom, while Billy Lee, who had been
+silently fishing all this time, looked interested.
+
+“I mean something I could do that would earn money,” she explained. “We
+want to stay in camp longer than we have money for, so we must earn it.”
+
+“The thing you always were best at was darning my stockings,” said Tom
+cheerfully, and grinned.
+
+“Oh, dear, I just knew you’d say that!” said Winona. “I can’t go round
+selling darns!”
+
+Billy Lee lifted up his head from a tangle in his fishing-line as he
+answered, “I don’t see why you couldn’t. I mean—why couldn’t you do
+mending for the Scouts? If you’d be willing to, I know we’d be glad.
+There’s an awful lot of holes in my clothes.”
+
+“And nobody to do them?” asked Winona, delighted.
+
+“Not a soul,” answered both boys at once.
+
+“Oh, how perfectly splendid!” said Winona. “Mr. Gedney will know how
+much I ought to charge for them, won’t he?”
+
+“Yes, or Mrs. Bryan had better tell you,” said Tom.
+
+“Oh, can I have them now?” asked Winona.
+
+“Oh, bother!” said Tom. “Won’t to-morrow do?”
+
+“I’ll get ’em,” said Billy Lee, and made a flying leap out of the canoe
+to shore.
+
+He was gone a few minutes, and came back with a clothes-basket full of
+garments of various kinds: also with the Scoutmaster, Captain Gedney.
+
+“Good-morning, girls!” said the Scoutmaster. “This is fine! Billy tells
+me we’re going to get our mending done!”
+
+“Oh, is it really all right?” quivered Winona.
+
+“Yes, indeed, it’s more than all right,” answered Mr. Gedney
+enthusiastically. “I was thinking of taking a trip to the village to see
+if we could find somebody we could put at it, but this is better. Now
+you get your Guardian to put a price on the work, either by the piece or
+by the hour. I can promise you spot-cash, and a great deal of gratitude
+into the bargain.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So the end of it was that Florence and Winona rowed happily back down
+the river with what looked extremely like two weeks’ wash in their boat;
+also with the joyful certainty that Winona, at least, was going to be
+able to earn her share of the expenses for the extra weeks of camping.
+
+The boys promised to paddle down in a couple of days and get the mended
+clothes, and—most important—the bill for them. Billy Lee wanted to see
+his sister, anyway, he said.
+
+When Florence and Winona got back nearly every girl in camp was seated
+out in the open air, in a big circle, and nearly all of them were
+talking at once, planning the ceremonial meeting for that night. There
+was to be a ceremonial fire, a very high and beautiful one with a
+central pole—this last an innovation which Louise was introducing. And
+Winona and Marie Hunter were going to be made Fire Makers, Louise and
+several of the others were going to be Wood-gatherers, and Nataly Lee
+was going to join.
+
+When Winona joined the circle she found that a good deal of the
+excitement was being caused by the Book of the Count. Marie and Helen,
+with paints and pen and brushes, were making the record of the days they
+had spent in camp a very lively affair.
+
+Winona sat down and looked on at what Marie was doing, and read on the
+page they had open:
+
+ On the second day, Winona,
+ Ray-of-Light, the Cat-Collector
+ Made her way unto the village,
+ To buy post-cards at the village.
+ With her went the cheerful Comet,
+ Ishkoodah with flaming tresses;
+ With her went the Star of Evening,
+ Helen, gentle Star of Evening,
+ And Nokoma, flower-giver—
+ Nataly the flower-giver.
+ Seeking post-cards, thus they wandered,
+ But alas, the Cat-Collector
+ Much preferred to bring home kittens,
+ And to advertise those kittens.
+ All next day the ad-replyers
+ Tracked our camp with questing footsteps,
+ Asked of us—“Where are those kittens?
+ Give us several dozen kittens!”
+ For, alas, those cats had vanished,
+ Gone with the first two replyers
+ To the ad Winona paid for.
+
+ Still about our Camp come wailing
+ Folk who seek the cats they heard of,
+ Seeking several dozen kittens;
+ Still the Ray-of-Light, Winona,
+ Cannot give them any kittens,
+ Cannot stop their wronged insistence
+ On those kittens, on those kittens—
+
+“Oh, good gracious!” asked Winona, beginning to laugh before she read
+any further. “Who _did_ make all that up?”
+
+“I did,” said Marie proudly, “but we all helped.”
+
+“Do you mean to tell me that any more people have come catting to-day?”
+demanded Winona.
+
+“Only seven,” said Helen. “Winnie, you’ll never hear the last of this.”
+
+“Well, Mrs. Bryan, I’ve found some work to do that will earn money,”
+said Winona, hastily changing the subject. “Florence and I went up to
+the Scouts’ camp, and Mr. Gedney gave us the boys’ mending to do. He
+said you were to put a price on it for us.”
+
+“Twenty to twenty-five cents an hour,” supplied Mrs. Bryan promptly.
+“You’d better have some of the other girls help you, too, dear, for
+there’s enough work there to take up a good deal of your time for three
+or four days, and you don’t come camping to turn yourself into a
+sewing-girl, even for the good of the camp.”
+
+“Very well,” said Winona. “Who hasn’t picked out any special work to do
+yet?”
+
+“Nataly Lee,” said someone.
+
+“Neither have I,” said Elizabeth. “I’ll help, too.”
+
+A half-dozen of them went off to a sunny spot, produced a large
+alarm-clock to time themselves by, and put in two hours of work
+immediately. That is, all but Nataly. She got tired at the end of one
+hour, and went off, she said, to lie down. The others got the mending
+almost done, for many hands make light work. Then they piled up the
+basket again, and went back to camp. It was Winona’s turn to get supper
+that night.
+
+“There ought to be about four dollars’ worth of work in that basket,”
+said Helen thoughtfully when they all met at supper.
+
+“It’s probably more than we’ll have next time,” said Winona. “But
+anyway, it’s a steady income. Let’s hope they’ll be kind, and wear big,
+awful holes in everything they have.”
+
+“They will, unless they’ve had a change of heart since last week,” said
+Louise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After supper was cleared away the girls set about collecting wood in the
+open space on the top of the little hill, for their ceremonial-fire. It
+was the most happy and successful meeting they had had, and also, as
+Louise expressed it, the most beadful. It ended in a ghost-dance around
+the fire. After it was through the girls lay still and told stories,
+which gradually became more ghostly than the dance. It was very pleasant
+till bedtime came. Then even the bravest of them made dashes for their
+tents; and Mrs. Bryan, making her rounds after the camp was asleep,
+found five lighted candles keeping ghosts out of five tents in a row!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOURTEEN
+
+
+There were bathing and boating and tree-climbing in the days that
+followed and there were hikes and folk-dances and various
+entertainments, by themselves, and occasionally with the Scouts for
+audience. The girls canoed all up and down the river, and borrowed the
+Scout swimming-pool with rapture, and learned all sorts of swimming and
+diving stunts. And everybody got brown and husky and cheerful. But in
+between the good times the girls worked on steadily, each at her
+appointed task, and in about ten days there was a promising collection
+of material to be sold, for the virtuous purpose of giving Camp Karonya
+some more weeks of life in the Wampoag woods.
+
+Helen gave up modelling her beloved statuettes, and went soberly to work
+at bowls and vases, and other such things that people would be likely to
+find useful. She decorated them with motives she drew herself, and took
+them up to Wampoag, the summer-resort, where there was a kiln, and had
+them fired. Louise made burnt-leather pillows, which filled her hair
+with such a fearful smell that for awhile she washed it every day, till
+it occurred to her to wear a bathing-cap to work in. She also burned
+mats and table-covers and napkin-rings to the limit of her purchasing
+power; and when that failed she took to carving things out of wood she
+picked up. The Blue Birds wove raffia baskets and table-mats, and Marie
+and Edith crocheted bags and collars. Adelaide devoted herself to
+canning. The rest helped her sometimes, but more of the time she took
+pride in putting up the fruit all by herself.
+
+There were embroidered tea-cloths and runners, and there was hammered
+brass-work. The honor-counts rolled up like snowballs, for the girls
+made nearly everything a girl is capable of making or decorating. There
+was almost enough made to stop.
+
+But still Camp Karonya held nightly discussions, having made these
+various things, as to how to sell them. The plan most of them wanted to
+adopt was that of going from house to house with them. Having a fair
+meant hiring a room or store, or running the risk of having nobody come
+to buy—for the camp was two miles from the nearest point of
+civilization. The only alternative seemed putting them into some of the
+resort shops to be sold on commission, and there was a large risk there
+that the shops might not do properly by them. There was another
+alternative, sending them home to be sold, but that seemed inglorious,
+somehow.
+
+One night, after everything had been argued over until everybody had
+finished from sheer inability to think of anything more to say, and
+begun to discuss constellations instead, Winona, lying on her back, felt
+a pull at her sleeve. She rolled over, to see Louise stealthily working
+herself down the hill, out of the moonlight. Winona rolled as stealthily
+after her.
+
+“What is it?” she asked, when they were at the bottom of the hill, where
+they couldn’t be seen.
+
+“Come hither, Little One, and I will tell you!” responded Louise, like
+Kipling’s Crocodile. She led the way to the dock, where they sat down in
+the moored rowboat, and Louise began to hold forth.
+
+“We’ve got more than enough things to sell, and none of those plans are
+a bit of good. What we want to do is to take all that stuff up to
+Wampoag, in this old boat of yours, and peddle them at the big hotels.”
+
+“I think so, too,” agreed Winona, “but the girls haven’t gotten
+unanimous yet. You know Nataly Lee’s going to fight to the last ditch
+against selling things that way. I don’t know whether she thinks it’s
+too hard work or too undignified, but you can see she isn’t going to
+stand for it one little bit.”
+
+“Oh, that girl makes me tired!” said Louise. “I’m not going to wait for
+their old unanimity. I tell you, Win, I have a plan!”
+
+“Well, go ahead!” Winona encouraged.
+
+“To-morrow morning,” said Louise. “You and I will slide off early, like
+the Third Little Pig, and pack the boat with all the junk we have ready.
+It’s all in the boxes in the store-place. Then we’ll row to Wampoag, and
+just sell things all day!”
+
+“How’ll we get them away without anybody seeing us?” objected Winona,
+who liked the plan very much. “It would be gorgeous if we could manage
+it.”
+
+“We’ll have to go now and sneak the stuff into the boat before bedtime,”
+said Louise. “We can pile them on that amateur stretcher we used to
+carry Florence. I think nobody ever took it apart.”
+
+“Hurrah! Come on, then!” said Winona, and the two girls slid off into
+the shadows.
+
+It was not such very hard work. They filled their two suitcases, and put
+what wouldn’t go in the suitcases on the stretcher; and had everything
+in the boat and covered up with a waterproof blanket before their
+absence had been noticed. Then they stole back into the circle as
+innocently as kittens, in time to sing “Mammy Moon” at the tops of their
+voices with the rest.
+
+They were both on the policing shift that week, so it was easy for them
+to arrange to get their share of camp-work over early. By half-past
+eight in the morning they were rowing gayly down the river in the
+direction of Wampoag. Florence wanted to come, but they had to repress
+her. She might have been in their way.
+
+When they were around the bend, safely out of sight of the camp, Winnie
+stopped rowing.
+
+“I had an idea, too!” she said. “Reach under the seat, Louise.”
+
+Louise pulled out, first, the luncheon she herself had poked under a
+little while before; next, a good-sized bundle that appeared to be
+clothes.
+
+“What’s this for?” she asked.
+
+“For us,” said Winona.
+
+Louise opened it, and eyed its contents puzzledly. There were a
+dressing-sack made of bandanna handkerchiefs, partly ripped up, two old
+skirts, an old shawl and a checked gingham apron.
+
+“They’re to dress up in,” explained Winona. “We’ll be poor little
+emigrant girls that want to sella da nice-a goods, lady! The women who
+go around selling things out of suitcases always have a foreign look. So
+I fished these out of the box of stuff we had for theatricals. I knew
+just where it was, because we got some things out of it for ‘Everygirl’
+last week.”
+
+“Oh, gorgeous!” cried Louise, finishing the ripping-up of the
+dressing-sack into its original red handkerchiefs. She dug through the
+pile again and picked out the shortest skirt, for she hadn’t her full
+growth yet. “Who gets the little checked shawl?” she asked.
+
+“You do, if you want it,” answered Winona. “I’ll take the apron.”
+
+They both turned in the collars of their middy blouses, and rolled the
+cuffs under. Skirts over them, a bandanna apiece round their necks, and
+the checked shawl over Louise’s head and a handkerchief on Winona’s—and
+they were very convincing emigrants.
+
+“Our shoes are rather too good,” said Winona discontentedly, “but you
+mustn’t ask too much in this world. Pin your hair up, Louise. It’s too
+red for an Italian, or even a Syrian.”
+
+She managed to secure her own on top under her ’kerchief as she spoke.
+They were both so brown that they looked like natives of somewhere else,
+and the dresses were very natural. The long skirts and fastened-up hair
+made them both look eighteen or twenty—for Winona was as tall as she
+would ever be, five feet six, and Louise, though shorter, was plump.
+
+“We can buy long earrings at the ten-cent store on our way up,” said
+Louise. “I always did want to.”
+
+“All right,” said Winona.
+
+“And, for goodness sake, Win, see if you can’t get up some sort of an
+accent. Italian would be the easiest, I guess.”
+
+“Yes, kinda lady! Sella da fina things—real handa-made!” responded
+Winona, her white teeth flashing.
+
+Then they came to the Boy Scouts’ camp, and they had to row very softly,
+and keep as far away from the bank as they could. But luck was still
+with them, and none of the Scouts happened to be fishing that morning.
+
+“If we’d remembered we might have brought back the mending,” said
+Louise, with a half-concealed desire to go tell the Scouts about her
+prospective lark.
+
+“Better not go in there!” said Winona. She had a brother in the camp,
+and she didn’t care to risk being stopped in mid-career of what promised
+to be a very fine time. So they rowed down the river till they reached
+Wampoag, and tied their boat to the dock.
+
+They took out the stretcher, put a suitcase on either end of it and
+piled the things that were too big for the suitcases in the middle. Then
+they each took an end and started bravely forth.
+
+“Where da gooda hotel for sella da goods?” asked Louise, with a broad
+and friendly grin, of the interested dock-keeper.
+
+“Any at all,” he answered. “Just go straight down this road till you see
+a hotel. They’re all together.”
+
+“Thank you, mister,” Louise answered, and they trotted on.
+
+The sight of two young Italian girls carrying a stretcher full of goods
+proved to be a little more of a sensation than the girls had bargained
+for. They felt as if they had never been so much stared at in their
+lives, and they were both grateful when they reached the shelter of the
+first hotel porch.
+
+It was a big hotel that they had come upon, and its wide porches were
+full of women, young and old, rocking, and talking and embroidering, and
+willing enough to look at the things the girls had. The arrangement was
+that Winona should take care of the smaller things, the painted and
+embroidered linens and so forth in the suitcases, while Louise attended
+to the pottery and larger art-craft things, and a row of Adelaide’s
+jellies. She didn’t expect to sell the jelly to people who already had
+three meals a day, but she was agreeably surprised. Evidently they liked
+to have things to eat in their rooms.
+
+The stretcher and suitcases were set on the porch and Louise, with an
+ingratiating grin under her shawl, went from woman to woman, holding up
+her wares.
+
+“Look at da fine pot—native wares—very cheapa?” she asked. “You not
+have to buy. We lika show. Buy da fine pot cheapa? You nice lady—you
+take real Indian pillow—real pine pillow!”
+
+“I believe I will,” said an energetic-looking old lady with white hair
+and a black silk dress. “How much is that pillow, my dear? And aren’t
+you pretty young to be out selling things this way? You don’t look more
+than seventeen.”
+
+Louise swelled with pride at being taken for as old as that, but she
+managed to answer, “One dollar for pillow—very cheap—real hand work!”
+and to the last question, “I lika sella da goods—four little poor ones
+younger as me home. I _very_ old!”
+
+At which the elderly lady bought the pillow on the spot. Louise put the
+dollar in the pocket of her skirt, and went back to the stretcher after
+a big vase of Helen’s, which was the pride of her heart, and for which
+she meant to ask at least one-fifty.
+
+“Real pottery pot, lady!” she explained to the nearest woman to her.
+“Real hand-made—see? Real hand-painted—only two dollar!”
+
+Louise had spent a summer at a hotel herself, the year before, and she
+knew all the tricks and manners of the porch-peddlers. She let the woman
+who wanted the vase beat her down to one-sixty, and pocketed the extra
+dime that she hadn’t thought she’d get with a sense of duty well done.
+She frisked up and down the porch having a glorious time, while Winona,
+with her open suitcase, sat still by the top step. She did not need to
+move, for the women were as interested in her wares as they always are
+in table-linens. She sold a stencilled crash luncheon set of Marie’s,
+five pieces, for five dollars, while Louise was haggling over the price
+for Helen’s vase. Several of the bead bags and necklaces woven on the
+little looms went, too. The girls left that porch with nearly twelve
+dollars worth of goods sold.
+
+The next hotel did not do so well by them, for the people there only
+bought a few handkerchiefs and bead chains. Still it was better than
+nothing. They had covered six hotels by one o’clock and made twenty-five
+dollars. The needle-work, much to the girls’ surprise, went more quickly
+than anything else.
+
+“It must be the wistful sweetness of your expression, or else they think
+I look too well-fed to be sorry for, Win,” said Louise as they munched
+their sandwiches on the dock. The dock-keeper had given them permission.
+“You just sit still and look pleasant, and the sales get made. I have to
+chase all over creation, and tease and joke and cheapen, to get them to
+buy mine.”
+
+“I’m afraid to talk much, for fear my accent will break through,”
+explained Winona. “It’s the goods, I think. They all seem crazy over
+those stencilled things. I could sell a lot more if I had them.”
+
+“Haven’t you any more?” asked Louise between bites.
+
+“Only one, and I promised that to your kinda lady that you sold the pine
+pillow to, and told you were the oldest of five. But I’m taking orders,”
+finished Winona with a grin.
+
+“Do you suppose Marie will stand for going on with it?”
+
+“For what—this bandanna party? She needn’t—I’ll deliver them myself,”
+stated Winona calmly.
+
+“What about the carved frames Elizabeth made?” asked Louise, as they
+rose and took up the burden of life in the shape of their much lightened
+stretcher.
+
+“Pretty well, but nothing like the way Florence’s and Frances’s little
+sweet-grass baskets went.”
+
+“If we sell enough to run the camp another two weeks, I don’t see why
+the girls shouldn’t keep any money over that they earn,” said Winona
+thoughtfully. “The proprietor of that little boarding-house we went to
+last but one says she wants more jelly. _That’s_ all gone, thank
+goodness—oo, but it was heavy!”
+
+“The little baskets at a quarter apiece are going off fast, too,” said
+Louise. “Hotel Abercrombie-by-the-Water. Don’t forget your dialect,
+angel-child.”
+
+“E pluribus unum! Panama mañana! Nux vomica!” answered Winona
+enthusiastically as they ascended the steps. “Buya da beada necklace,
+lady?”
+
+“Good!” said Louise under her breath, and herself tackled dialect again.
+“Buya da pot for poor woman, lady? Got thirteen children to keep—no
+money!”
+
+“Thirteen children—really?” asked the woman in horror.
+
+“Thirteen—all girls!” answered Louise mournfully, while Winona bent
+very low over her suitcase, and tried not to laugh. “Unlucky number,
+huh?”
+
+“Very, for her!” said the woman. “Well, I really must buy something to
+help her.”
+
+Winona was going to stop her, for she thought it wasn’t fair; although
+Louise evidently took it as a lovely joke. But as the woman did not feel
+that her duty to the thirteen went beyond buying one fifteen-cent
+sweet-grass napkin-ring—and she only wanted to give ten cents for
+it—Winona did not intervene. She only whispered, “Don’t, Louise!” next
+time she passed her. And Louise, though she laughed, said no more about
+the thirteen poor little Camp Fire Girls starving at home. Then towards
+evening it was Winona who got into trouble.
+
+They had sold about forty-five dollars’ worth of stuff in the course of
+the day, and were back at the first hotel, the one they had started
+from, to deliver the stencilled set Winona had promised to Louise’s
+white-haired lady. Winona, who felt very tired after her long day of
+tramping and selling, was sitting on the top of the hotel porch in the
+shade of a pillar, her hands crossed on her lap. Her pretty face was
+pale with the long, tiring day, and her eyelids drooped. She was
+figuring out that, what with the Scouts’ mending and this day’s work,
+and the orders they had taken, the camp could go on three weeks more.
+And she felt a touch on her shoulder.
+
+“My dear,” said the brisk voice of the lady who had bought the
+stencilled set, “you seem tired.”
+
+“Why, not so very,” said Winona, coming out of her thinking-fit hastily,
+and forgetting her accent on the way.
+
+“And don’t you find this a hard life for so young a girl?” went on the
+lady. “Wouldn’t you rather do something else?”
+
+Winona smiled and shook her head. “I like it,” she said.
+
+The old lady sat down by her and took her hand. Louise, meanwhile, out
+of hearing, was trying to sell a very lopsided basket to an elderly
+gentleman.
+
+“My child,” she said, “I can’t help feeling that you’re too intelligent
+and too refined-looking for a life like this. I am sure you are not an
+Italian. Is there nothing I could do to help you?”
+
+Winona felt very uncomfortable. She hadn’t bargained for having people
+take a personal interest in her.
+
+“Really there isn’t anything,” she answered truthfully. “I have a very
+good time. I can’t tell you all about it, but indeed, I have a very
+pleasant life.”
+
+But the old lady was not to be daunted.
+
+“My dear child, there is something very attractive about you,” she said.
+“I believe with the proper education you would become an unusually
+charming young girl. You are young enough still to be trained. Is that
+girl with you your sister?”
+
+“Oh, no,” said Winona, wondering what next.
+
+“I thought as much,” said the old lady. “You don’t look like sisters.
+You’re naturally of a better class than she is. Now, supposing that
+someone who could do a good deal for you took you and had you educated,
+do you think you would be a good girl and do them credit?”
+
+Winona did not know in the least what to say. It looked as if the old
+lady intended to adopt her before she could escape.
+
+“It would be awfully nice,” she said, uncomfortably, “and very kind.
+But—indeed, I couldn’t!”
+
+The old lady had begun to speak again, when a clatter of hasty feet on
+the steps behind them made her and Winona both turn around and look.
+
+[Illustration: “WILLIAM!” SAID HIS AUNT, “DO YOU KNOW THIS—THIS YOUNG
+PERSON?”]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIFTEEN
+
+
+It was only a tall boy in the uniform of the Boy Scouts who was tearing
+up the steps. But both the old lady and Winona uttered a faint squeal,
+the old lady because he kissed her, and Winona because she recognized
+the newcomer. It was Billy Lee, and he was evidently a relative of
+Winona’s would-be benefactress.
+
+“How are you, auntie, and how’s everything?” he was inquiring genially,
+with an arm still about her. Winona gazed wildly around, meanwhile, for
+a hole to crawl into, but there was none. “You see, I’ve come to
+dinner,” went on Billy cheerfully.
+
+By this time he had swung around, and seen Winona. He took in her whole
+get-up, earrings, ’kerchief, sagging skirt, checked apron; and, further
+off, Louise making change energetically in the same regalia. He began to
+laugh.
+
+“Good for you, Winona!” he said. “Been selling Camp Fire stuff?”
+
+“William!” said his aunt before Winona could answer, “Do you know
+this—this young person?”
+
+Billy looked embarrassed.
+
+“Oh, say, Winnie, I’m afraid I’ve put my foot in it,” said he. But he
+went on telling the truth—Billy was unfortunately incapable of doing
+anything else. At least, it seemed unfortunate to Winona right then.
+“Why, yes, Aunt Lydia. This is Winona Merriam, who lives next door to
+us. She’s camping about a mile and a half down the river from us
+Scouts.”
+
+The old lady turned sharply on Winona.
+
+“Then what makes you masquerade as an Italian peddler?” she asked
+sharply.
+
+Winona took courage, for though the old lady was cross, she did not seem
+unforgivingly angry.
+
+“We thought if we dressed up perhaps people would buy things quicker,”
+she explained. “But we do really need the money very badly, don’t we,
+Billy?”
+
+“They’re trying to make enough to stay in the woods all August, auntie,”
+explained Billy. “They’ve all been working like beavers, making things,
+to do it.”
+
+“I don’t see yet why the bandanna handkerchiefs,” said the old lady
+tartly. “And you, miss”—to Louise, who had come up—“what did you mean
+by telling me that you were the eldest of five, and hadn’t slept under a
+roof for ten days?”
+
+“Because it’s true,” said Louise. “I haven’t—we’re camping. And I _am_
+the eldest of five, worse luck! I have to spend my whole time at home
+setting an example. That’s why I go away to be naughty!”
+
+It was impossible to be angry long with Louise Lane, and the old lady
+did not seem to want to be angry with Winona. So things straightened
+themselves out, and actually ended in an invitation to stay to dinner!
+
+“But we’ve nothing but our middy blouses, under these awful things,”
+protested Winona, “and Mrs. Bryan will be worried if we don’t get home
+till late.”
+
+“That’s all right,” said Billy’s aunt Lydia, whose name was Lawrence.
+She was Mrs. Lee’s sister. “I’ll have them send a man down from the dock
+to tell your Guardian where you are.”
+
+“Oh, then thank you!” said Winona radiantly. But Louise still hesitated.
+
+“Well, what is it?” asked the old lady.
+
+Louise hung her shawl-draped head for a moment, then she flung it back
+and answered frankly.
+
+“I may want to come peddling again, and if they see us in our camp
+uniform they’ll know who we are!”
+
+“Great Scott!” cried Billy, beginning to laugh, “You _are_ a queer girl!
+I say, Aunt Lydia, let her disguise herself some more, if that’s what
+she wants. Give her some of your clothes, or the chambermaid’s, or
+somebody’s. Would that be all right, Louise?”
+
+“Why, yes indeed!” said Louise, grinning joyously. “Lead on, Desperate
+Desmond.”
+
+“I never saw such girls!” said Miss Lawrence. “However, you may as well
+have your play out. William, get a bellboy to put these goods somewhere.
+I’ll take these objects of charity to get ready for dinner. Your room’s
+next suite twelve, the one I have.”
+
+She shepherded the two girls upstairs by the staircase, instead of the
+elevator, as if she wanted them to be conspicuous.
+
+“Now, remember,” explained she, “you’re two young foreign peddlers that
+I’m giving a dinner to out of the kindness of my heart. I’m loaning you
+clothes out of the same thing. So you can go right on peddling if you
+want to, you with the business instinct—Louise you said your name was?
+Very well, Louise, you can go on selling your potteries and bead bags
+after dinner—if you want to. But I want to talk to Winona myself. I
+don’t know but I still want to adopt her!”
+
+Miss Lawrence left the girls alone when she had shown them to a room,
+and went to prepare for dinner herself. There was a bathroom next to
+them, and they made for it—one after another, of course—with gurgles
+of joy. Winona went first, while Louise was doing her hair, which was so
+thick and long it took a great deal of time to arrange.
+
+“Isn’t hot water heavenly when you haven’t seen it in a tub for a week
+and a half?” said Winona, emerging in a borrowed kimono, which she
+presently passed on to Louise.
+
+“I’ll tell you when I’ve tried,” said Louise, disappearing in her turn
+into the bathroom. She turned around and poked out her head to say,
+“Now, remember, we’ve both got to keep on looking as old as we can. We
+have characters to keep up!”
+
+Winona began to investigate the clothes Miss Lawrence had laid out for
+them. She did not expect to find anything more exciting than a black
+silk with a fichu, or something else elderly of that sort. Instead,
+there lay on the bed two pretty frocks which had certainly been made for
+girls of their age.
+
+She held them both up against her. They were a little shorter than she
+usually wore her skirts, both of them, and a little loose. Evidently
+their owner was of a build somewhere between Winona and Louise. But
+Louise, when she emerged, was quite pleased at that, for what was short
+for Winona was long for her, naturally, and carried out the idea of age
+that she wished to convey. She chose the more elaborate of the two, a
+green silk, because the other dress was pink, which doesn’t match red
+hair. But it did match Winona’s brown hair and blue eyes beautifully,
+and the wide satin sash was very becoming to her. The girls gave their
+tennis shoes a liberal dose of whitening, and decided that they would
+have to do. There were stockings to go with the dresses.
+
+When they were done dressing they gazed at each other in admiration.
+
+“I never had as pretty a dress in my life!” said Winona delightedly,
+surveying the folds of rose-colored organdy that ruffled about her. She
+reached up as she spoke to fasten back her curls with the shell barrette
+that usually held them at the back of her neck.
+
+“Glad you like them!” said Miss Lawrence, appearing on the threshold of
+the next room. “They belong to my niece Nataly—I suppose you know
+Nataly if you live next door to her—but she hasn’t had them yet. I
+brought them to her from my trip abroad. Here, Winona, you haven’t any
+hair-ribbon.”
+
+“I haven’t been wearing any in camp,” said Winona, standing still,
+however, while Miss Lawrence unclasped the barrette and supplied its
+place with a rose-colored satin ribbon tied about her head,
+fillet-fashion.
+
+“That’s the English fashion,” said Miss Lawrence, “wear your hair loose
+till you’re sixteen or seventeen, then do it all up at once, instead of
+pulling it up by degrees, as we do here. It’s very becoming, my dear.”
+
+Winona privately felt that it was a little youthful, but she said
+nothing, and indeed the effect of the shower of curls falling loose from
+under the ribbon was exceedingly becoming.
+
+Louise, over by the mirror, continued to put pins into her hair, and
+Miss Lawrence did not try to super-intend _her_ toilet at all, though
+Louise was getting herself up to look as near twenty as she could.
+
+A knock at the door of the sitting-room, where they went when they were
+dressed, made them all turn.
+
+“Come in,” said Miss Lawrence.
+
+“It’s me, Billy,” said his voice ungrammatically inside. “I say! What
+stunning clothes!” he added frankly as he took in the splendor of the
+girls’ attire.
+
+Winona looked at him rather shyly. The small bag he had carried must
+have been well packed, for Billy had blossomed out in a tuxedo and long
+trousers.
+
+“Why,” she said, “I didn’t know you for a minute—you look so grown up!”
+
+“I’ve had long trousers for a year now,” explained Billy, “only I’ve
+always had on my uniform when you’ve seen me before.”
+
+“Of course, that’s it,” admitted Winona. But she continued to stare, for
+this tall young gentleman looked about eighteen in his correctly cut
+clothes, and she felt like such a little girl, looking as Miss Lawrence
+had made her look. What she did not know was that she was looking her
+very prettiest, like a girl in a play or a picture, with her flushed
+cheeks and falling curls and rosy draperies. Miss Lawrence, who seemed
+to have taken a fancy to her, slipped her arm through Winona’s, leaving
+Louise to follow with Billy.
+
+Louise was not impressed in the least by Billy’s grandeur. It took a
+good deal to impress Louise Lane, and one suit of evening clothes and a
+large hotel weren’t likely to do it.
+
+Winona did not look to the right or left as they entered the big
+dining-room, but she knew Louise had seen something, for she heard a
+little squeal of delight close behind her. They were scarcely seated
+when Louise burst out:
+
+“What do you suppose they’ve done, Winnie? I don’t know whether it was
+you or Billy, Miss Lawrence, but thank you both, anyway. Winona, our
+things are all set out in that little sun-parlor sort of place where
+everybody can see them, and there’s a bellboy looking after them. I saw
+him selling a bead belt!”
+
+“It wasn’t any trouble,” said Billy, looking embarrassed. “The
+management lets people use that room for displays, don’t they, Aunt
+Lydia?”
+
+He did not explain that he had tipped the head bellboy liberally to have
+the things looked after, and it never occurred to either of the girls
+till long after.
+
+Winona secretly decided that Nataly couldn’t be as trying as the girls
+thought her, if this was the kind of a brother she had. So she smiled
+brilliantly at Miss Lawrence and Billy, and felt very happy indeed over
+the bright lights and the elaborate dinner and the orchestra and pink
+dress.
+
+And then something occurred to her. This was Nataly’s dress, a brand-new
+present-dress, and so was the one Louise had on. And they were getting
+all the first wear out of them, would Nataly like it?
+
+She looked up, directly, and said what she thought.
+
+“Miss Lawrence, will Nataly mind our wearing her clothes?”
+
+Louise answered before Miss Lawrence had a chance. “You know perfectly
+well she will, Win. Why, she nearly had a fit when I climbed into a
+clean middy of hers day before yesterday. And these are uncommonly glad
+and happy rags we have on.”
+
+“If she doesn’t like it,” explained Miss Lawrence with perfect
+clearness, “she knows just what she can do. My niece Nataly is a spoiled
+young person if ever there was one. But don’t worry, my dear”—for
+Winona was looking distressed at the idea of Nataly’s objection—“I’ll
+see that she’s perfectly satisfied.”
+
+So Winona did not worry. She talked instead, and told Miss Lawrence
+everything she wanted to know about Camp Karonya and what they did
+there.
+
+“It’s a miniature community,” said Miss Lawrence approvingly. “I wish
+they’d had them when I was a girl. I suppose you’ll have a float at the
+lake carnival, since you’re such enterprising young persons!”
+
+“Oh, is there going to be a lake carnival?” asked both girls in a
+breath. Miss Lawrence nodded.
+
+“Why, didn’t you know?” asked Billy. “The people here in Wampoag have
+them every year. They give prizes for the best decorated float and
+canoe. I don’t know whether it’s a cash prize this year or a cup.”
+
+“I do hope it’s a cash prize!” breathed Louise fervently, while Winona’s
+mind began to work at the ways and means for making and decorating a
+Camp Fire float, and the best way to get it up the lake.
+
+“It would be lovely if we could do it,” she said. “When is it to be?”
+
+Billy pulled a little calendar out of the one small and concealed pocket
+that his clothes allowed him, and studied it.
+
+“A week from to-morrow,” he said. “You have lots of time.”
+
+“Then I’m sure we can do it,” said Winona. “Marie has a canoe she’ll
+probably want to enter, and besides that surely we can get up a float
+among us.”
+
+And then something which Louise—so she said afterwards—had been
+expecting, happened. One of the women who had bought pottery from them
+that morning came up, and began to talk to Miss Lawrence, quite as if
+the girls were out of hearing.
+
+“Good-morning,” she began, taking everything in as she talked. “Aren’t
+these the little Italian vendors that were around this morning? Why, how
+transformed they look! Really, the younger one looks quite refined. And
+what are you doing with them, dear Miss Lawrence?”
+
+Her tone added quite plainly, “And won’t they pocket the spoons?”
+
+Louise, the irrepressible, grinned above her salad. “Kinda lady loana da
+cloes,” she said glibly; and the waiter, who had heard her discoursing
+in rapid and fluent English of an unmistakably home-grown kind the
+moment before, got behind a palm. If he hadn’t he would have disgraced
+himself in a way no well-trained waiter should. Billy, too, dived into
+his napkin and seemed to have swallowed something down his Sunday
+throat. But Miss Lawrence remained quite calm.
+
+“I have taken quite a fancy to them,” she said. “They seem like good,
+industrious girls. I am glad to see you are so interested, too, Mrs.
+Gardner. The best way to help them—you were going to ask me that, were
+you not—is to buy their goods. You’ll find them on sale in the little
+rose-room.”
+
+“Oh—ah, yes indeed!” said Mrs. Gardner, and fled, while the young
+people regarded Miss Lawrence with admiration.
+
+When the meal was over Miss Lawrence would not hear of their going back
+to the camp, or going on with their selling. The bellboy or a maid could
+go on looking after their things, she said, and sent Billy over to see
+about it. Then they went into one of the little dancing-rooms and showed
+each other steps for a long time; that is, Billy and Winona did, for
+Louise said she was tired, and sat thankfully still, listening to the
+orchestra that played in the dining-room. After that Miss Lawrence
+carried them all off to a band concert.
+
+It was ten-thirty by the time they had finished, and all had something
+more to eat—real, grown-up things to eat in a most gorgeous café. Miss
+Lawrence wanted them to stay all night, and Winona was willing, but
+Louise insisted on going back.
+
+“If we’re here to-morrow morning,” she explained, “every blessed woman
+that we sold things to will want to know all about us and our past
+lives, and then the secret will come out. No, thank you, Miss Lawrence,
+
+ “I see by the moonlight,
+ ’Tis past midnight,
+ Time pig and I were home
+ An hour and a half ago!”
+
+“I being the pig, I suppose!” added Winona.
+
+“Well, I won’t keep you against your will,” said Miss Lawrence, getting
+up from the café table. “So you’d better go back to the hotel. They can
+be packing up what’s left of your things for you, while you change. But
+what about rowing across the lake and down the river in the dark? Can
+you look after them, William?”
+
+“I should think I could!” said Billy. “Besides—I forgot to tell you,
+girls, or we might have had a grand reunion—Lonny Hughes and Tom are to
+meet me at the dock at about eleven, with one of the camp canoes. Tom’s
+Winona’s brother,” he explained to his aunt. “So we’ll take one of the
+girls in the canoe, and one of us will go in the boat, and get them home
+safe as anything. For the matter of that, you can’t get hurt on this
+lake unless the fish should jump up and bite you,” he added as they
+reached the hotel, and parted to dress.
+
+The girls hurried off their finery, and got hastily into their serge
+skirts and white blouses.
+
+“I feel like Cinderella!” said Winona as they went down in the elevator
+again, only to find that, quick as they had been Billy had been quicker,
+and stood, familiar-looking in his khaki, to take them away. The pottery
+and linen that was left would all go into one suitcase now, so well had
+they and the bellboy prospered. Billy gave them, too, the money that had
+been taken in during the evening. They hurried off, after they had said
+good-bye to Miss Lawrence, and made her promise to come see them at Camp
+Karonya and stay a whole day.
+
+At the last moment she pushed a bundle into Winona’s hands.
+
+“Here are your dresses, child,” she said. “You looked so sweet it would
+be a shame for you and Louise not to keep them. I’ll make it up to
+Nataly.”
+
+Winona threw her arms around Miss Lawrence’s neck, and kissed her.
+
+“Thank you, dear fairy godmother!” she said.
+
+A more astonished pair of boys than Lonny and Tom it would have been
+hard to find. It did not take long to explain matters. In a few moments
+they had Winona in the canoe between Tom and Billy, while Lonny rowed
+Louise in the boat. The girls held the boat and the canoe together. As
+they went Louise and Winona told the tale of their day’s work.
+
+When they were done Louise pulled out the money they had made, and began
+to count it.
+
+“You have some, too, Win,” she said.
+
+“I know,” said Winona, “I have what Billy gave me, that the bellboy
+made. But I don’t believe it’s a lot.”
+
+“Better count it,” counselled Tom, and Winona did. When she was through
+she looked up with an awed expression.
+
+“Nearly ten dollars more!” she announced. “Oh, Louise, there must be
+some mistake! Why, if we both really have made all that, there’s enough
+for another three weeks’ camping!”
+
+“And orders ahead!” said Louise serenely. “It will take Marie and
+Adelaide more of their time than they’ll want to spare from fancy diving
+and telling the birds from the wild-flowers, to make jelly and runners.
+I tell you, folks, I’m going to be an Italian porch-worker from now on.
+It pays. Sella da fina crock—getta da bigga price—blowa it in!”
+
+The boys shouted. “Good for you, Louise!” they cried, and a startled
+bullfrog gave a deep emotional croak at the noise, and jumped into the
+water.
+
+It was moonlight, so the trip home was pleasanter than any they had had.
+They sang till they came close to Camp Karonya, where they quieted down
+for fear of disturbing the sleeping girls. But they need not have
+worried. Camp Karonya was improving the moonlight night by sitting
+around a watch-fire, singing and telling stories. They could hear
+Helen’s voice lifted up in “Old Uncle Ned,” with a mandolin accompanying
+her that probably belonged to Edith. The boys tied the boat and the
+canoe, and carried the suitcases and stretcher, so pleasingly empty,
+ashore. All five walked over to where the fire gleamed, and were in the
+midst of the girls before anyone had seen them come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIXTEEN
+
+
+The girls jumped up and surrounded them.
+
+“Where on earth have you been? What on earth have you been doing? Where
+in the name of common sense did you get that haughty black person who
+brought us news of you about six?” everybody wanted to know, while
+Adelaide and Nataly held brief reunions with their brothers, and six
+girls at once pressed refreshments on Lonny and Tom and Billy.
+
+“We’ve sold most of your arts-and-crafts things,” announced Winona.
+
+“And every stitch of embroidery,” added Louise.
+
+“And we’ve been to a band concert and met a fairy godmother!” chanted
+Winona in her turn.
+
+“And we have heaps and _heaps_ of money!” finished Louise jubilantly.
+
+Then all the girls cried out, “Oh, tell us about it! Tell us about it!”
+
+So Louise sat down at a discreet distance from the camp-fire, and
+assisted by Winona’s quieter voice, told the story. When she got to the
+part where they pretended to be Italian girls Nataly interrupted.
+
+“Oh, that was dreadful!” she said. “Surely you didn’t do that?”
+
+“Didn’t we, though?” grinned Louise cheerfully; “And your very own Aunt
+Lydia aided and abetted us, and gave us dinner and kind words besides!”
+
+“Aunt Lydia!” exclaimed Nataly.
+
+“She’s over at one of the Wampoag hotels, Nataly,” explained her
+brother. “You knew she was going to be there, didn’t you?”
+
+“How could I when I haven’t heard from her?” asked Nataly.
+
+“Oh, that’s so!” said Billy penitently. “I ought to have brought you
+down her last letter, but it was addressed to me, and I forgot to pass
+it on.”
+
+The fact was, as Winona learned later, Miss Lawrence had very strong
+likes and dislikes, and much preferred her nephew to her niece.
+
+Louise turned round to Nataly.
+
+“You made some things to sell, didn’t you?” she asked, “And yet you
+think it was shocking of us to sell them! I don’t think that’s fair.”
+
+“Well, I don’t care. I don’t think it’s nice or lady-like to peddle
+things from door to door,” said Nataly stubbornly.
+
+“Maybe it wasn’t,” said Louise cheerfully, “but it was certainly heaps
+of fun!”
+
+“Oh, we _did_ have fun!” said Winona. “And we have orders for more of
+Marie’s stencilled runners, and Adelaide’s jelly.”
+
+“Did nobody love my pots?” asked Helen sadly.
+
+“Oh, yes, indeed,” consoled Winona, “only you were so industrious, and
+made so many, that we have some left. The Blue Birds’ baskets went off
+very well, too.”
+
+“How much did you make?” asked Mrs. Bryan. “I’m wild to know.”
+
+Louise pulled her bandanna handkerchief out of her deepest pocket, and
+Winona produced hers from the bottom of her blouse. They handed them
+over to the Guardian.
+
+“Mine’s only what the bellboy took in while we were at dinner and out in
+the evening,” Winona explained. “Louise took care of all the rest.”
+
+Mrs. Bryan counted it silently, while the girls waited breathlessly for
+the result.
+
+“Fifty-three dollars and forty-six cents!” announced Mrs. Bryan at last.
+“You blessed angels, with what we’ll get for the mending, that means
+over three weeks more of camp!”
+
+“By the way,” suggested Tom here, “can’t you give us what’s done of the
+mending, please, Mrs. Bryan? It’s time we got back to camp.”
+
+She sent Florence and another Blue Bird to get it, and they ran off,
+swinging their lanterns.
+
+“We’ll send down the bill by some of your sisters, with the rest of the
+work, by day after to-morrow at the furthest,” she promised, as the
+girls stood up to bid the three Scouts good-bye.
+
+They watched the canoe paddle off into the darkness, then settled down
+to hear the rest of the adventure.
+
+“But there’s something else we haven’t told you!” said Winona, when the
+whole story had been told and talked over for a long while. “There’s
+going to be a lake carnival.”
+
+“Oh, what fun! Let’s go!” said Adelaide, speaking more brightly than
+Winona had ever known her to. “We could hike as far as this side of the
+lake by land, couldn’t we, Opeechee?”
+
+“Certainly we could—if we had to,” said Mrs. Bryan, who was watching
+Winona. “Wait till Winona finishes. She looks as if she had a plan.”
+
+“I was thinking,” said Winona, “that it would be very nice if we could
+decorate a float. The boys said they were sure the Scouts would loan us
+enough rowboats to build the float over, if we needed it. And we could
+have tents——”
+
+“Of course we could!” said everybody enthusiastically, and all began to
+plan at once.
+
+Finally Mrs. Bryan rose, and suggested that it was twelve o’clock, and
+that all but the breakfast-getters had better sleep till eight next
+morning. So they put out the fire, and went to bed.
+
+About two o’clock a slim figure in a red kimono stole down the avenue of
+tents with a lantern. About two-thirds of the way there met her another,
+plumper figure, in a blue kimono, also with a lantern.
+
+“Winona!” said the blue kimono.
+
+“Why, Louise!” said the red one.
+
+Then they both began to giggle in a subdued way.
+
+“What on earth are you prowling round for, at this time of night?” asked
+Winona.
+
+“What are you?” returned Louise.
+
+Winona beckoned her friend over to a seat on a fallen log.
+
+“I—well, I’ve been worrying over our dressing up that way, and fooling
+people, to sell things,” she confessed. “I suppose you’ll think I’m a
+horrid little prig, but—Louise, I think we ought to go back and tell
+those hotellers that we were just plain Camp Fire Girls, not Italian or
+Dalmatian or anything like that.”
+
+“I thought a Dalmatian was a dog,” suggested Louise.
+
+“Maybe it is,” said Winona sadly.
+
+Louise sat closer to Winona.
+
+“Winnie,” she said, “that’s just what I climbed out of bed about myself.
+I was coming to look for you when I met you. I’ve been worrying about
+it, too. It was a lark, but I think it’s up to us to gambol over there,
+clothed and in our right minds—and own up.”
+
+“Oh, I’m so glad!” said Winona. “We’ll tell Mrs. Bryan in the morning.”
+
+“All right,” said Louise, and she began to giggle.
+
+“And then, while they’re thinking how noble it is of us to confess,
+we’ll sell ’em more things—real Camp Fire Girls’ hand-crafts!”
+
+“Louise,” said Winona with admiring conviction, “you certainly _are_ the
+limit.”
+
+They both laughed, and felt better. Then they went back to bed and went
+to sleep.
+
+Next morning they rowed duly up the lake, and made a conscientious round
+of the hotels and cottages where they had sold their things the day
+before. But the way of the transgressor refused to be hard. They could
+wake very little excitement on the subject of their transformation in
+the minds of their patrons—who, it is to be feared, either regarded it
+all as a good joke, or did not worry about it at all. Indeed, most of
+the people Louise could find to explain to were more wronged because she
+had no goods with her, than by anything else. So she took a number of
+orders.
+
+“It’s no use, Lou,” said Winona, as they met at noon by the hotel where
+Miss Lawrence stayed, “I can’t get a soul to care whether I’m a Canadian
+or a Hottentot. The only thing they’ll say is, ‘We’d like some more of
+the baskets,’ or ‘those runners,’ or whatever they didn’t get
+yesterday.”
+
+“Same here,” said Louise. “But I landed some fine fat orders, and if
+you’re as clever as I think you are, you did, too.”
+
+“Yes, I did,” said Winona. “And, anyway,” she added, brightening, “when
+we’ve done this hotel our consciences will be clear.”
+
+“I only hope we don’t meet that horrid Mrs. Gardner,” said Louise.
+
+So they marched up the steps, and tried to pick out the women they had
+sold to the day before, to explain to them. But Winona had scarcely
+begun, “You see, we really weren’t Italians at all,” when the people she
+was talking to began to laugh. Winona, bewildered and a little cross,
+looked around to see what they were laughing at. She saw Miss Lawrence
+behind her, laughing, too.
+
+“It’s no use explaining, my dear,” said that lady. “I did it myself.
+Everybody knows that you and Louise Lane disposed of your goods under
+false pretenses by tying up your heads in red handkerchiefs and letting
+your customers draw their own conclusions. I don’t know but some of us
+want our money back! Never mind, children, it was very clever of you!”
+she added, seeing that Winona was not sure whether she was in earnest.
+
+And the girls found themselves being questioned and laughed at and made
+much of by a group of women, who wanted to know all about the Camp Fire,
+and the things the girls made, and the ways they earned money, and what
+they did with it, till Winona and Louise were fairly tired with
+answering questions.
+
+They invited everybody to come out to the camp, and set a day. They took
+some more orders, and then they carried Miss Lawrence off across the
+lake and down the river, to see Camp Karonya. When she arrived they
+handed her over to Nataly, as was polite, and she and Mrs. Bryan showed
+her over the camp.
+
+She investigated everything with the same brisk, fairy godmother
+expression that she had had when she took Winona and Louise under her
+wing, stayed to luncheon, and then expressed a desire to be taken down
+to the Scouts’ camp, to see Billy. So two of the Blue Birds rowed her
+there.
+
+After they had seen Miss Lawrence off, the girls became busy a little
+way down the river. Winona got there a little late and found that much
+had happened while she and Louise had gone off that morning. At first
+the idea of making the float had been to found it on the rowboats the
+Boy Scouts were willing to lend. But when a deputation, headed by Mr.
+Gedney, paddled down, bringing the boats in question, it became
+painfully clear that four canoes would not support enough planks to hold
+twenty life-size girls. Neither would rowboats. At least, Mrs. Bryan and
+Mr. Gedney agreed that they wouldn’t—most of the girls and all the boys
+were willing to take a chance.
+
+When this turn of affairs arrived everyone felt very sad, and for a
+while it had looked as if Camp Karonya wasn’t going to have a float in
+the lake carnival.
+
+But just then along came that resourceful old gentleman, Mr. Sloane,
+with fishing-rod and a can of bait.
+
+“Well, what’s all the trouble?” he inquired genially of everyone in
+general. So they told him. Mr. Sloane did not hesitate a moment.
+
+“I got a friend that owns some good, water-tight scows,” said he most
+unexpectedly. “They ain’t doin’ nobody any good, and I guess he’d loan
+’em to you, or, if wust come to wust, he’d let you have the use of ’em
+for maybe seventy-five cents apiece. Two scows are all you’d need to put
+the plankin’ across.”
+
+He gave them directions as to where to go after the scows’ owner, and
+ambled on in search of a quieter fishing-place. An embassy was sent
+after the scows immediately, and returned with them in triumph. They
+proved perfectly seaworthy, and quite equal to supporting all they would
+have to. So when Winona arrived on the scene after luncheon the girls
+had reached the stage of nailing the planks across.
+
+They had bargained for the scows at seventy-five cents each, as Mr.
+Sloane had said they would be able to, and promised to give them a coat
+of paint before they returned them. The boards, bought of the village
+carpenter, were more expensive. However, the girls thought they could
+venture to pay for them out of the treasury, on the strength of the
+orders ahead that they had taken. Marie and Edith were supervising
+things.
+
+“Is there anything I can do to help?” Winona asked Marie, who was
+frowning thoughtfully over a hastily-drawn plan.
+
+“Not unless you can help us with this design,” Marie answered. “See
+here. The idea is to make a miniature Indian village. How would you
+group the tents so as to take up the least room and show best?”
+
+“Why do you try to draw it?” asked Winona. “Why not do as generals do,
+make little paper tents and move them around till you get a tableau of
+the effect you want?”
+
+The idea was new to Marie, but she liked it, and the three girls fell to
+constructing little paper cones, and arranging them on a square space
+that represented the float.
+
+Presently one of the girls who was nailing dropped out with a pounded
+thumb, and Winona took up her hammer and went to work. She discovered
+that the driving of a nail straight, and making boards lie side by side
+evenly, is more of an art than people know.
+
+They worked on the float most of that afternoon, except for a few of the
+girls who were told off to do the Scout mending, and they sat down near
+the carpenters and sewed sociably to the sound of the pounding. They
+worked till six, and went to bed unusually early.
+
+By the second day the platform was done, and proved to balance very well
+on the water, even with all the girls on it. Next Marie and her helpers
+went to making tents, for their own soldier tents were too
+unromantically shaped to be any good on a float. They wanted real Indian
+wigwams, or as near to them as they could get.
+
+Marie bought unbleached muslin, and they dyed it the correct dark brown.
+They made three wigwams of this, the story-book-picture kind, with the
+crossed poles tied at the top, for a foundation. In each tent a squaw
+was to sit—or rather, at its door, for the tepees, in order to fit on
+the limited space of the float, had to be made rather small, and would
+have been a tight fit for even the smallest squaw. Some of the girls
+were to dress as chiefs, and were working hard on war-bonnets and
+leggings. Even Puppums was to grace the occasion, guarding a
+pappoose—little Lilian Maynard, the smallest Blue Bird. There was some
+idea of including Hike the Camp Cat, now a cheerful and opulent-looking
+kitten, but it was thought better of, because he yowled so when they
+rehearsed him.
+
+When the tents and costumes were done, the brushwood heaps stacked, the
+floor covered with twigs and moss, the girls tried grouping themselves
+as they were to appear on the final night. And it proved that there was
+not room on the platform for three tents and nineteen girls, even if
+seven _were_ small.
+
+Marie stepped off and looked it over.
+
+“There are just two girls too many,” she said. “Three, if I were on
+board. I’ll eliminate Marie Hunter to begin with. I’m going to decorate
+my own canoe. You’d better draw lots for the other two to stay out.”
+
+Everyone on the float looked at everyone else. Nobody wanted to drop
+out, but nobody felt like being selfish.
+
+“I’ll drop out!” said the whole of Camp Karonya in chorus, after a
+minute’s dead silence.
+
+“I’ll go in your canoe, Marie—have you forgotten?” asked Edith. “The
+plans you made included me.”
+
+“So they did,” said Marie in a relieved voice. “Well, perhaps the rest
+could crowd a little closer.”
+
+“I’m afraid not, and be sure that nobody’d tip into the water,” vetoed
+Mrs. Bryan. “I’m the one to stay ashore, girls. I’ll gaze at you with
+fond proprietorship while you get first prize.”
+
+But there rose up a storm of objections to that. “No you won’t, either!
+There won’t any of us be in it if you aren’t, Opeechee!” till she had to
+give up giving up.
+
+Winona braced herself a little, and “I’m out, too,” she said gayly.
+“There’s no use asking me to stay—I don’t like your old float!”
+
+She sprang ashore, and went over and stood by Marie.
+
+The girls protested, and several more volunteered to drop out, but
+nobody meant it quite as hard as Winona did. So the Indian village went
+on being erected, and the girls went on practising an Indian dance which
+should take up the least possible room. Meanwhile Winona rounded up the
+finished mending and rowed up the river to deliver the latest basket of
+mended socks and shirts. She had made her sacrifice in all good faith
+and earnestness, but she felt as if she didn’t want to see them going
+gayly on without her—at least, not right _now_.
+
+She wasn’t conscious of behaving any way but as she generally did, but
+she must have, for both Tom and Billy watched her uneasily, as she sat
+in the boat and talked to them after they had taken the mending, while
+she waited for the orderly to come with her money.
+
+“What’s the matter, Win?” asked Tom bluntly in a minute. “You’re down
+and out—I can see that. Who’s been doing anything to you?”
+
+Winona shook her head. “Nobody.”
+
+“Then what have _you_ been doing?” asked Billy. They stood over her,
+both looking so worried that Winona felt like hugging them, or crying,
+or both.
+
+“It isn’t anything,” she said. “Except—well, I did it myself. Somebody
+had to stay off the float, because there wasn’t room for everyone, so I
+elected myself. And—and—oh, I _did_ want to be in that carnival!
+But”—she straightened bravely, and smiled up into the two indignant
+faces—“I guess it’s all right, after all. If I could decorate my
+rowboat it would be all right, but I can’t, because they’re going to
+need it to carry properties in.”
+
+“It’s a confounded shame,” said Billy Lee, “and after you planned it,
+and all! You ought to have a float of your own. I’ll tell you, Winona,
+why don’t you decorate a canoe?”
+
+“Only reason is, I haven’t a canoe,” laughed Winona—they were all three
+sitting in a row in the grass by this time.
+
+“I have,” said Billy, “and you’re more than welcome to it, and to all
+the help I can give you on it.”
+
+“And I’ve got some change you’re welcome to for decorations,” added Tom.
+
+“Oh, how perfectly lovely!” said Winona, jumping up with her face aglow.
+“Indeed I will decorate it, and thank you both, ever and ever so much. I
+have ever so many lovely ideas for decorations. Billy!”
+
+She stopped short.
+
+“Well?” said Billy.
+
+“Would you mind being in the canoe with me?”
+
+“Sure, I’d love to,” said Billy heartily, whether he really meant it or
+not.
+
+“Oh, thank you _so_ much!” cried Winona again.
+
+“That’s the way to take it!” said Tom. “We’ll get you up a canoe,
+between us, that’ll make your old Camp Fire float look like a bad
+quarter and a plugged nickel—see if we don’t!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
+
+
+Winona and Florence paddled back to Camp Karonya with the latest bundle
+of mending, very, very happy. When they came ashore, they were met by a
+committee consisting of Adelaide, Louise, Helen and Marie.
+
+“We’ve got a plan for your being in the picture,” said they very nearly
+in unison. “We can decorate the boat with the apparatus in it——”
+
+But Winona waved a lordly hand.
+
+“Boat me no boats,” said she. “I’m going to have Billy Lee’s canoe to
+decorate. We’re going out this afternoon, or maybe to-morrow afternoon,
+up to Wampoag where the shops are, and we’re going to buy out the shops
+with decorations. Going to get honorable mention, anyway!”
+
+“Oh, then you’d really rather!” said Helen. “I’m _so_ glad. But it won’t
+seem natural not to have you on the float, Winnie!”
+
+“Just as natural as not having Marie,” said Winona.
+
+“No,” said Marie quietly, “not exactly. You’re like the spirit of the
+whole thing, Win, and I think they ought to have you.”
+
+“You can’t,” said Winona, sitting down on the grass and drawing her
+knees up to her chin.
+
+“We could if we canned Nataly,” said Louise the rebel, half under her
+breath.
+
+“Well, you can’t do that,” said the other girls in a breath.
+
+The truth was, Nataly Lee was the one dark spot—the one cinder, as you
+might say—in the Camp Fire. She did not particularly like doing her
+share of the work, she could not be made to take an interested part in
+the work for honor beads, and she acted generally as if she was a caller
+who was much older and more languid than the others. It was, in short,
+very much as Louise had said when she offered to join—she was like a
+kitten who refused to be anything but a cat.
+
+“I don’t know what Nataly’s doing here, anyway,” Louise went on. “And
+we’d be a lot happier without her. I wish she’d go home and look after
+her complexion. She can’t do it properly here—anybody can see that!”
+
+“Can’t do what?” said a languid voice. It isn’t a good thing to discuss
+your friends too freely if they’re anywhere at all around, because they
+are exceedingly likely to overhear or partly hear. And this is just what
+happened now. Nataly herself walked out of the strip of woods that
+separated the camp from the river, and sat down by them.
+
+“I thought I heard you talking about me,” she said.
+
+“We were,” said Louise, quite unruffled. “At least I was. I was saying
+that you couldn’t look after your complexion properly here in the woods,
+and that I thought you’d be happier away from our rude young society!”
+
+Nataly did not see in the least that Louise was laughing at her, but
+Helen did, and gave Louise a severe pinch. “Guying” was something that
+the camp spirit allowed only if the victim knew what was being done to
+her. But where Nataly was concerned it was hard to make Louise behave.
+
+“Well, you know,” said Nataly, “I am thinking of going home. It makes me
+nervous, the idea of Aunt Lydia being near enough to pounce down on me
+every minute. She is _so_ energetic. And my nerves are nearly all right
+now.”
+
+“Then you really think you will go back?” said Winona.
+
+“I really do, as soon as the carnival is over,” said Nataly.
+
+“Well, as I said,” said Winona hastily, for Louise looked as if she were
+going to suggest an earlier departure, “I’m going up to Wampoag this
+afternoon to buy things with the boys.”
+
+“I have a ’gagement to make baskets with Frances,” said Florence, “so I
+can’t go with you.”
+
+“I will if you want me,” offered Louise. “I have various things I want
+to say to you alone.”
+
+“That sounds dark and dreadful!” said Helen good-naturedly. “I think
+we’d better not volunteer to go along, Marie!”
+
+“We couldn’t, anyway,” Marie reminded her. “There’s a lot to do on those
+war-bonnets yet.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So that afternoon Louise, Winona, Billy and Tom paddled up to the summer
+resort in quest of decorations.
+
+“Have you any idea how you’re going to trim the canoe?” asked Louise.
+
+“I’ve thought it all out,” said Winona. “I found the idea in an old book
+of ballads Marie brought along. It was called ‘The Ship o’ the Fiend.’”
+
+“Pretty name!” said Louise. “Who’s going to be the fiend? Please don’t
+all speak at once!”
+
+“I’ll be the goat,” said Billy. “Winnie told me a little about it. The
+ballad was about a girl who went off with an old fiance, and he turned
+out to be a real live demon.”
+
+“Yes,” said Winona, “the tall topmast no taller was than he,” it says.
+
+“Well, I draw the line at stilts,” said Billy sleepily. He was curled
+down in the bottom of the boat basking in the sunshine, for Louise had
+insisted on taking a paddle. “What do I have to do?”
+
+“The first thing,” said Winona, “is to wake up enough to sit up and be
+consulted. How much copper wire ...”
+
+The rest was inaudible, for Billy moved closer to Winona, who talked to
+him mysteriously under her breath. The others could hear scraps like
+“Japanese auctioneer ...” “fifty yards ...” “red paper muslin,” and such
+illuminating fragments.
+
+“How much money have you got for me to spend, Tommy?” Winona broke off
+to inquire.
+
+“Four whole dollars,” he said, “earned by splitting wood for a farmer.”
+
+“I certainly am obliged,” she said, “and I’ll pay it back.”
+
+“You’ll do no such thing!” he said. “I should hope I could give my own
+sister a lone four dollars once in awhile!”
+
+“All right, you can,” said Winona soothingly. She pulled out the paper
+the boys had secured and given her, and began to read it aloud.
+
+“Cash prizes in the canoe class, first, twenty-five dollars, second, ten
+dollars, three third prizes, five dollars each. Now you see, if I get a
+third prize I’ll be a dollar in, and all the glory reflected on Camp
+Karonya besides!”
+
+They took a street-car when they got to Wampoag, because the shopping
+district was a long ways off, and it was a hot day anyway. Tom and
+Louise watched the other two with curiosity, as they went from store to
+store, buying things that it seemed impossible could fit into each
+other; copper wire, red tinsel by the box, paper muslin in what seemed
+unlimited quantities, though it was really only a little over a dollar’s
+worth. Then Winona went into one Japanese store alone, and came out with
+a bagful of paper lanterns and a knobby bundle which she refused to undo
+or show. They hunted all over three streets for Greek fire, before it
+occurred to Billy to go back to the hardware store where they had bought
+their copper wire. He came out with three boxes of it, labelled “Blue,”
+“Green” and “White,” and seemed rather sad because they had no lavender
+or gray fire in stock.
+
+“‘They bought a pig and some ring-bo-ree, and no end of Stilton
+cheese!’” chanted Louise softly. “How on earth are you going to connect
+all that crazy stuff?”
+
+“You’ll know, all in good time, my dear,” said Winona sedately. “We can
+go home now. The worst is over.”
+
+“We deserve a soda, at least, for all this,” said Billy.
+
+“Marble-dust,” said Tom solemnly. “Some day, Bill, if you keep on
+drinking sodas, you’ll turn into a statue, and your sorrowing relatives
+will have to put you up in the hall for an ornament.”
+
+“Glad I’m as lovely as all that comes to!” said Billy with a grin. “They
+couldn’t do it to you, old fellow—you aren’t pretty enough!”
+
+“He is pretty, too,” said Louise stoutly. “Somebody told me only
+yesterday that they thought Tom was so poetic-looking, and had a
+striking head.”
+
+Billy laughed out loud, and Tom wriggled.
+
+“I take it all back, Louise,” he said. “He _is_ beautiful.”
+
+Tom gave a sort of mournful growl.
+
+“Oh, cut it out, Billy!” he said. “If you really want that soda, here’s
+a drug-store.”
+
+“A striking head,” mused his sister, cocking her own head on one side,
+to look at Tom from this new point of view. “I really think you have.”
+
+“If ever I meet the fellow who said that, he’ll find out I have a
+striking fist,” muttered Thomas darkly, walking into the drug-store
+ahead of the rest, and sitting down at a table in the back. “Four walnut
+sundaes, please. No, I don’t want ’em all myself. The others are coming
+in the door now.”
+
+For the next few days Winona, at a point half-way between her camp and
+the Scout’s camp, worked steadily over the paper lanterns she had
+bought. She covered them all with white paper, and cut out holes in the
+paper after the fashion of eyes, nose and mouth, until, if you were not
+too critical, they looked like big oval skulls. If you _were_ critical,
+they might remind you, it is true, of jack-o’-lanterns, but nobody was
+unkind enough to say so but Tom. There were forty of them altogether,
+and when they were all covered, and brought down to camp out of the
+danger of being rained on, and festooned about Winona’s tent, the effect
+was truly awful. Tom, who had been watching his sister’s performance
+with interest, came over one day with five little paper-mache lanterns
+which he presented to her, two in the shape of black cats, and three
+like owls.
+
+“I don’t know yet what you’re going to do,” he said, “but if Bill’s
+going to wear horns and hoofs, and those things over the cot are meant
+for skulls, I should think these would come in handy.”
+
+“They’re just exactly what I wanted!” said Winona with rapture, hanging
+them with the rest. “Now I’ve nothing to do but my dress.”
+
+She showed him several yards of black paper muslin and a sheet of gilt
+paper. “It doesn’t look promising, I know,” she said, “but it will be
+quite nice, I think, when it’s done.”
+
+And it really was. Helen helped her to fit it, and they made it with the
+dull side out, close-fitting, and covered with the stars and crescents
+of the traditional witch-dress. She was done with it, even to the
+pointed hat and black half-mask, in very good time.
+
+“Now,” she said to the boys, standing over Billy’s canoe where it had
+been pulled up in the grass, “now comes the tug of war. Tom, you said
+you would help me.”
+
+“I did,” said he. “What shall I do?”
+
+“Then please nail these poles to the end of the canoe. They’re about six
+feet high, aren’t they?”
+
+“Yes. Do you want them sticking straight up into the air?”
+
+“Straight up, please,” she said.
+
+“Billy’s flying around in the town like a hen with its head cut off,”
+said Tom as he proceeded to do what his sister asked, “trying to buy
+something he won’t tell about. And I found Louise and Helen up at Camp
+Karonya, winding tinsel into balls like fury. Strikes me you ought to
+share that five you won’t get with the whole crowd of us.”
+
+“So I will when I get it,” said Winona serenely. “Now will you please
+brace those end-poles thoroughly, and nail cross-pieces on them about a
+foot from the top?”
+
+“It’s easy to tell people how to do things,” said Tom; but he was clever
+at carpentering, and had it done in a very short time.
+
+Then Winona took the copper wire she had bought, and strung it from end
+to end of the cross-pieces, till the effect was something like that of a
+half-done cat’s cradle. Then she stood off and looked at her work,
+walking round and round it, as a kitten looks at a mirror.
+
+“That wire ought to bear about twenty pounds, don’t you think?” she
+asked.
+
+“I don’t see why not,” said Tom, sitting down on the grass to watch her.
+
+“Now I’ll begin, then,” she said. “Thank you for making the foundation.”
+
+She took up the copper wire again, and strung more lines of it from end
+to end of the canoe, and one around the gunwale. She laced still more up
+and down in irregular points, up and down the side-wires, till the
+effect was that of an irregularly pointed fence, or crown, as high as
+the end pieces in some parts, and low enough, at the ends, to show the
+people seated in it.
+
+“Looks like a cross-section of Alps,” said Tom critically. “Are you
+going to be the Blue Alsatian Mountains?”
+
+“There are two classes of people who should never see a thing
+half-done,” answered his sister, standing off again to get the effect.
+
+“Thank you,” said Tom.
+
+“Doesn’t it look like anything else at all?” she asked, abandoning her
+superior attitude, and throwing herself on his mercy.
+
+“Well, something like a fever-chart,” said he.
+
+Winona said no more—there didn’t seem to be any use. She picked up her
+ball of red tinsel, and began to wind it around and within, and across,
+every point of the “fever-chart,” till there was a solid network. It was
+not a bad imitation of a springing fire.
+
+“Now do you see?” she said. “That’s a big, red blaze coming out of the
+canoe, and when we’ve lighted the Greek fire inside it ought to look
+real enough to burn you.”
+
+“Not bad,” admitted Tom. “But I don’t see its connection with a black
+bonnet and forty jack-o’-lanterns.”
+
+“You will by-and-bye,” said his sister, going on with her work. It went
+very smoothly after that, except that Puppums _would_ jump inside, and
+then looked at her in a wronged way because the canoe did not float off.
+After the tinsel was on nothing remained to do but to wrap the
+end-pieces with black muslin, so they would not show at night, and to
+cover the canoe with the same material. The lanterns did not need to be
+hung till the last moment.
+
+The night of the carnival Camp Karonya, very much excited, sailed down
+the river in all the glory of its fleet, about six. The Indian village
+was a great success as far as looks went. Whether it would be as
+handsome a float as the ones it would have to compete with nobody could
+tell yet. As a canoe takes less time to engineer than a float, and also
+as the boys hadn’t come yet, Winona stayed behind a little while. At
+about seven Tom and Billy came up the river in another of the Scouts’
+canoes. Winona, in her witch costume, with her lanterns, was waiting for
+them by the decorated canoe.
+
+Billy was most gorgeous. He had hired a red Mephisto costume, evidently
+from a real costumer—horns, hoofs and all. His full grandeur didn’t
+show till he sprang out on the grass, because he had modestly shrouded
+himself in a raincoat, and his mask was in its pocket. But he snapped
+the mask on, tossed the coat off, and struck an attitude, before he
+helped Tom to lay the canoe in the water.
+
+“You certainly are grand and gorgeous, Billy,” said Winona. “All you
+need is a spotlight running round after you to look just like the man in
+the opera.”
+
+“I feel like a freak,” admitted Billy. “Got everything, Winona? We’d
+better be starting.”
+
+Winona veiled her own splendors with an evening wrap of Mrs. Bryan’s
+which had, fortunately, been brought along, and stepped in. Tom trailed
+behind.
+
+“I believe I’m frightened,” said Winona. “What about you, Billy?”
+
+“There’s nothing to be afraid of,” he said. “We can’t very well upset,
+tied to a string of other craft, and maybe we’ll get a fourth prize—if
+they only have four entries in the canoe class.”
+
+“We’ll get one anyway!” declared Winona proudly, throwing her head back
+and forgetting to be nervous.
+
+They were early at the dock. The Camp float was moored quite a little
+way from the place where they had to be, but they could see each other,
+and called across. After that Winona did not feel so lonely. The boys
+helped her to light and tie on the lanterns, all so realistically like
+skulls, and when she saw how very ghostly they looked she felt that she
+hadn’t lived in vain.
+
+“Have you the skeleton, Billy?” she demanded anxiously of Mephisto, who
+was wrestling with a bundle in the back canoe.
+
+“Here it is,” he said, finally producing it. “I had rather a time
+getting old Hiraoka to rent it, but an auctioneer will do anything for
+enough yen.”
+
+As he spoke he unwrapped a neat, papier-mache skeleton of nearly
+life-size, which was of Japanese origin, and which, as he said, he had
+rented from the Japanese store of Mr. Tashima Hiraoka for this night
+only.
+
+“Billy!” said Winona remorsefully, “how much did you pay for Mr. Bones?”
+
+“No time to worry about that now,” said Billy. “Where do you want him
+put?”
+
+Winona saw that he was right, and put off insisting on paying for the
+skeleton till time should be less precious than now. They swung it above
+the tinsel flames, on wire loops prepared for it, so that it turned
+gently, as if roasting. Tom looked on in respectful admiration.
+
+“Here’s the last thing,” said Billy, producing the mysterious bundle
+that had excited Louise so the day they were shopping for decorations.
+
+“Those are Billy’s idea,” said Winona, pulling the objects out as she
+spoke. “They just put the finishing touch on, don’t they, Tom?”
+
+“I should say they did!” said Tom appreciatively. They were twenty small
+red demons rather like Billy, and the same number of tiny skeletons, all
+with waggle-some hands and feet.
+
+“Blessed forever be Japanese stores!” said Winona. “Just hang them
+around carelessly, boys, as if they were hovering over the fire, you
+know. Billy, do you think you can make the demons look pleased and the
+skeletons unhappy?”
+
+“You never know what you can do till you try,” said Billy with his usual
+poise. He pulled some wire out of the back canoe, which, like the
+Mother’s Bag in the Swiss Family Robinson, seemed to have everything in
+the world in it. The boys set to work with such a will that the last
+demon was wriggling naturally as life, and there was ten minutes yet to
+spare, when they were done.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
+
+
+Billy helped Winona in, felt for the matches, and got in himself. Tom
+pushed them off from shore. It was all done with the solemnity of a
+funeral procession. Winona looked at the boys’ excited faces, and
+laughed.
+
+“We’re not being rowed off to execution,” she explained, though she felt
+a little excited herself. “I’m perfectly calm—O-oh! Gracious! What’s
+that?”
+
+“That” was a long, unearthly wail which seemed to come from the inside
+of the canoe itself. It increased and quavered and howled and died down
+again.
+
+“Oh, that’s us,” said Billy placidly. “Tom and I borrowed Boots Morris’s
+father’s Gabriel horn and fastened it into the canoe this afternoon.
+Forgot to tell you. Don’t you like it?”
+
+“Lovely!” gasped Winona. “Only—only it was a little sudden, the first
+time. I thought Mr. Bones was expressing his feelings.”
+
+“It adds to the effect all right,” said Billy proudly.
+
+“It certainly does!” said Winona. “Yes, we have a tow-rope, marshal. Tie
+us on, please.”
+
+“Well, you do look like you came from somewhere else!” said the
+marshal—he was the dock owner by day—as he fastened the “Ship o’ the
+Fiend” into line. “I don’t want anything more like D. T.’s than you be!”
+
+“That’s what I call a delicate compliment,” said Billy, lifting his mask
+so he could grin with freedom.
+
+“M’ yes, I suppose so,” said Winona doubtfully. “Are we going to start
+soon, marshal?”
+
+“In about ten minutes,” said the marshal, seeming to be still entranced
+with the canoe and its decorations. “They burnt one o’ my
+great-grandmothers, a couple o’ hundred years ago, for doin’ not much
+worse’n you be,” he added.
+
+“We ought to get something, then,” said Winona, thinking more of a
+possible prize than of the marshal’s family history.
+
+“You sure ought!” he said darkly, handing them a number and passing on
+to the next boat.
+
+The ten minutes seemed very long and tedious, but between eating some
+sandwiches which Winona had thoughtfully provided, exchanging
+compliments with the neighboring boats, and getting their Greek fire
+ready to set off, they passed somehow. The whistle blew, and the long
+trail of boats, canoes, and floats started on its slow and winding way.
+The float was tied far off, at the beginning of the procession, where
+they could not see it. Marie’s canoe was just in sight, but not near
+enough to talk to—a big silver cobweb spotted with lantern-flies, and
+Marie and Edith dressed as the Spider and the Fly, at either end of it.
+
+Finally the whistle blew. Billy tucked a final piece of sandwich beneath
+his mask, and resigned himself to tending the Greek fire for the rest of
+the evening. As for Winona, finding nothing particular to do, she pulled
+a book out from under a cushion and began to read.
+
+“Winona, would you kindly lay away that piece of literatuah and wo’k the
+Gabriel ho’n?” asked Billy in the softest and Kentuckiest of voices.
+Winona had observed that when Billy’s Southern accent reasserted itself
+he was generally in deadly earnest. She meekly put the book away and
+began to press the bulb of the horn at regular intervals.
+
+“Oh, I do wish we could see us, and be us, too!” she said in one of the
+intervals.
+
+“M’m! Don’t I?” said Billy. “I don’t know, though. Maybe we’d be
+disappointed.”
+
+“I know we wouldn’t,” said Winona confidently, and pressed the horn
+again, which put a stop to conversation.
+
+Meanwhile Tom, on the grandstand, was seeing them, and being very proud
+of his relationship to the “Ship o’ the Fiend.” The black-covered canoe,
+with its belt of shivering fire and its weird occupants, showed up
+gloriously. The irregularly hung lanterns looked more like skulls than
+Winona had dared to hope in her wildest moments. All the little demons
+and skeletons danced realistically on their invisible wires in the air,
+and, crown of all, the nearly-life-size skeleton swung above, with the
+witch and the demon watching him from either end, as he roasted above
+the Greek fire. An occasional shriek from the Gabriel horn gave the
+final touch. The whole thing was like a vision out of a Poe story, or
+some German goblin-legend. The people took to clapping as they went by.
+
+“I believe they’re clapping for us!” said Winona awedly, as a burst of
+it came to their ears over the water.
+
+“Sure they are,” said Billy. “Shows their good sense, too. It’s a mighty
+good looking canoe we have.”
+
+“Can we photograph you, please?” said a polite voice before Winona could
+answer—and lo, the reporter’s boat!
+
+“This _is_ glory!” said Winona, snapping down her mask, and being
+frankly delighted. “Just think, Billy, we may be in the paper!”
+
+The reporter asked questions and fussed with his flashlight apparatus,
+and finally took two exposures. They kept very still while the
+flashlight was exploding, and answered the reporters in full.
+
+“The designer of your decorations certainly was very clever, and had a
+vivid imagination,” ended the smallest reporter as the press-boat went
+on its way.
+
+Winona sat up straight, and looked very proud.
+
+“At last I’m appreciated!” she said. “Don’t you wish you had a vivid
+imagination, too, Billy?”
+
+“If you straighten up much more,” said Billy, leaning over to light
+fresh Greek fire, “you will certainly hit the decorations, and something
+will bust.”
+
+“I don’t care!” and Winona laughed excitedly. “It’s my first chance at
+being famous, and you can’t think how nice it is! Listen to that!”
+
+The applause along the banks was certainly continuous enough to make
+someone older and staider than Winona happy. The canoes were making the
+circuit of the upper part of the lake now. In the centre was the royal
+float, where the king and queen of the carnival sat.
+
+When the procession had gone down one side of the lake and up the other
+it would make a circle about this royal float, and the prizes would be
+awarded.
+
+They were almost through with this, only a little way from the royal
+float, when a small green canoe full of sightseers whirled against them,
+sent by some sudden twist of wind or water. And—neither Winona nor
+Billy could ever understand how it happened—the shock of the blow, or
+perhaps some mischievous person in the other boat, parted the ropes that
+held Winona’s canoe lightly to the canoes before and behind it, and sent
+them far to one side of the lake, out of the radius of the lights. The
+wind, naturally, took this particular time to blow hard. The decorations
+made the canoe top-heavy and hard to guide, and they dared not paddle
+fast for fear of upsetting. They could see from their outer darkness the
+canoes they had been between being hastily tied together.
+
+Winona paddled frantically. “Do you think we can get back in time to be
+judged?” she panted.
+
+“We’ll try,” said Billy, working his paddle more slowly, but with
+greater effect than Winona’s.
+
+“No—oh, Billy, Billy! There goes the signal—they’ve given the launch
+prize, and they are to give the float and rowboat prizes right
+afterwards, and then the canoes! There goes the gun again. Oh, _dear!_”
+
+Winona had really been working harder than she should have over her
+canoe decorations, and helping with the float besides, as well as doing
+her routine camp-work. She had been “all keyed up” by the evening’s
+excitement, and her hopes of a prize, and this sudden downfall of her
+hopes was too much for her self-control. Billy saw two large tears roll
+down her cheeks from under her mask.
+
+“Poor Winnie! It certainly is a shame!” he said.
+
+“I suppose that horrid little gunboat canoe named ‘Flossie’ will get our
+prize,” mourned Winona, casting fortitude to the wind—which must have
+carried it quite a way, for it was blowing more and more strongly. “I
+know we’d have had one of the fourth prizes, too!”
+
+“You have the glory, anyway,” he said. “Everybody applauded us more than
+they did anything else except that big Queen Elizabeth float.”
+
+“But I wanted the money, and I wanted to have the Camp Fire have a
+prize! There, Billy, I won’t be a coward any more. I’m tired, I think,
+or I wouldn’t have acted like this kind of an idiot,” she said bravely,
+pushing up her mask to dry her eyes, and trying to smile.
+
+“You’ve worn yourself out over this decoration business, that’s what the
+matter is,” said Billy. “Do you mind telling me what you want the money
+for?”
+
+“No, certainly not. I wanted to get a pair of silk stockings apiece for
+Adelaide and me. I know she wants a pair dreadfully, because she never
+had them, and if I got a pair like them for myself she’d be more apt to
+take them—and—well, I wanted a pair, too!”
+
+Billy registered an inward vow that his Aunt Lydia should manage it just
+as soon as it was humanly possible. He knew that she would do more than
+that for Winona, for whom she had conceived a strong liking.
+
+“Poor kid, she’s all worked up about it,” he murmured, forgetting his
+own disappointment, for he, too, had hoped that his canoe would get a
+prize.
+
+But help was in sight. About five minutes later (though Winona and Billy
+always swore it was a full half hour) they felt a violent rocking, and
+heard the insistent wuff-wuff-wuff of a steam launch.
+
+“Here, catch a-hold and tie yourself on,” said the welcome voice of the
+marshal out of the darkness, without the least waste of words or time.
+
+As soon as Billy’s excited fingers could do it they were fastened to the
+end of the marshal’s official launch, and bobbing off towards the royal
+float at a tremendous rate of speed.
+
+“How did you come to come hunt for us?” Winona called to the marshal as
+they went.
+
+“You were knocked out o’ line an’ got blowed away, didn’t you?” answered
+the marshal.
+
+“Then we’re going to be judged—we’re going to be judged!” she rejoiced.
+“Oh, do you think we may get a prize yet?”
+
+“Shouldn’t wonder but you got something,” said the laconic marshal.
+“Here we be.”
+
+He bent over and unfastened them.
+
+“You’re late, you see,” he said, “and you’ll just have to paddle out an’
+get your sentence alone.”
+
+Winona’s heart beat frantically, but she straightened up in the canoe,
+and she and Billy, standing up at front and back (it was risky work with
+the top-heavy decorations, but they never thought of that till
+afterwards), paddled out into the open space before the royal float. All
+the other entries had been judged. Over in the place where the
+prize-winners were Winona had time to see that the Camp Fire float and
+Marie’s canoe were herded with the others. So even if she got nothing
+the glory of Camp Karonya was safe. It was trying to wait there alone,
+with everyone staring, but it did not last long. The red-and-gold herald
+came forward very soon.
+
+“First prize, canoe class!” he said—and Winona almost lost her balance.
+“Awarded to Miss Winona Merriam of Camp Karonya, and Mr. William Lee, of
+Boy Scouts’ Patrol Number Six, for their entry ‘The Ship of the Fiend.’
+Twenty-five dollars.”
+
+The clapping burst out again. When it was done Winona and Billy started
+to paddle back to the prize-winners’ enclosure, but a gesture of the
+herald stopped them. They paused, a little puzzled.
+
+“Do they want us to say thank you?” wondered Winona.
+
+Before Billy could turn the canoe the left-hand red-and-gold herald
+walked forth.
+
+“Silver loving cup for greatest originality of conception also goes to
+Miss Merriam and Mr. Lee,” read the herald.
+
+They were clapped again—they could see Tom, on the grandstand, standing
+up and waving his hat—and then at last the marshal beckoned them to
+cross to the sparkling ring of other craft in the background. The
+winning launches, floats, rowboats and canoes were to act as a guard of
+honor to escort the royal float back to the grandstand, where the court
+carriages for the king and queen of the carnival waited.
+
+They went to this place at last, and paused by their friends, the Camp
+Fire float and Marie’s canoe.
+
+“We got a fourth prize!” called Marie gayly as Winona stopped by her.
+“Oh, Winona, you darling! You always were a mascot!”
+
+“Marie always was an angel,” thought Winona to herself. Edith was not so
+selfless.
+
+“Congratulations, Win,” she said bravely, holding out a tinsel-wrapped
+wrist across the canoes. “I’m glad you got it—but I wish we could have
+had something better. I think we deserved it.”
+
+“You certainly did,” said Winona warmly. “But it doesn’t much matter,
+you know, Edith. The main thing people will notice is that Camp Karonya
+landed three prizes. And think of that loving-cup sitting up, with ‘Won
+by Camp Karonya,’ on it!”
+
+“Aren’t you going to have your name put on it?” asked Edith.
+
+“Certainly not!” said Winona. “It’s a Camp trophy. I shall put my name
+on the back of the check for twenty-five dollars. That is pleasure
+enough.”
+
+“I think we’ve ‘done noble,’ all of us,” said Marie. The canoes were
+paddling off by now, but the going was slow, and they could still talk.
+
+“What did the float get?” asked Winona. “You know we were blown off in
+the dark, and lost track of events till the marshal came after us.”
+
+“Second,” answered both girls together.
+
+“You were the belle of the ball,” added Marie.
+
+“Well, I don’t think we did so badly,” declared Edith. “A first, second
+and a fourth prize all to one camp. I hope nobody thinks we got more
+than our share.”
+
+“We didn’t,” said Winona. “Oh, I’m so happy!”
+
+“I’m rather pleased myself,” said Billy’s quiet voice from the other end
+of the canoe.
+
+But it was not until the royal float had been escorted home, and
+everything was broken up, and Tom and Billy were paddling Winona back to
+camp, that he said what he really thought.
+
+“I’m mighty glad you got that first prize,” he said. “You deserved it if
+anybody ever did, for being such a little sport about dropping out of
+the float. I’d blow a lot of that money in right away if I were you, to
+congratulate myself.”
+
+“After I’ve paid back what I owe certain people,” said Winona, “I shall
+divide with the Camp treasury. Even then I’ll have a lot more than I
+ever thought of getting.”
+
+“Anyway, you were a real sport, and you deserved everything that was
+coming to you,” repeated Billy, in which Tom agreed with him. And when
+your brother approves of you and says so you can generally be sure that
+you have done something remarkably right.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINETEEN
+
+
+Next day was the “cold gray dawn of the morning after.” Not that it was
+particularly cold or gray, but there was all the unnailing of the float
+to do, and the dismantling of the two decorated canoes. The girls wound
+the tinsel off carefully for use on future Christmas trees, and packed
+away in a box what other decorations were not perishable, for you never
+know when you’re going to need things. Otherwise they sat around and
+gloated softly over Camp Karonya’s exceeding brilliancy in carrying off
+prizes in large quantities.
+
+Mrs. Bryan would not let Winona divide her money with the Camp, because
+they had enough already to see them through the rest of the time they
+were to spend there; and then, too, the second prize that the float had
+won was fifteen dollars.
+
+Nothing else memorable happened that day, except that Nataly Lee left
+for home. She was thinner and in better condition than she had been when
+she came, but she frankly didn’t like the life. To her, carrying water,
+instead of being a lark, was a nuisance. She had no particular pride in
+working for beads, and it was thought she was hungry for paper novels.
+It worried her, too, that she was getting burned brown. So she went back
+to her mother. The girls saw her off, and sang her a cheer, and were as
+good as they could be. But it is not to be denied that Camp Karonya felt
+a little relief at her going.
+
+After that nothing happened but regular camp work for three days. And
+then Louise proceeded to distinguish herself. It was to be expected.
+
+Tom and Billy had taken Winona and Louise off for a day’s fishing in the
+canoe. As usual, Winona and Louise provided the lunch, the boys the
+fishing-tackle and the canoe, and the fish were to be divided at the end
+of the day. They had fished most of the lazy, sunny morning, and it was
+noon. They climbed out of the canoe by a spring, washed their hands, and
+set out the lunch; the canoe was too fishy to be used as a dining-hall.
+
+“Do you think that four of us can possibly eat all that?” inquired
+Billy, eying the piles of sandwiches, the veal loaf, the whole cake and
+the can of pears which graced the paper napkins on the grass.
+
+“Well,” explained Winona, “the truth is, Louise and I rather doubled up
+on this lunch. We were both afraid there wouldn’t be enough, and each
+went separately and brought half a chocolate cake. You see it’s cut down
+the middle. I merely joined the twin halves for the sake of looks. But
+do you think that’s too many sandwiches for four people with real
+appetites?”
+
+“I don’t,” said Tom decidedly. “I’ll attend to anything that’s left
+over. A very nice amount of lunch—just right. Watch me!”
+
+But they did not watch him because they were otherwise engaged. None of
+them had small appetites, and they all did good work. Just the same when
+they were through there were a generous piece of cake, a fat slice of
+veal loaf, and seven sandwiches left.
+
+“I told you so,” said Billy. “Here, Tommy, it is up to you. Have these
+seven nice sandwiches.”
+
+“Can’t be done,” said Tom regretfully. “I’ve had that many. I had three
+pieces of cake, too.”
+
+“Doesn’t matter!” said Billy. “A gentleman’s word of honor——”
+
+He prepared to jump on Tom and hold him, while Louise held a sandwich
+ready to insert.
+
+“Ow!” said Tom. “Help! This is cruelty to animals. Pry him off, Winnie!”
+
+“Oh, let up, please!” said Winona. “You know, he might explode, and
+mother’d feel badly.”
+
+Billy took one knee off, and Tom wriggled more vigorously. Louise
+relented, and the two girls were trying to pull Billy off Tom. They had
+almost succeeded, when a little rustle behind them made Winona, whose
+senses were the most alert, let go and turn. The others followed her
+eyes. They sat up and looked, and Tom jumped to his feet and began to
+dust himself off.
+
+The newcomer, who was a most forlorn and bedraggled little girl, spoke
+very welcome words.
+
+“Me’s very hundry!” she said pathetically.
+
+“You poor little thing!” said Louise. “Come here, dear; there’s lots for
+you to eat.” The little girl made straight for her. Louise got out a
+fresh paper napkin, and piled sandwiches, loaf, cake and all on it.
+
+“Wait a minute,” said Billy. “Is all that good for so little a
+girl—hadn’t you better give her one at a time?”
+
+Louise held the veal loaf poised in air on her fork. “Will your mother
+let you eat this?” she asked.
+
+[Illustration: THE CHILD BEGAN TO EAT EVERYTHING AT ONCE]
+
+The bedraggled small child sat down on the grass, as if the words were
+an invitation. She was a pretty, dirty child of perhaps five, dressed
+only in a soiled and ragged underwaist and petticoat, and with a mane of
+very long and heavy hair, all tangles and elf-locks. Her hair was yellow
+and her eyes big and blue, and she would have been pretty had she been
+cared-for looking.
+
+“Ain’t got any mother,” she said, “just Vicky. She lets me.”
+
+“Poor little thing!” said Louise again, and handed her the veal loaf.
+The child began to eat everything at once, with an eagerness which made
+it certain she had told the truth, at least, about being hungry.
+
+“What’s your name, kiddie? You’ll tell me, won’t you?” asked Billy, when
+she seemed to have taken the edge off her appetite. He bent down to her
+with a sympathetic expression which he possessed at times, and which—or
+something about him—won the hearts of most small children he had
+dealings with.
+
+“Sandy,” she said through large mouthfuls.
+
+“Sandy what?” inquired Louise.
+
+“Sandy Mitchell. Gimme more cake?”
+
+As she had had two large slices, it was thought best not to give her any
+more.
+
+“Mercy, no!” said Winona, as Louise was cutting it, in spite of
+prudence. “Not another bit. We don’t want her to die on our hands. You’d
+better come over here by the spring, dear, and let me wash your hands.”
+
+Sandy got up immediately, with the placid remark, “It might-a given me a
+pain, anyway,” and allowed her hands to be washed, and dried on a fresh
+paper napkin.
+
+“Poor little cowed thing!” exclaimed Louise at this instant obedience.
+“Sandy, dear, won’t your people be worried about you?”
+
+“Nope,” said Sandy.
+
+“And where do you live?”
+
+“Way, way off,” she said. “We just comed. I’ll show you to-morrow.”
+
+“Poor little dear thing!” said Louise. “How pretty she is! Winnie, I’ve
+a good mind to adopt her.”
+
+“Having only five at home,” murmured Tom.
+
+“From the way she talks her people wouldn’t care,” said Louise. “Maybe
+Camp Karonya could take care of her. We will till we go back, anyway.”
+
+“She must belong to one of those poor families along the west branch,”
+said Tom. “Three miles away, and we can’t possibly get there by
+canoeing, because we’d have to paddle back seven miles before we could
+paddle over the three. Who’s going to walk three miles and a half by the
+thermometer to take the lady home? Don’t all speak at once.”
+
+“Do you live up there?” Louise asked her. “And does your father drink?”
+
+“Yep,” said Sandy. “Favver? Course he dwinks. Evvybody dwinks.”
+
+“Think of being brought up to think things like that,” said Louise.
+
+“Don’t you think,” suggested Winona, “that we’d better take her back to
+camp? I don’t know the way to the place Tom talks about, and maybe it
+would be best for Mrs. Bryan to take her anyway, if they do drink.”
+
+“Good idea,” said everybody. Sandy herself seemed pleased, and attached
+herself to them as readily as a stray puppy would have done. They
+cleared up leisurely, then got back into the canoe, taking the child in,
+too. It was rather a close fit, though it was an eighteen-foot canoe,
+but they managed it. She was no more trouble than Puppums would have
+been—Puppums, fortunately, had been left with Florence. They had a good
+day with the fishing, and trailed into Camp Karonya at six with fish for
+breakfast; and Sandy.
+
+“Good luck!” were Tom’s parting words. “We’ll come to-morrow and help
+you take her back, if you like.”
+
+“You needn’t bother,” said his sister. “We’ll take the faithful
+rowboat.”
+
+“We aren’t going to take her back!” insisted Louise. “I’m going to adopt
+her. Sandy, wouldn’t you like to live with me? _I’d_ dress you in nice
+clothes and give you a dolly.”
+
+“An’ five cents?” demanded Sandy, “An’ things to eat?”
+
+“Oh, the poor baby!” said Louise. “She’s had to think about money and
+food and grown-up things like the poor little children you read about in
+the pamphlets. Yes, indeed, you shall, Sandy.”
+
+“She looks well-fed,” said Tom. “Well, good luck. Don’t get a reputation
+for collecting them—you mayn’t be able to dispose of orphans as easily
+as you can kittens.”
+
+They parted, and Louise carried Sandy into camp. They arrived as supper
+was about ready. The Blue Birds carried the fish off to the ice-box (it
+was literally a box, a very ingenious arrangement of sawdust and wood
+which had meant a bead for Elizabeth) and the rest clustered about
+Louise’s treasure-trove.
+
+“Better find out if she really needs adopting,” advised Marie as they
+sat around the long table, and Sandy exercised an appetite as large as
+her noon one.
+
+“With a drunken father, and no mother, and looking like that?” fired up
+Louise. “I’m going to wash her after supper.”
+
+There seemed no connection between washing her and adopting her, but
+there evidently was to Louise.
+
+“Want me to help?” offered Winona. “It ought to be more fun than washing
+Puppums.”
+
+“I hope she won’t howl and try to climb over the side of the tub, the
+way he does,” said Louise. “Yes, thank you, I’d love to be helped.”
+
+A warm bath in a foot-tub, following directly on a large meal of corn
+fritters, baked potatoes and huckle-berries, ought nearly to have killed
+Sandy, but it didn’t.
+
+“I never dreamed you meant to do more than wash her face and hands,”
+protested Marie, who, as the guardian of the Blue Birds, had ideas about
+such things. But it was too late. Anyway, there was no visible effect.
+Sandy awakened next morning, well, happy, and still hungry. They had
+given her Nataly’s bunk with Mrs. Bryan. Helen bunked with Elizabeth,
+because Nataly said the girls tossed, and Mrs. Bryan didn’t.
+
+While Sandy slept Louise and Winona were busy. Louise woke Winona at
+five, and they heated water, filled the charcoal-iron, and washed and
+ironed and mended Sandy’s underclothes. While Louise darned Sandy’s
+socks, Winona ironed the garments dry. Then they foraged about the
+store-shed, which was a warm place at that time of year even in the
+early morning, and found a white dress of Florence’s which Winona
+thought she had remembered bringing.
+
+When found it proved much too large for Sandy, but Louise was still
+enthusiastic, and took it up with such good will that two of the tucks
+she put in had to be ripped out again when they came to dress Sandy in
+it. They polished the small strapped shoes the child had taken off,
+sewed the button of each on more firmly, and decided that they looked
+almost new.
+
+Then Winona went back to awaken her own little sister. When she returned
+to Louise’s tent she found her friend had finished giving Sandy another
+bath. She was just dressing her.
+
+“I don’t believe this poor little thing knows what a thorough bath is,”
+she greeted Winona over the child’s head.
+
+“Yes, I do, too,” said Sandy. “But I had one last night, an’ you’ve been
+an’ given me anuvver now!”
+
+“I think I’ll box her hair, too,” went on Louise. “It is getting rather
+common now, but she has so much, and it’s so untidy, that it would
+really be the best thing even if I didn’t keep her.”
+
+“I wouldn’t do her hair till you’re sure we’re going to keep her,”
+objected Winona. “Her people mightn’t like it.”
+
+“A dissipated father and a poor little overworked elder sister—Vicky is
+your sister, isn’t she, Sandy?—and a home where they don’t even wash or
+feed her? Poor people haven’t time to take care of hair like this.
+Anyway, they haven’t done it, for it was tangled awfully,” she finished
+conclusively.
+
+“But it’s so pretty!” protested Winona. “Just look at it, nearly to her
+waist, and thick and curly, and such a lovely gold color!”
+
+“So much the worse for her health,” said Louise as promptly as
+Red-Riding-Hood’s wolf. “Sandy, wouldn’t you like your hair cut nice and
+short, so it wouldn’t get tangled any more?”
+
+“An’ twousers?” demanded Sandy hopefully. “Gee, zat’s gweat!”
+
+“I’ll have to stop her using slang,” said Louise. “No, dear, not exactly
+twousers, but—I could get her some overalls, couldn’t I, Win?”
+
+“I suppose so,” said Winona.
+
+“Then I will,” said Louise.
+
+“You’re gweat, too,” said Sandy, turning around where she sat on
+Louise’s lap, and throwing both little bare arms around her neck and
+kissing her. Louise kissed her back warmly.
+
+“Isn’t she a dear?” she said. “Winnie, will you please hand me the
+scissors?”
+
+“No,” said Winona, “I won’t. It’s wicked to spoil pretty hair like
+that.” And she walked out of the tent.
+
+“I’ll det ’em,” said Sandy, slipping down and bringing them to Louise
+from the table at the end of the tent.
+
+“Here’s a piece of ribbon to tie it with, if you won’t cut it off,” said
+Winona, reappearing with a wide length of blue taffeta.
+
+“No, thank you,” said Louise, cutting industriously and very neatly. “It
+would just be in her eyes all the time. I’m going to cut it straight
+across her eyebrows, like a little boy’s.”
+
+“I did it to all my dolls once,” said Winona. She sat down, though, and
+watched Louise till she was done.
+
+Louise had washed the little girl’s hair when she gave her the second
+bath, and when it was even and short enough to suit her she finished
+dressing the child in her white frock, and set her on the grass outside,
+to dry in the sunshine. She gave her a picture book to look at to keep
+her amused. The bobbed locks, thick and curly, fluffed out charmingly in
+a yellow bush around the sweet little face.
+
+“It’s becoming,” admitted Winona. “She looks like a cherub, or a
+choir-boy on a Christmas card. There is the signal for breakfast. You
+just got her dry in time.”
+
+“Breakfast?” said Sandy, brightening.
+
+“Poor little darling!” said Louise, catching and kissing her. “I don’t
+believe she ever had anything to eat before she came here!”
+
+They went to breakfast in state, and Sandy’s golden aureole and clean
+white frock made quite a sensation at the table. They piled things up
+for her to sit on, and she was put where Mrs. Bryan could reach her, and
+argue with her easily if she misbehaved. But she acted very well indeed.
+Her table-manners were good, considering, she talked without the least
+shyness, and managed to eat a very large breakfast. Louise beamed with
+pride over the impression her protegee was making.
+
+When breakfast was over, and Sandy turned loose again to play with
+Puppums and Florence, to whom she had taken a violent fancy, Louise
+packed a market-basket with everything a starving family might need.
+Then she found her purse, summoned Winona, and they took the rowboat and
+went forth, Sandy and Puppums in the bottom of it.
+
+They rowed along the west branch, a narrow stream that doubled at right
+angles from the branch the camps were on. It was lined with pretty
+summer cottages for a part of the way, then after that, at the very end,
+came a part that was filled with poor people who had squatted there. But
+long before they came to the poorest part Sandy desired to land.
+
+“Here we is!” she said cheerfully, at a prosperous-looking dock about a
+third of the way up.
+
+“Not here, dearie,” said Louise. “It’s probably some place where the
+poor child’s been fed,” she added aside to Winona.
+
+“We may as well get out, though, mayn’t we?” suggested Winona. “Maybe
+they can tell us where she comes from.”
+
+They tied the boat and got out, and walked down a deep lane for a while.
+Presently they came to a large white house in the middle of a couple of
+acres of half-yard, half-lawn looking land.
+
+The doors and windows were all wide open, but there was no one to be
+seen. Sandy walked into the hall with an assured tread, took a long
+breath, and called at the top of her lungs, “Vicky! Vick-ee!”
+
+The girls stood at the door and waited, ready to apologize for their
+charge’s rudeness whenever somebody might appear. In about five minutes,
+during which Sandy continued to shout, they heard a light, slow step
+along the upper hall. Presently a slim, dark, rather pretty little girl
+of about eleven scuffed down the stairs. She had on a kimono over her
+nightgown, though it was quite late in the morning.
+
+“That you, Sand?” she called as she came. “Goodness, you’re up early!”
+
+“This is Vicky,” Sandy explained to the girls over her shoulder. “Vicky!
+I’ve had two baths!”
+
+Louise stood, for once, speechless. She hung mechanically to the handle
+of the basketful of provisions, but she was too surprised to move. It
+was Winona who finally took courage to come forward and explain.
+
+“I’m Winona Merriam,” she said, “and this is my friend, Louise Lane. We
+are over at Camp Karonya, the Camp Fire, you know. We found this little
+girl yesterday, and we came over to-day to bring her home. Does
+she—does she belong here?”
+
+“Why, of course she does,” said Vicky. “Thank you for bringing her.
+She’s always trailing off that way, aren’t you, Sand? How long you been
+gone?”
+
+“Is she your sister?” asked Louise, who had her breath by this time.
+
+“M’hm,” nodded Vicky. “Why—why, Alexandra Mitchell, where’s your hair?”
+
+“It got boxed!” exclaimed Sandy gleefully. “Isn’t it nice?”
+
+“I’m afraid we’ll have to explain about that,” said Winona bravely.
+“Your little sister strayed into a little fishing-trip four of us were
+having yesterday, very hungry and rather dirty, and without all her
+clothes on. And from the way she talked we thought she was—well, we
+washed her and dressed her, and—I’m sorry—shortened her hair, it was
+so tangled. I’m ever so sorry. I think it will grow——”
+
+Vicky stared a minute at Alexandra, very proud of herself, neat, clean,
+dressed and bobbed. Then instead of being angry she sat down on the
+floor, where she was, and burst into a fit of laughter.
+
+“You thought—you thought—oh, my _goodness!_”
+
+“Yes,” said Winona. She sat down, too, and finally went off herself.
+“Yes—we _did!_”
+
+“And you brought food for the hungry family——” Vicky’s eye fell on the
+large basket which Louise still held stiffly before her. “Oh, oh, oh!
+And Uncle Will’s pride, Sandy’s hair, that he made a picture of that
+sold for ever so much money—oh, my goodness _gracious!_”
+
+She and Winona both began to laugh again. Louise didn’t. She stood
+against the wall like a wax statue.
+
+“It certainly is funny,” said Vicky at last, mopping her eyes, “but I’m
+good and glad about Sandy’s hair. It was an awful nuisance to take care
+of, and Uncle Will _would_ keep it that way so he could paint pictures
+of it. Won’t you stay and have some breakfast? We have a cook.”
+
+“No, thank you,” said Louise hurriedly, “we’ve had our breakfast.”
+
+“What an awful noise, children!” said a voice; and a rather rumpled man
+appeared. He had an absent look, and also gave an impression of not
+having been to bed all night. He had a paint-brush in his hand.
+
+Vicky and Sandy sprang for him, hanging to him.
+
+“Oh, Uncle Will, this is two Camp Fire girls,” said Sandy. “They cutted
+my hair when I was lost. Ain’t it cute?”
+
+“_Oh!_” said Uncle Will, and looked as aghast as Louise had. “How did
+this accident happen?”
+
+“It wasn’t an accident,” said Sandy. “Louise boxed my head, an’ gived me
+two baths!”
+
+Uncle Will—so far as the girls learned that was all the name he
+had—uttered another faint exclamation. Then he dived back into his room
+as if he wanted to bear the shock alone.
+
+“I’m so sorry!” said Winona, who found she had all the talking to do.
+“I’m afraid your uncle doesn’t like it!”
+
+“Oh, he’s only got an artistic temp’rament,” said Vicky, as if it were a
+disease uncles could not help. “I think Sandy’s goin’ to, too. Do stay
+to breakfast. We’ll have things out o’ your basket if you will.”
+
+“No, thank you,” said Winona. “I think Louise is in a hurry to go home.
+Come over and see us. It isn’t far if you have a boat.”
+
+“We’ll get somebody to bring us,” said Vicky. “I’d come now if I was
+dressed.”
+
+“It wouldn’t be a bad plan if you dressed a little earlier,” said Winona
+frankly. “Are there just you two?”
+
+“Nope,” said Vicky, “there’s Lancy, too. He’s eight. Uncle Will tries to
+bring us up, but he don’t know how so very well.”
+
+“Well, when you come down to camp we can tell you a lot of things if
+you’d like us to,” said Winona.
+
+“Maybe,” said Vicky indifferently. “But it’s all right this way. You can
+try telling us, though.”
+
+“Well, good-bye,” said Louise—it was all she had contributed to the
+conversation, but she seemed to contribute it gladly.
+
+So they went, still carrying the basket.
+
+“Wait!” called Sandy’s voice behind them when they had gone a little
+way. “I’m goin’ back wiv you! You said you’d ’dopted me!”
+
+“But we didn’t know your uncle wasn’t poor then,” said Louise. “We can’t
+take you away from him.”
+
+“You ’dopted me,” said Sandy doggedly, “an’ I’m goin’ wiv you—so
+there!” And she thrust her wet little hand into Louise’s and trotted
+along beside them. “Louise—wasn’t there cake in the basket?”
+
+“You have cake at home, dear,” said Louise. But she looked as if she
+felt a little better. After all, even if an orphan didn’t need adopting,
+it was a pleasure to find that she liked it.
+
+“Like you best,” insisted Sandy. “Goin’ to stay wiv you. They don’t
+care!”
+
+“Oh, let’s let her, just for to-day, anyhow!” said Winona. “I don’t
+believe anybody’ll mind.”
+
+“All right,” said Louise rather as if she wanted to. They got into the
+boat again, and rowed to camp.
+
+“Sandy,” asked Louise, “what did you mean by saying your father drank?
+You haven’t any father.”
+
+“Well, I did have,” said Sandy. “And of sourse he did dwink when there
+was a him. Evvybody does. Little flowers do. My governess said so.”
+
+“Your _governess!_” said Louise. “Is your uncle rich enough for you to
+have a governess—and you go trailing round in your underwaist and
+petticoat!”
+
+“When he draws pictures an’ sells ’em he is. When he don’t he don’t.
+Gimme some cake?”
+
+Sandy was evidently quite calm about her way of living.
+
+“She mayn’t need adopting, but she certainly needs reforming,” said
+Louise vigorously.
+
+They were paddling past the Scouts’ camp by now. Louise was quite
+willing to go past softly, but Sandy yelled, for she saw Billy.
+
+“Hello, girls!” he called. “Back already? Got all the papers signed?”
+
+“No, I haven’t,” said Louise. “And, Billy, if you ask me any more
+questions, I’ll jump over and drown!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY
+
+
+The Camp Fire might all grin broadly whenever it spoke of Louise’s
+adoption—even more broadly than it had at Winona’s cat-collection: but
+the adoptee herself was quite serious about it. Adopted she was by the
+Camp Fire in general and Louise in particular, and adopted she meant to
+stay. She went home once in awhile—there was nobody to worry about her,
+it seemed, when she stayed away—but as a rule she considered herself a
+Camp Fire Girl. She was too young to be a Blue Bird, but that didn’t
+make any difference. Finally she was given the official position of
+third sub-mascot, ranking after Puppums and Hike the Camp Cat.
+Unofficially, she got better training than she appeared to have had for
+some time, for she knew that to stay in Camp she had to obey rules.
+Vicky never did come over. Once in awhile they would return Sandy to her
+home, just for politeness, but it didn’t seem to be specially required
+of them.
+
+“We ought to have a grand entertainment,” declared Marie one day, “and
+invite all the summer people who bought our things.”
+
+“Yes,” Louise approved, “and then, perhaps, if we made them happy,
+they’d buy some more.”
+
+“Well, I was thinking of charging for the entertainment,” demurred
+Marie.
+
+“But wouldn’t it be piling things up just a wee bit too much?” asked
+Louise.
+
+“Perhaps,” admitted Marie.
+
+“What were you thinking of having?” asked Winona.
+
+It was at the end of a weekly Council Fire, and the girls were lying
+about, as usual, on the hill.
+
+“I was wondering”—from Marie a little doubtfully—“if we could have
+some tableaux from Maeterlinck, with readings. I could do the readings.”
+
+“What’s Maeterlinck?” asked Louise cheerfully. “Something good to eat?”
+
+“No, you goose!” instructed Marie. “He wrote the ‘Blue Bird,’ and—oh, a
+lot of plays.”
+
+“Nice ones?” asked Louise. “Lots of people running around doing exciting
+things?”
+
+“No,” admitted Marie. “Nothing much happens. But it’s very elevating.”
+
+“I don’t feel as if I wanted to be elevated, somehow,” said Louise
+firmly, “and I’m sure those summer people don’t; they come here to relax
+and enjoy themselves, and when they want something really high-brow they
+go to the movies and see bears and lions eating each other. They can do
+that right in the place itself.”
+
+“I don’t believe they’d come to a Maeterlinck show, either, Marie,” so
+said Mrs. Bryan. “We can take him up to read this winter, if the girls
+want to know more about him. But he isn’t exactly the author for a
+summer entertainment—especially if we want to make money.”
+
+“We do,” said Marie who had a strictly practical side to her.
+
+“Does it have to be an author?” Helen wanted to know.
+
+“It seems to,” said Louise.
+
+“I have an idea!” exclaimed Winona, sitting up.
+
+“Is it an author?” asked Louise.
+
+“Yes!” said Winona, “it is!”
+
+“Well?” from everybody.
+
+“Samantha Allen!” cried Winona eagerly. “My plan’s this. Have somebody
+dress like Samantha—you know the pictures—and tell all about herself
+to begin with. Then we could make a big, wooden frame—we have those
+boards left from the float—and Samantha could turn over the leaves of
+the album, and describe the characters in her books one by one, as they
+were shown in the frame. We could call it ‘Samantha’s Picter-Album,’ or
+something like that.”
+
+“I saw an entertainment that was something of that sort once,” said
+Adelaide. “But it was just a frame with old-fashioned pictures, like
+daguerrotypes. There wasn’t any Samantha, or any talking. I should think
+this would be lots better. But would it last a whole evening, and make
+the Wampoag people think they’d had their money’s worth?”
+
+“I think so,” said Louise. “And anyway, if it wasn’t so very long we
+could amuse the visitors by showing them over the camp, and telling them
+all about our customs and habits. Maybe we could do a folk-dance for
+them afterwards.”
+
+“Oh, yes, of course we could!” said Edith, whose specialty it was. “We
+could give them an Indian dance as easy as anything, and that Russian
+one I learned before I came. I can teach it to eight of us.”
+
+“I know how to dance the minuet,” suggested Helen. “How many had it in
+that Washington’s Birthday thing Miss Green’s class had last year?”
+
+Five had, it seemed. As a minuet only needs ten performers it was very
+simple to polish that up. And all of them knew Indian dances already. So
+a committee was appointed to get up the costumes. The Indian dresses
+were there already. For the Russian dance Edith thought head-dresses of
+paper muslin would do and aprons of colored scrim, over white skirts and
+turned-under, slipped-under-the-skirt middy blouses. For the
+minuet—well, there was cheese-cloth in red and yellow that Marie had
+had on her canoe; everyone could powder her hair and contrive a
+’kerchief. The pannier draperies could be pinned into place, and broad
+bodices of Winona’s black paper muslin from the canoe-trimming could be
+cut and pinned into place with very little trouble. Helen and Edith and
+Adelaide were told off to see about the costuming; Edith, as she had to
+train the others in dancing, had nothing but supervision to do. Helen
+and Adelaide did what little actual work was needed.
+
+“The main thing this entertainment needs seems to be pins,” said Helen
+the third day after they had decided to have it. It was a Thursday, and
+they planned the affair for the next Monday night. “We’re nearly out of
+them.”
+
+So eight papers of pins were bought, not to speak of a good deal of
+white paper muslin. The girls were assigned their different characters
+in the Album, and each left to her own cleverness in getting up the
+costume. About midway in the preparations it suddenly dawned on the
+girls, who had gotten all the Samantha books from the Wampoag library,
+and had their families send them on the ones they owned, that boys were
+needed.
+
+So a committee consisting of all the sisters was sent up the lake to
+borrow Boy Scouts. It wasn’t the easiest thing in the world, for boys
+seem to dislike “dressing up” as much as girls like it; but Mr. Gedney
+was Camp Karonya’s friend, and they went back with all the boys they
+needed promised them—if they would look after the costumes and not
+expect the Scouts to rehearse.
+
+Louise was appointed a Committee of Tickets, with Elizabeth to help her.
+Louise was a born ticket-seller. She loved it. She and Elizabeth put in
+most of their waking hours exchanging bits of ecru cardboard with small
+red things on them (meant for Camp Fires) for thirty-five cents. And
+they did very well. They got permission of all the drug-stores and many
+other stores, to put up posters, which were camp-made, also, of course.
+So by the time the fateful night arrived quite a goodly crowd was
+ferried over to Camp Karonya by the Scouts’ canoes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At eight precisely the audience, accommodated on long planks which
+reached from box to box, saw a curtain pulled away from between two
+trees. Nothing was to be seen in its place but a plump red album
+standing out against a background which represented every sheet in the
+camp. They had used Marie’s red cheese-cloth after all, instead of
+Winona’s black paper muslin. As for the framework, that was a work of
+art for which several of the girls were responsible. It had taken all
+the manual training they knew, and a little bit more—they had had to
+call Tom Merriam, whose hobby was carpentry, before they got it all
+right—but the general effect was gorgeous. The audience was given a
+fair amount of time to appreciate the beauty of the album, which was
+about eight feet high. Then Marie stepped out. She had been elected to
+the very responsible part of Samantha because her memory was good,
+rather than because she looked it. But she had done excellently with
+what means she had. Two small pillows for a foundation, a pink wrapper
+with large black spots, sent on from home, an elderly bonnet borrowed
+from a friendly farmer’s wife, a substantial gingham apron, spectacles,
+a Paisley shawl, and a large palm-leaf fan, completed a get-up that
+would have disguised Marie Hunter effectually from her own best friend.
+
+When she thought she had waited long enough to give the audience a
+chance to appreciate her she curtsied, and reaching over, pulled at the
+album cover with the crock of a green-handled umbrella. The inside page
+of the album was imitated by a frame with white muslin tightly stretched
+over it, and an oval hole in the middle for the picture. In the hole
+just now was a meek, chin-whiskered face surrounded by a high
+collar—Mr. Gedney, normally. Samantha pointed to this proudly.
+
+“Brethren and sisteren,” began Samantha, after she had introduced
+herself, “this here is my lawful, though sometimes wayward, pardner
+Josiah Allen. I was married to him in a brand-new green silk gown, made
+pollynay, and Mother Jones’s parlor, come twenty year ago. Our mutual
+affection has been a beakin ever since, though I can’t deny it has
+sputtered some once in awhile, and burned purty low, tryin’ times like
+house-cleanin’ an’ wash-days.”
+
+She went on with the famous tale of “How the Bamberses borrowed Josiah,”
+cutting it short when she heard the tiny bell behind the scene tinkle,
+as a signal that another picture was ready. Then she jerked the cover to
+with her umbrella-handle, and operated it again. This time the inside
+leaf had been fastened back with the lid, for this was a full-sized
+picture. The audience, by this time, was laughing at nearly everything
+she said, for Marie was a capital mimic, and she had picked out and
+strung together all the funniest things she could find in the Samantha
+Allen books.
+
+“This here,” announced Samantha, “is my step-children, Thomas Jefferson
+and Tirzah Ann. They ain’t bad children, if I do say it as shouldn’t,
+and I have brung ’em up like they wuz my own.”
+
+Winona was Tirzah. She sat stiffly in a high-backed chair (the back was
+pasteboard, covered with black muslin, cut in a Chippendale sort of way)
+and she wore a full, flowered gown, with her hair looped over her ears
+and fastened in the back to a “chignon” with two fat curls hanging from
+it. They had put Tom with her, with a view to mutual support. He, too,
+had a preposterous collar (collars may be made by the dozen if you have
+scissors and patience, and the Camp Fire Girls had both) and a flowered
+vest. His baggy clothes and a tall hat at his feet completed a picture
+that was so much like the ones you do see in old albums that the
+audience began to clap before Marie was through her introduction.
+
+“Woof!” said Tom when he got out of the frame. “Never again for me!” He
+turned to grin at Billy, who had still to go on. Billy was supposed to
+be ‘Submit Tewksbury’s beau, a dashin’ city feller,’ and he was trying
+to get an appropriate amount of dash into his mustaches.
+
+“Every time I go up against Camp Karonya,” responded Billy sadly, “I
+have to do something that needs a lot of stiffening. I had to work two
+hours over that fiend tail of mine, and these whiskers are just as bad.”
+
+“It’ll be worse when you have real ones,” remarked Louise consolingly.
+She was acting as putter-on-of-finishing-touches. There was a
+dressing-tent apiece for the girls and boys, and Billy was on the
+outside of his, trying to arrange the mustache to his liking by means of
+a small mirror pinned to the canvas.
+
+“At least I won’t have to worry about their sticking on,” was his reply.
+
+“There,” said Louise, “they’ll do now.”
+
+“Billy and Adelaide wanted!” called Edith.
+
+Adelaide, on account of a mournful expression that still appeared at
+times, had been selected for “Submit Tewksbury,” who had a broken heart
+and was good to one relative after another for thirty years or more. She
+had been told to look as sad as she possibly could, and she was posed
+with a medicine bottle and spoon, with which she had just—so Samantha
+explained—been nursing her relatives. Billy, behind her, looked very
+cheerful and debonair with his jaunty mustache and a very gaudy shirt
+which—so he said afterwards—he had bought especially for the occasion,
+for thirty-nine cents marked down from fifty. It had a large, spotty
+pattern on it, and it looked _very_ festive.
+
+The tableaux went smoothly on. Marie remembered all her lines, the
+audience appeared to enjoy it all very much, when suddenly in the midst
+of a speech she remembered something, and halted, secretly referring to
+the list of pictures which was pinned inside her palm-leaf fan. Widder
+Doodle, Submit Tewksbury, Elder Minkley, Maggie Snow—yes, they were
+four past Betsy Bobbet, the crowning glory of the evening, and no Betsy
+Bobbet had there been! Marie pulled herself together and thought a
+minute, talking on meanwhile.
+
+“Brethren and sisteren,” she said, “I hope you’ll excuse me for a
+minute. My wind’s a gittin’ low, and my new congress gaiters pinch me
+some. I’m goin’ to ask you to wait a bit, till I fetch me a drink of
+water.”
+
+The audience laughed, and clapped, as it had been doing most of the
+evening, and Samantha scuttled distractedly behind the scenes, where she
+clutched the nearest person to her. It happened to be Mrs. Bryan, who
+was making up one of the boys under a light.
+
+“Where’s Betsy Bobbet—I mean Lilian Green?” she asked hurriedly. “It’s
+way past her turn, and she’s never been in at all.”
+
+“Oh, my dear, didn’t anyone tell you?” said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+“They couldn’t,” said Marie. “I’ve been out front all this time.”
+
+“I’m awfully sorry,” said Mrs. Bryan. “Can’t you do without her? She
+slipped and tore her costume so badly that it wasn’t fit to appear in.
+She could pose, of course, but the tears would show.”
+
+“I went right down over a tent-pole,” explained Lilian, appearing to
+speak for herself. She was indeed badly torn, not to speak of the fact
+that she was limping a little. Her bonnet and veil—a green
+mosquito-netting veil—were wrecked—and she had managed to muddy
+herself thoroughly, too.
+
+“You certainly made a thorough job of it!” exclaimed Marie. “But oh,
+Mrs. Bryan, what shall I do? I’ve been talking about her all the
+evening—leading up to her. She’s the keystone of the whole
+performance.”
+
+“It would be a case of Hamlet with Hamlet left out without her, then,
+would it?” queried Mrs. Bryan. “My dear, I don’t know what to say. If
+Lilian were damaged somebody else could supply her place, but we haven’t
+any understudy for Lilian’s clothes!”
+
+“There’s only one thing to do,” offered Winona, coming over from a group
+of girls. “Have her go on anyway, Marie, and make up something to
+explain why she looks so funny. Explain why she’s so torn and
+crumpled—make a joke of it, so they’ll think it was all on purpose.”
+
+“Winnie, you’re the pride of my life!” vowed Marie. “I’ll have to do
+just that. It will be hard,” she added doubtfully.
+
+“Oh, no, it won’t,” and Winona laughed reassuringly, “you’re the
+cleverest one of us, and if you can’t make up some reason why Betsy
+Bobbet looks mussed, nobody can. Now go on out and do it.”
+
+She gave her a little push.
+
+“Ray-of-Light, you’re a dear!” Marie said affectionately as she turned
+and went out. “Put Lilian in the frame just as she is, please,” she
+said. “I think I can manage it.”
+
+Lilian laughed a little at the idea of displaying herself to two hundred
+summer people looking as if she had come out of a subway accident, but
+she got into position like the good-natured girl she was, and Marie
+heard the little bell and began to make her impromptu explanation.
+
+“My friend, Betsy Bobbet, she’s a considerable kind of a curis person,”
+she said. “She’s sorter sentimental, an’ sometimes she’s too impulsive.
+Now, just before she had this daguerrotype took that I’m goin’ to show
+you, she was writin’ a pome to the Muse. This is how it went:
+
+ “Muse of Poetry
+ I would do much for thee
+ And I am full of tears
+ Because I have been writin’ so many years
+ And still unappreciated I be—
+
+“Betsy can write pomes like that any time,” explained Marie, and the
+audience giggled. “But I always tell Betsy,” Marie went on, “that
+walkin’ cross-lots ain’t any place to compose poetry to Muses. Well, she
+was walkin’ ’cross-lots in a brown study an’ a red-striped morey waist,
+speakin’ this out loud as she went. An’ she got to gesturin’ before she
+thought. An’ Farmer Peedick, him that married Jane Ann Allen, had jest
+let his best bull out in the field. An’ whether it was the red morey
+waist or the pome Betsy never did know, but she thinks it was the pome.
+She says she thinks the bull, not bein’ used to fust-class poetry, was
+excited. So he just up an’ ran after her. Well, she stopped recitin’,
+an’ ran, too. She jest got over the barb-wire fence in time. But I tell
+you, Betsy Bobbet is a wonderful woman! When she was safe she fixed that
+bull with her eye (it was a poet’s eye, she says to me), an’ recited the
+remainder of that ode to him. An’, ladies an’ gentlemen, you mayn’t
+believe it, but that bull was cowed! Yes, sir. He looked at her, Betsy
+says to me, as if he was sayin’ ‘I can’t stand that!’ an’ he ran. Yes,
+sir, he just ran!”
+
+She pulled aside the frame, and there smirked Betsy, very stiff and
+proper, with her bonnet and veil still a wreck and her red morey waist
+very much askew, and with a jagged rent down the front of her skirt. But
+her corkscrew curls twisted gracefully down either side of her face, her
+eyes were rolled up, and her mitted hand clutched a roll of paper. The
+audience howled.
+
+Marie closed the cover, bowed, and went on to the end of the pictures.
+
+The dances—the Indian dance, the minuet and the Russian dance—were
+beautiful and everyone applauded them, though they liked the Indian
+dance best. When they had finished some of the guests, to Louise’s great
+delight, demanded Camp Fire work, and bought it, too. After that the
+girls distributed coffee and sandwiches free, and then the Scouts took
+the audience, in relays, up the river to Wampoag.
+
+Before they went somebody said to Marie:
+
+“My dear, you were splendid. I’m going to give that entertainment for
+our church this winter, and write to you for help. But the most
+convincing and amusing picture of the lot was ‘Betsy Bobbet.’ Do tell me
+how you ever managed to make the thing so life-like?”
+
+But Marie merely looked modest.
+
+“We did the best we could,” she said. “It was quite simple, after all.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
+
+
+The next time Billy and Tom and Winona and Louise went off in Billy’s
+canoe for the day, they did not take Sandy. She happened to be making
+one of her brief visits home. They took, instead, a shot-gun apiece
+(that is, the boys did), a book apiece (that was for the girls), a
+bagful of socks from the Scouts’ mending-basket, and the usual amount of
+lunch.
+
+“We look like an Italian moving,” Tom observed critically, looking over
+their joint baggage. “Three fishing-rods, two baskets, two paddles, two
+guns, two sunbonnets. Whew! Louise, I’ll trade with you.”
+
+“It isn’t much at all,” said Louise indignantly. “I could carry my
+share, and yours, too, if I had to.”
+
+“You may,” he returned promptly. “Here’s my rifle. It won’t go off
+unless you hit the trigger by accident.”
+
+“Heap big chief!” said she, not offering to take it. “If I’d remembered
+how you hated carrying innocent little things like this around with
+you”—she pointed to the imposing pile of baskets, books and work in the
+bottom of the canoe—“I’d have telephoned for an expressman.”
+
+“Have you a telephone?” asked Tom. “When did you put it in, and what did
+you tie it to?”
+
+“No,” said Louise, “but we could have borrowed yours.”
+
+The Scouts had just finished installing a telephone from Wampoag to
+their headquarters. They had done nearly everything themselves in the
+way of connecting and so forth. They were very proud of it, and the Camp
+Fire girls were wildly envious, for all _they_ had was a system of
+baking-powder-box-and-wire telephone, worked out from the American
+Girl’s Handy Book by two young geniuses. It was all right as far as it
+went, but naturally it wouldn’t connect them with the telephones at
+home, or at Wampoag.
+
+“Why, of course you could,” consented Tom. “In fact, you can. Shall I
+paddle you that way?”
+
+“You needn’t mind,” she smiled. “Do look at Winona!”
+
+Winona had one of Marie’s books, and she was sitting on the bottom
+reading it, forgetful of the world.
+
+“What does this mean, Billy?” as she looked up suddenly. “Marie has a
+note here in pencil ‘But Raleigh was not exclusively Elizabethan!’ and
+two exclamation points after it.”
+
+“I don’t know,” Billy answered frankly. “I don’t see why Marie wants to
+worry about it.”
+
+“Raleigh was Gothic with Queen Anne chimneys,” interrupted Tom. “If you
+want information just come to me, little one. Here, Winnie, put down
+that book. It looks too full of useful information for a nice day like
+this. Remember, this is a pleasure exertion.”
+
+“All right,” and Winona laid down the book. “Only I do wish I knew as
+much as Marie does.”
+
+“And yet she never seems to study hard,” remarked Louise, to whom
+lessons were a painful grind. “I believe she’s like Billy Wiggs of the
+Cabbage-Patch—she ‘inherited her education from her paw!’”
+
+“She could!” put in Tom mournfully. “Professor Hunter has enough and too
+much. Just wait till you get under him, Louise!”
+
+“Oh, I can wait. I’m in no hurry at all. He’s awfully nice out of school
+hours, but——”
+
+“But why talk about school in vacation?” broke in Billy impatiently.
+“Isn’t it a lovely day?”
+
+The girls were curled on the bottom of the canoe, in the middle, and the
+boys were paddling at the ends. The morning breeze, cool and fresh,
+struck their faces, whipping Louise’s red hair about her face in little
+curls, and blowing Winona’s blue tie straight back over her shoulder in
+the sunshine.
+
+“This is something like living!” Tom declared, spatting the water with
+his paddle because he was so happy. “Pass me about three bananas, will
+you, whoever’s nearest the lunch? I feel hungry.”
+
+“You aren’t,” said Louise swiftly. “You just want those bananas because
+you know they’re there. Have some poetry instead. I brought a bookful.”
+
+“Poetry!” snorted Tom, as she hoped he would.
+
+“Cæsar! There’s a snipe!” cried Billy, dropping his paddle, reaching for
+a rifle, and taking hasty aim.
+
+“Never touched it,” mocked Tom as the report died, and the snipe
+appeared not to have done so at all.
+
+“How do you come to be carrying all these shooting-irons around?” asked
+Louise suspiciously. “I thought Mr. Gedney was pretty strict about it.”
+
+“Special permission,” explained Tom. “We’ve both always known how to
+shoot, and old Billy here is supposed to be the most careful thing that
+ever was.”
+
+“That wasn’t a snipe,” said Billy disgustedly. “That was a mosquito, a
+nice tame old Jersey mosquito. I always heard they grew to that size,
+but I never believed it before.”
+
+“Don’t cast any asparagus,” said Louise. “The advertisements say there
+are no mosquitoes here.”
+
+Billy eyed the now almost gone snipe.
+
+“Well, he may have been a plain fly,” he conceded.... “Let’s go on
+hunting. Perhaps we’ll find a real snipe next time.”
+
+They paddled along lazily for the next three-quarters of an hour,
+talking a little now and then. For the most part, though, they went on
+in silence, except when Louise giggled over “Fables in Slang,” which she
+had pulled out of her blouse-pocket, or when someone saw what might be
+game, or especially good scenery. They went, presently, down an arm of
+the river that was scarcely more than a creek, and stopped there till
+afternoon for rest and refreshment. It seemed a charming spot, and
+almost deserted. Only in the distance one red-roofed farmhouse could be
+seen, adding to the picturesqueness of the landscape.
+
+There were three small sandwiches left, and the girls, with the aid of
+paper and pencil, had just worked it out that each person present was
+entitled to three-quarters of a sandwich. They were trying to decide who
+should get the three quarters that were cut out of the three
+sandwiches—it was more a point of honor than necessity, for nobody much
+wanted any of them—when there was a subdued howl from Tom, who had been
+lying on his back in the canoe, gazing up at the sky.
+
+Six stately geese were flying in an arrow-shape across the creek, above
+the canoe. Both boys fired.
+
+“Oh, what a shame to kill them!” mourned Winona; but Tom said hurriedly
+again that they had special permission from Mr. Gedney, and sat up to
+see if he had done anything.
+
+“We each got one!” said Billy in a tense whisper. “They’ve dropped on
+the farther shore—there by the farmhouse!”
+
+The boys pushed the canoe up close and sprang out. They were dashing
+excitedly across country after their prey. Suddenly the waiting girls
+heard wild howls, and the tall, angry form of a wild-eyed man in
+overalls suddenly appeared from nowhere with a pitchfork.
+
+“Oh, he’s chasing the boys!” exclaimed Winona.
+
+“He certainly is!” seconded Louise, and began to giggle. “Listen to
+him!”
+
+It was really impossible to do anything else.
+
+“My geese! My prize geese!” shouted the overalled man, adding what he
+thought of Tom’s and Billy’s intelligence. “My pedigreed geese, you
+young idiots! I’ll teach you!”
+
+“You ought to have made ’em wear their pedigrees around their necks,”
+Tom shouted back at the man.
+
+“Oh, can they get away?” cried Louise. “Look!”
+
+And Winona, looking, saw that their way back to the canoe was cut off by
+a dog—the traditional farmer’s dog of the comic papers. He was
+stationed on the bank, eying the canoe and the girls in it in a very
+threatening way, and most plainly only waiting till the boys came back
+to bite them.
+
+Winona gave the canoe a determined push which landed it in midstream,
+and both girls began to paddle back by the way they had come, Winona
+because she had a plan, Louise because she was following Winona.
+
+“We’ll meet them around this point, on the other side,” she explained to
+Louise. “I saw a glimpse of water on the other side, and I think the
+point of land the farm is on is like a peninsula.”
+
+Sure enough, they discovered the criminals crouched romantically behind
+a clump of trees at the other side of the point of land. They were so
+well hidden that the girls would never have seen them if Billy had not
+stealthily waved a red handkerchief which he always carried for
+wigwagging. The girls paddled up as softly as they could, and the boys
+crawled out and waded to the canoe, crouching low. Nobody dared say
+anything till the canoe and its crew was well out and downstream again,
+far from farmers with dogs and pitchforks and no desire to listen to
+explanations.
+
+“And we never even got those geese!” mourned Tom.
+
+“Got those geese!” said Louise severely. “You oughtn’t to want to get
+pedigreed geese that belonged to a farmer—especially a farmer with that
+kind of a disposition.”
+
+“He hasn’t any business to let tame geese go prowling around the country
+that way,” growled Billy, “the first day a fellow has leave to go
+shooting food for the Scouts at home! How were we to know they had a
+coat-of-arms and a family tree? They ought to have been kept at home, in
+their ancestral barnyard.”
+
+“And we never even got the confounded things!” lamented Tom again. “And
+we might just as well have, too, because we’ll have to go up and pay for
+them, of course, when Mr. Overalls has calmed down enough not to bite us
+on sight. They may be worth a thousand dollars apiece, for all we know.
+We were the pedigreed geese, I think!”
+
+“Never mind,” said Louise soothingly, “be glad Father Goose didn’t get
+you, instead of sorry you didn’t get his pets. They probably would have
+been tough, anyway.”
+
+“And we can fish,” suggested Winona. “Nobody’s going to jump out of the
+river and tell us that these are his pedigreed perch.”
+
+“The game-warden may, if the river’s been stocked lately,” said Billy.
+
+“It hasn’t,” asserted Tom. “Don’t you remember? We found out all about
+that before any of us came up here last year. All these fish are old
+enough to die. Pass me the bait, please, Winnie.”
+
+“Here you are,” said Winona.
+
+She baited a line for herself, dropped it in, and everyone else did the
+same thing. After that nobody said anything for quite a little while,
+unless an occasional “Confound those geese!” from Tom could count as
+conversation.
+
+“Got something!” announced Louise at length, jerking in her line.
+
+“What is it?” asked Tom with interest.
+
+“Feels like a perch—or a trout,” said Louise pulling in her line
+rapidly.
+
+“It doesn’t _look_ like one,” said Winona.
+
+“M’m, not exactly,” said her brother. “You ought to be interested in it,
+though, Win—it’s a catfish.”
+
+“You can eat catfish,” said Louise, quite calmly. “In fact, I believe
+they’re considered very good eating. I don’t know but I’d rather have
+them than trout.”
+
+“Especially if you can’t get the trout,” added Tom.
+
+“If you can’t get what you want, you must want what you can get.” So she
+baited her line again.
+
+“Well, what is it this time?” inquired Tom next time she pulled her line
+in. The rest had had fair luck.
+
+“Probably another pussy-fish,” said Louise resignedly. But this time it
+was a real perch, and after that it was a sunfish, and then two more
+catfish. And presently there was enough for supper, and by the time they
+got back they knew it would be supper-getting time. Winona was cooking
+supper that week. So they put the fish in the empty lunch-basket and
+paddled for home. Louise took Billy’s paddle, and Billy trolled all the
+way. He didn’t get anything, but he enjoyed himself.
+
+“Who’s that on the dock?” asked Tom as they neared the Camp Karonya
+landing. “Are they waiting for us?”
+
+“Tom’s afraid the farmer with the ducks has come around the other way,”
+said Louise. “No, Tommy, my dear, that’s only Mr. Sloane, who is a sort
+of unofficial uncle to Camp Karonya. We’re supposed to have rented that
+dock from him, but he comes there and fishes just as much as if we
+hadn’t.”
+
+“Sort of a fourth sub-mascot?” said Billy. “Yes, I remember—the old man
+who helped you out about the scows when you were building the float.”
+
+“He’s the one,” said Winona. “He’s fishing.”
+
+“And there’s Puppums, too,” said Louise. “Oh, the dear old doggie! He’s
+come down to the dock to wait for you, Winnie!”
+
+“So he has,” agreed Winona. “I wonder if he’s been there long.”
+
+Puppums liked canoeing very much, and when he thought Winona ought to
+have taken him and hadn’t, he would go down to the dock, trailing her by
+scent, and sit there hours and hours—merely for the sake of looking
+reproachfully at her when she did get in, it was thought. Winona always
+hugged him, and apologized, and took him for a row if possible, and he
+knew it.
+
+When he caught sight of the canoe (like most dogs, he was short-sighted)
+he began to bark excitedly and run up and down the dock, and jump wildly
+about. He did everything but swim out to the canoe. Puppums hated
+water—which gave rise to a theory that there was a little pug in his
+ancestry.
+
+Mr. Sloane, too, rose as the canoe came near the landing-place. He did
+not jump up and down, because he had not been waiting for the canoeing
+party. He had evidently taken their return as a signal that it was time
+he went home himself, for he was collecting his rod and bait-can, and
+his coat, and the other things he had strewn about the dock. Puppums
+still careered wildly around and around. As Winona stepped ashore his
+excitement grew so intense that he ran full tilt into Mr. Sloane, who
+was bending over picking something up, and nearly knocked him over.
+
+“W-u-ugh!” said Mr. Sloane, and began to hunt frantically about the
+dock.
+
+And as the boys and girls gained the shore it became painfully evident
+that the little dog had jarred out the old gentleman’s false teeth.
+
+Mr. Sloane had never made any secret of the fact that he wore “bought
+teeth”—indeed, he had told Winona and Adelaide, who were his especial
+favorites, just where he got them and how much they cost, and where
+others like them could be gotten. But still, when your friend’s teeth
+are knocked out all at once by your family dog, well, you _do_ feel a
+little embarrassment. With one accord the four looked in the other
+direction, as Mr. Sloane, with a “Drat that pup!” continued to hunt for
+his teeth. The boys fussed with the canoe, and Winona and Louise began
+to hunt for a nonexistent something in the box they used for a locker.
+
+But Puppums was going to be polite at all costs. He trotted over, his
+tail wagging wildly at the prospect of being able to do something for
+his mistress, picked up the teeth, and carried them proudly to Winona!
+
+“Oh, Puppums—you _naughty_ dog!” she said, trying to take the teeth
+away from him as unostentatiously as possible.
+
+But Puppums, realizing from her voice that something was wrong, looked
+up at her depreciatingly, wagged his tail again, suddenly put his tail
+between his legs and started for the camp!
+
+It was no use to try to ignore things any longer.
+
+“Oh, Mr. Sloane,” Winona cried. “I’m so sorry! He’s a bad dog. I’ll go
+straight after him and get them.”
+
+“Now, never mind,” said Mr. Sloane, kindly if rather indistinctly. He
+began to laugh. “That dog o’ yours certainly is a rip-snorter!” he said.
+“Knock a man down an’ carry off his teeth!”
+
+By this time the boys had stopped trying not to laugh, and were howling
+in unison in the background. And little Frances, Adelaide’s sister, came
+up with a nice birch-bark box. She handed it to Mr. Sloane, dropped a
+pretty courtesy, and ran. And so did the others. The only unembarrassed
+members of the party were Puppums, who wasn’t there, to be Irish, and
+Mr. Sloane himself.
+
+“Talk about banner days!” sighed Louise. “I was the only one of us that
+didn’t get into trouble——”
+
+“Louise!” called somebody, from outside the tent where Louise was
+washing and getting ready for supper. “Did you know that you left the
+store-shed door open this morning when you came in for supplies, and
+somebody’s carried off every bit of bacon!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
+
+
+And in the opulent days which followed the winning of the carnival
+prizes, and the selling of lovely amounts of Camp Fire goods, Camp
+Karonya decided that it ought to own a phonograph. The treasury, which
+was a suitcase under Helen’s bed, had money in it, and the girls badly
+needed something to dance by. To be sure, the camp boasted a mandolin,
+two guitars, a mouth-organ and a banjo, to say nothing of Mrs. Bryan’s
+Iroquois drum. But all these had to be worked by hand, and the
+orchestra, after performing for several long evenings while their
+friends practised folk-dances with abandon, struck.
+
+“We want to get a chance at the folk-dances, too,” they remonstrated,
+very reasonably. Indeed, Louise got up and made a moving speech,
+alluding to her pressing need of folk-dances, and her slender chance of
+being able to do them while she played her instrument.
+
+“Here I am,” she said pathetically, “twice as plump as anybody else in
+camp. I need folk-dances more than anybody here does. And I’ve spent
+this whole blessed evening plunking a banjo while other people got thin,
+people that were thin already! It may be good for my moral character,
+but, girls”—Louise’s voice dropped tragically—“it’s _ruining_ yours!”
+
+They all agreed that something should be done.
+
+Mrs. Bryan was entirely willing to go on pounding her Indian drum
+indefinitely, but the girls did not think it would be good for their
+moral characters to let her, either. So they held a business meeting on
+the spot, which happened to be the large level place they used for
+dancing ground; and decided to buy a phonograph.
+
+“I think we have catalogues of them at home,” said Dorothy Gray. “Shall
+I write and have them sent on?”
+
+The girls considered that for awhile, but they finally decided not to.
+Everyone wanted a voice in choosing the phonograph, or at least in
+deciding on what kind of a phonograph they were to have.
+
+“But we don’t want to pay the full price for it,” said Helen wisely.
+“What we ought to do is to advertise in the _Press_ in the village. It’s
+the country paper. Look at the market Win created for kittens——”
+
+But here Winona sprang for her, and they rolled over on the leaves, and
+the meeting ended in a frolic.
+
+However, they all liked Helen’s idea, and two Blue Birds were sent off
+to the _Press_ with an advertisement for a second-hand phonograph or
+victrola in good condition. Next day two other Blue Birds went after the
+answers. There were three.
+
+One offered a fine music-box in good condition, which had never been
+used since the owner’s wife died twenty years ago. He lived on the
+Northtown Pike (which nobody present had ever heard of), about seventeen
+miles from the village. The music-box played six tunes and was an
+heirloom, having belonged to his mother, but the farmer on the Northtown
+Pike would part with it for twenty-five dollars for he wanted another
+Holstein cow and this would pay for part of her.
+
+“Horrid old thing!” said Winona when Marie was done reading the answers
+aloud. “If it’s an heirloom he hasn’t any business parting with it to
+buy a section of any kind of cow—or even a whole one.”
+
+“Well, Marie, go on to the next,” said Mrs. Bryan. But the next was even
+more hopeless. What this man had was, from his description, a very cheap
+phonograph which was almost as old as the farmer’s music-box; but he,
+too, thought he would like to have twenty-five dollars for it.
+
+“He doubtless wants to buy a section of cow, too,” suggested Mrs. Bryan.
+
+“Maybe they’re buying her together,” said Louise brilliantly; and Marie
+read the last letter. This was the only one at all promising. The
+writer, who was a woman with a good handwriting and correct spelling,
+said that she had a two-year-old victrola in good condition, and that
+she would gladly sell it for twenty-five dollars, because she was going
+to be given a new one.
+
+“That sounds better,” said Mrs. Bryan. “I would advise a committee of
+you to go and look it over.”
+
+“But how badly they all want twenty-five dollars!” groaned Marie. “Do
+you notice it? They all ask for exactly the same amount.”
+
+“Probably buying the cow on shares,” repeated Louise.
+
+“I vote we make Louise one of the committee to see the two-year-old
+victrola,” said Winona. “She has business instinct, and the rest of us
+haven’t such a lot.”
+
+“What’s more to the point, I also have a victrola at home, or Dad has,”
+said Louise, “and I know what it ought to be like to be good.”
+
+So it was moved and seconded that Louise, Winona and Helen be appointed
+a committee of three to investigate the victrola.
+
+As early as they could in the afternoon after they had received their
+replies they started out. It was a gorgeous day, not too warm for
+comfort, and they chased each other about the road as if they were
+kittens, instead of responsible Camp Fire Girls out on a very
+business-like errand. After they had gone about a mile, which led them
+nearly to the village, it occurred to some brilliant person that it
+might be a good plan to ask somebody how to get to the address of the
+woman with the two-year-old victrola. It was The Willows, Lowlane, near
+Gray’s Road, and so far as the girls knew that might have been nearly
+anywhere. So they did ask at the post-office, where they had quite made
+friends with the old postmaster.
+
+“It’s three miles down the pike,” said he. “Strike off on the left to
+Gray’s Road—you’ll see a signpost, I guess—and then turn down the
+first little lane you come to. They call it Lowlane now, the folks that
+own the house, but it was never anything but Low’s Lane till they came
+there.”
+
+“The first little lane we come to?” repeated Winona.
+
+The postmaster looked thoughtful. “Now, I don’t want to be too sure,” he
+said. “The first, or maybe the second. Elmer, do you recollect whether
+Low’s Lane is the first or second turning on the Gray’s Road way?”
+
+“Second,” said Elmer the clerk readily.
+
+“There now!” said the postmaster. “I might a’ told you wrong. I
+certainly had it fixed in my mind that it was the first.”
+
+“Thank you,” said the girls. “It won’t be hard to find.”
+
+It seemed, indeed, plain enough sailing, and the girls went on. The road
+was bordered with trees, and there were flowers they wanted to pick, and
+occasionally rabbits for Puppums to chase. He was not a swift enough
+runner to ever catch any of the rabbits he ran after, and the rabbits
+did not seem to mind, so Winona let him go on chasing.
+
+“We’ve gone quite three miles, I know,” said Louise dismally when they
+had been walking some time. “And there’s no Lowlane—not even any Gray’s
+Road.” Louise had trained a good deal since she had been in camp, but
+she still felt long walks more than the other two did, who were slim. “I
+‘don’t believe there’s no sich animal’ as Mrs. Martin, or a victrola.
+There aren’t any victrolas or any lanes, high or low, on earth.
+Woof—I’m tired!”
+
+She fanned herself with her handkerchief, and the dog tried to jump at
+it, under the impression that she was playing a game with him.
+
+“It does seem a long way,” said Helen sympathetically, “but there is a
+Gray’s Road, for I’m sure I see a signpost a little ahead of us.”
+
+“It’s probably one of those automobile directions that says ‘Three miles
+back to the village—seventeen miles forward to Jonesville. Use Smith’s
+Lubricating Oil and Robinson Tires!’” and Louise shrugged her shoulders.
+
+Nevertheless, when they came up to the signpost, although it did advise
+automobiles about several kinds of supplies they ought to have, it also
+said that this was Gray’s Road. They turned as they had been told, and
+went down it, in search of their second landmark, Low’s Lane. This,
+unfortunately, wasn’t in sight. “Let’s ask,” said Winona as they passed
+a little old house by the side of the road, and steered the others up
+the path that led to the porch. It was a ramshackle, unpainted
+packing-box of a place, with an old, old lady, heavily shawled, curled
+up in a rocker, for inhabitant. Helen was pushed forward to speak to
+her. “Can you tell us if we are near Low’s Lane?” she asked, politely.
+
+“Hey?” said the old lady. “I’m a little deaf.”
+
+Helen said it over again as loudly as she could.
+
+“Rain?” said the old lady. “No, no—it ain’t goin’ to rain!”
+
+“Low’s Lane!” screamed Helen.
+
+“What?” said the old lady.
+
+“Ask her about the victrola,” suggested Winona. “Sometimes deaf people
+can hear one word when they can’t another. Perhaps she’d know by that
+where we wanted to go.”
+
+“We want a place where they’re selling a victrola!” shouted Helen.
+
+This time the old lady seemed to hear.
+
+“Victrola, hey? You go right on a piece till you turn to your left. It’s
+the first house.”
+
+“Thank you,” yelled Helen.
+
+They were offered, and took, drinks of water, and went on again.
+
+“I think one of you might have asked some of the questions,” said Helen
+indignantly.
+
+“I’ll ask one now!” defied Louise. “Far be it from me not to do my
+duty.” She turned and ran back to where the old dame still rocked on her
+porch.
+
+“Is it a good victrola?” she shouted.
+
+The old lady shook her head.
+
+“I wouldn’t go so far’s to say _that_,” she answered. “Smart,
+though—awful smart and clever!”
+
+Louise ran back to the others without asking any more questions.
+
+“She says the talking machine isn’t good, but awful smart and clever,”
+she panted. “What _do_ you suppose she means?”
+
+“I can’t imagine,” said Helen. “Anyway, we know how to get there.”
+
+The first lane, sure enough, led to a house, but there seemed to be no
+willows anywhere about it. Still houses often have names that have
+nothing to do with the facts, so the girls pressed on. The place had a
+vaguely familiar look to Winona and Louise.
+
+“I’m sure I’ve come here before, by another way,” said Winona.
+
+“I haven’t,” said Helen. “You must have come by water. I think the
+river’s somewhere back of us. If you ask me, I think one way’s enough to
+come.”
+
+They lined up before the door and rang. But the bell, they discovered
+finally, was badly out of order. A “please knock” sign was blowing about
+the porch, they discovered still a little later. They knocked
+vigorously, and the door was finally unfastened by a draggled little
+girl of about eleven.
+
+“Why—why, how do you do, Vicky!” said Louise in surprise. “Why, of
+course, Helen, this is Sandy’s house. Only this isn’t the same door, is
+it, that we came in by last time, Vicky?”
+
+Vicky, who was as tousled as usual, shook her head.
+
+“What’s the matter?” she asked stolidly. “Has Sandy been naughty?”
+
+“No, indeed,” said Louise, “she’s as good as gold. Can’t we come in?”
+for Vicky didn’t seem to feel specially hospitable—she was holding the
+door on a crack, and was not her usual sunny self. “Sandy’s around here
+somewhere—at least she’s not in camp.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” she said, and opened it wider. The girls filed in and sat
+down in the square hall, which was as littered as usual with clothes and
+paper bags and everything else that places are usually littered with.
+
+“Look at that hole!” whispered Louise, forgetting her politeness as
+Vicky stood near them, not intending, evidently, to sit down and
+entertain them if she could help it. “There’s more hole than stocking!”
+
+It was quite true, but unfortunately Vicky had sharp ears.
+
+“They’re my own stockings,” she said crossly, “and I like ’em with holes
+in.”
+
+“Oh, all right!” said Louise dryly. “Only they aren’t usually worn that
+way.”
+
+“Can we speak to your uncle?” interposed Helen, for the air was becoming
+stormy.
+
+“Isn’t home,” announced Vicky. “He had a cross fit and went out
+walking.”
+
+“Is anybody home?” asked Winona. “We came on business.”
+
+“You can do it with me, whatever it is,” said Vicky, sitting down with
+the torn-stockinged leg under her.
+
+Helen plunged straight into the business at hand.
+
+“The old lady down the road said that this was the house where they had
+a victrola——” she started to say—and stopped in dismay over the
+effect of her words; Vicky flew into a temper and began to cry.
+
+“I want you to go away from here—coming to make fun of me!” she sobbed,
+stamping her foot at them. Before they could answer she ran out of the
+room, leaving them staring at each other in surprise.
+
+“Well, what on earth?” Winona slowly ejaculated.
+
+“Goodness only knows,” said Louise. “Anyway, I seem to feel that she
+doesn’t want to sell it to us.”
+
+“Well, no,” assented Helen, and the three of them thoughtfully and
+slowly let themselves out at the door they had come in by.
+
+They had gone only a little way back when they heard flying feet behind
+them.
+
+“Wait a minute,” panted Vicky, catching up to them. “I
+guess—perhaps—I’d better explain. I’m sorry I got mad. But—but my
+_name’s_ Victrola!” She flushed painfully. Evidently it was hard for her
+to tell. “I thought you were just making fun of me, but I thought about
+it, and I guess you weren’t. I know the place you want—it’s a little
+further, up the next lane.”
+
+She started to run back, but Winona caught her hand and held her.
+
+“Why, you poor dear!” she said. “I don’t see why you mind. It’s a very
+pretty name. But we weren’t trying to make fun of you. We really want to
+buy a phonograph for the camp.”
+
+“They laugh at me—everybody does,” faltered Vicky. “They were this
+morning—the boys down by the landing. That’s why I was so cross. They
+pretend to wind me up, and—and I _hate_ it!”
+
+“So would I,” comforted Louise. “But you mustn’t mind, Vicky. All my
+life the boys have called me ‘Carrots,’ and ‘Reddy,’ and things like
+that. There’s no use caring. Look here, honey, I’ll tell you what to do.
+See if you haven’t got a middle name you can use, or even one you ought
+to have had. Ask your uncle if there wasn’t a middle name somebody
+almost gave you once, and if there was use it.”
+
+“I wonder if I could!” said Vicky, brightening. She reached down and
+pulled up one of her stockings, as if the prospect of a better name made
+her want to be tidy.
+
+“Anyhow it’s a pretty name,” said Louise cheerfully. “I wouldn’t worry
+about it.”
+
+“Yes, you would,” said Vicky, as she turned back. “There down this
+lane’s the place you can get—it.”
+
+It was Louise’s turn to detain her this time.
+
+“Vicky! Vicky!” she called. “Won’t you and Sandy come down to Camp
+Karonya and stay overnight, to-morrow night? We’re going to do some
+stunts—just to celebrate. The Scouts are coming over, and one or two of
+our pet particular friends.”
+
+“I don’t know the way,” said Vicky.
+
+“Sandy does,” said Louise and Winona together.
+
+“Thank you,” said Vicky sedately. “We’ll come. And—please don’t tell
+the others my name. I’ll have the real one thought out by that time.”
+
+“Of course we won’t,” they promised.
+
+“It _was_ mean to name her that,” Helen declared as they went down the
+lane.
+
+“Maybe it was before there were machine victrolas, and her mother just
+thought it was pretty,” suggested Louise. “The other children have fancy
+names, too; Alexandra and Lance. Remember Vicky told us there was a boy
+named Lancelot, the day we went up?”
+
+“To return your orphan?” said Winona. “Oh, yes—we all remember. Never
+mind, Ishkoodah dear, perhaps next time you’ll find a real one.”
+
+“Wouldn’t it be fine if Camp Karonya _could_ look after some little
+girl—one of the Children’s Aid children, for instance?” said Helen
+thoughtfully.
+
+“It would take a good deal of money,” spoke practical Louise, “if we
+didn’t one of us have it in the family.”
+
+“Not such a lot,” said Winona. “Oh, it would be lovely! A nice little
+orphan with blue eyes and curly hair, and we’d name her ourselves——”
+
+“We’d call her Gramophone!” suggested Louise; and, tired as they were,
+they all began to laugh. But by this time they were nearly at the house
+the machine’s namesake had directed them to, and it was the right one.
+
+The owner had a fairly good victrola and six double-faced records, and
+she finally consented to let it go for twenty dollars. The girls paid
+down the money on the spot, and constructed a carrier for it out of two
+pieces of board which the machine’s owner threw in.
+
+There were no adventures whatever connected with this end of the
+happening. Helen took the front end and Louise the back, and Winona
+steadied it. Then they set it down, after they had walked awhile, and
+changed places. It seemed rather a long way home, and they were
+exceedingly glad when they reached camp—that was all. Their sympathetic
+comrades attended to their routine duties for them, and all the
+adventurers had to do was to lie on the grass and tell about their
+travels—everything, that is, but Victrola’s name and her grief over it.
+
+After supper the whole camp assembled to enjoy the machine, and danced
+to everything on its disc, even the sextette from Lucia, given as a
+vocal selection. But Louise did not do any folk-dances that night. She
+was so tired that she curled up on a soft spot and fed the machine till
+it was time to go to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
+
+
+“Did you dye that old petticoat and underwaist pink?” demanded Winona,
+sticking her head into Marie’s tent.
+
+“Yes, I did,” said Marie promptly, “and it’s starched, and ironed with
+the charcoal-iron.”
+
+“And did Adelaide borrow her brother’s bathrobe for Louise?”
+
+“No, she didn’t, but I did—at least, I sent Frances over for it,” said
+Marie. “It’s here, and safe.”
+
+“And did Louise sew the hood on it?”
+
+“She did,” said Marie resignedly. “Every single property for ‘Gentle
+Alice Brown’ and the ‘Oysterman’ is in a mound in the dressing-tent. Go
+look, for goodness’ sake, or you’ll have nervous prostration.”
+
+Winona, property-woman and general manager of the performance, pulled
+back her head with a sigh of relief, and went to find the girl who had
+promised to straighten out the fishing-tackle necessary to the Ballad of
+the Oysterman—for they were to present that classic of Holmes’s in a
+very few hours.
+
+The performance was to be at eight, and it was a strictly complimentary
+one. The Scouts were invited, and various special friends from Wampoag,
+most of them made over dealings in Camp merchandise. A committee had
+been appointed to see about illuminations, and another to attend to the
+refreshments. They were amassing honor beads by doing it. Marie’s Blue
+Birds were busy everywhere. Camp Karonya was dazzlingly clean, and
+everyone was getting out the one dress-up frock she had brought along,
+and giving it attention. There was to be an exhibit, also, as the
+flaring posters Helen had prepared said, of “potteries, embroideries,
+jellies, hand-carvings, pickles and other objects.” It had been going to
+be “other objects of art,” but Winona pointed out that jellies and
+pickles _weren’t_, no matter what the rest might be. So the poster
+stopped abruptly at “objects,” and the space was filled up by a
+life-like portrait of a jelly-glass.
+
+Camp Karonya took a very brief meal of bread and milk and cookies, and
+the dish-washers hurried through their tasks. For eight o’clock has a
+way of coming long before you expect it. About seven-thirty the paddles
+and oars and motor-boats of the audience began to be heard, and the
+reception committee scurried down to the dock to meet their guests.
+First came their friends the Scouts from down the river, about thirty
+strong. After them, in little groups, came the summer people, including
+Billy’s Aunt Lydia, who never missed a Camp Fire function if she could
+help it.
+
+The audience was seated, as usual, on planks laid from box to box and
+nailed. They did not have to sit there long. After a great deal of
+giggling and rustling behind the big green curtain that had been made of
+sacks, pieced together and dyed, Winona came out to announce the
+beginning of the entertainment.
+
+“Ladies and gentlemen,” she commenced, “to-night we are going to have,
+beside several musical selections, some moving pictures with explanatory
+recitations—some _very_ moving pictures. After the opening song we will
+have the first one, ‘Gentle Alice Brown.’”
+
+The audience applauded, and then the girls sang a Camp Fire song in
+chorus. After that Louise and Edith played a conscientious
+mandolin-banjo duet. Then Marie, who was the reader of the evening, came
+out with a copy of Gilbert’s Bab Ballads and very slowly began to read
+“Gentle Alice Brown.”
+
+At the first line the curtain was pulled back, revealing Winona alone
+against a sheet background. She was in an 1860 costume made from an old,
+full petticoat and tight underwaist, dyed pink, and helped out with
+small puffed sleeves and a sash. Her curls were bound with a wreath of
+artificial roses from the ten-cent store, slightly over one ear. She sat
+on a chair with her head on her hand, and she was looking mournfully
+over the chair-back. Marie began,
+
+ It was a robber’s daughter, and her name was Alice Brown,
+ Her father was the terror of a small Italian town;
+ Her mother was a foolish, weak, but amiable old thing,
+ But it isn’t of her parents that I’m going for to sing.
+
+As Marie went on, across the stage galloped ferociously Helen, who had
+been given the role of Robber Brown because she was one of the tallest
+of the girls. A red flannel shirt of Tom Merriam’s, topped by a fishing
+hat and black mustachio, were most convincing. Her short kilt, which
+gave her rather the look of a Greek than an Italian bandit, was met by a
+pair of fishing-boots, and she wore three carving-knives and a cartridge
+belt. She strode ferociously across the stage, looking neither to right
+nor left.
+
+Edith Hillis, trotting meekly behind her as Mrs. Brown, wore a baggy old
+long skirt, a bandanna tied around her waist, one around her neck and
+another on her head. She only had one carving-knife. But the lovely
+Alice did not deign to look at her parents. She gazed sadly out over the
+audience, while Marie went on to tell how—
+
+ As Alice was sitting at her window-sill one day
+ A beautiful young gentleman he chanced to pass that way,
+ A sorter at the Custom-house, it was his daily road—
+ (The Custom-house was fifteen minutes walk from her abode).
+
+At this point the hero crossed the stage dashingly, with a cane under
+his arm. It was Adelaide, in a plaid cap, a waxed mustache, and a very
+precise duster which reached her heels. A pipe (she said afterwards it
+had a dreadful taste) stuck from one corner of her mouth.
+
+Gentle Alice sighed deeply, and so did her lover, who became aware of
+her presence with a tragic start. He halted, waved to her, sighed with
+his hand on his heart, and looked altogether very lovelorn. Gentle Alice
+did not notice him at first, but she gradually seemed to yield, and
+finally languished softly at him—and winked. So did he. Then he kissed
+his hands at her and went off reluctantly to work, while Alice wiped
+away her tears with a large bandanna such as her parents had worn. (They
+were the historic bandannas which had served Winona and Louise so well
+on their peddling trip.)
+
+The ballad went on to relate how presently Alice’s conscience bothered
+her. So she asked the Brown’s family confessor about it,
+
+ The priest by whom their little crimes were carefully assessed.
+
+Here Louise appeared, in the brown bathrobe, with its hood pulled up
+over her head, and sandals on. Alice threw herself at his feet, and
+waved her hands in grief.
+
+ “Oh, father,” Gentle Alice said, “’Twould grieve you, would it not,
+ To find that I have been a most disreputable lot?”
+
+Louise assumed a benign expression and listened while Alice confessed
+her sins. Marie stopped, while Winona herself spoke:
+
+ I assisted dear mamma in cutting up a little lad,
+ I helped papa to steal a little kiddy from its dad—
+ I planned a little burglary and forged a little check
+ And slew a little baby for the coral on its neck!
+
+But Father Brown seemed inclined to be forgiving, and with a few
+remarks, ended,
+
+ We mustn’t be too hard upon these little girlish tricks—
+ Let’s see—five crimes at half a crown—exactly twelve and six.
+
+Alice thanked him in a few grateful couplets, and pulled out another
+bandanna with money tied up in it from which she paid him. The ballad
+went on to relate how Alice tremblingly confessed her last sin, about
+the beautiful gentleman, who passed every day:
+
+ I blush to say, I’ve winked at him—and he has winked at me!
+
+This shocked Father Paul for, as he explained,
+
+ If you should marry anyone respectable at all,
+ Why, you’d reform, and then what would become of Father Paul?
+
+So he pulled up his cowl, the ballad went on to state—and Louise went
+on to act—and trotted off to tell the news to Robber Brown.
+
+They came on together, while the Father repeated the news, and stood
+consulting in the corner, while Alice, from her actions, seemed to be
+thinking still of the sorter.
+
+Robber Brown took it quite calmly. He decided to be quite kind to Alice
+about it—merely to
+
+ Nab that gay young sorter, terrify him into fits,
+ And get his wife to chop him into little bits.
+
+He argued that Alice, after that, would not love him any more. So, while
+Father Paul exited, Robber Brown lay stealthily in wait, assisted by his
+wife. Presently along came the gay young sorter again, waving his hand
+jauntily to Alice. Robber Brown sprang out, crossed directly in front of
+the sorter, who appeared not to see him at all, and proceeded to track
+him up and down the stage two or three times, with Mrs. Brown trailing
+in the rear. After the three had gone up and down twice (Alice, also,
+oblivious to her parents’ presence, and throwing kisses to the sorter)
+Robber Brown finally “took a life-preserver” in the shape of a
+stout-looking stick, and pretended to fell the gay young sorter.
+Immediately Mrs. Brown bounded up with a piece of chalk, and proceeded
+to mark him off in pieces for dissection, for, as Robber Brown remarked:
+
+ I have studied human nature and I know a thing or two—
+ Though a girl may fondly love a living chap, as many do,
+ Yet a feeling of disgust upon her senses there will fall
+ When she looks upon her lover chopped particularly small!
+
+Indeed, this terrifying sight as far as it went, seemed to have the
+desired effect on Alice. To be sure, she fell in a dead faint, and
+Father Paul had to catch her, while Mr. and Mrs. Brown, and two more
+bandits (in bandannas) carried off the late sorter; but immediately
+afterward a young bandit, very much like Robber Brown except that he was
+smaller, came in and was patted with obvious admiration by Mr. and Mrs.
+Brown, who led him up to Alice. She recovered slowly, sat up, and
+presently accepted his attentions with pleasure. Father Paul gave them
+his blessing, while Marie said:
+
+ And gentle little Alice grew more settled in her mind,
+ She never more was guilty of a weakness of that kind,
+ Until at length good Robber Brown bestowed her little hand
+ On a promising young robber, the lieutenant of his band!
+
+After that the curtain was drawn again, while the girls dressed for
+Holmes’s “It Was a Gay Young Oysterman.” This, while it was good, was
+not the hit with the audience that “Gentle Alice Brown” had been. When
+it was finished, and the oysterman and his bride were seen “keeping a
+shop for mermaids down below,” the girls took down the curtain, and
+while more music was played the performers hurried into their pretty
+dresses. Then they came out, and strolled about the camp with the
+audience.
+
+“Where are Vicky and Sandy?” Winona remembered to ask Helen, as they met
+after the curtain was down. “Did they come?”
+
+“I think so,” said Helen, rubbing hard at her cork mustache. “Adelaide,
+did you see Sandy anywhere?”
+
+Adelaide, who was just braiding her hair, turned.
+
+“Yes, I did,” she said. “She’s here somewhere, with another little girl.
+I saw them not long ago.”
+
+Winona went in search of them, for when you ask a guest to an
+entertainment it’s only polite to hunt her up. It was not hard to find
+the sisters. They were sitting with Louise, eating home-made ice-cream.
+
+Winona sat down by them.
+
+“I’m awfully glad you came, Vicky.”
+
+“So’m I, too,” said Vicky. She seemed rather shy here in the camp, but
+she looked happy. “I’m having a nice time.”
+
+“I’m glad,” said Winona. “Did you like the moving pictures?”
+
+“Yes,” said Vicky, “they were awfully funny. And—oh, Winona, I’ve
+picked out a name.”
+
+“What is it?” asked Winona.
+
+“Janet. Of course people can call me Vicky still, if they want to, but
+my real name will be Janet. I asked uncle, the way you said, and he said
+I did have a middle name, Janet, after my grandmother.”
+
+“Oh, that’s splendid!” said Winona. “I’m named after my grandmother,
+too.”
+
+“That makes us a sort of relation, doesn’t it?” asked Vicky.
+
+“Why, I hope it does,” was the hearty reply.
+
+“And there’s something I wanted to ask you about,” said Vicky—now
+Janet—shyly. “Alone, I mean.”
+
+“Come over here with me, and we’ll walk up and down and talk about it,”
+invited Winona.
+
+Vicky took her hand, and they strolled off down one of the wood-paths.
+
+“I’d rather not ask Louise,” explained Vicky, “because—well, she laughs
+so about everything. She might laugh at me. And that other girl is sort
+of grown-up talking. But—well, it’s—I’d like to be like the rest of
+the people—other little girls, you know—and it’s dreadfully hard when
+you haven’t any father or mother, and your uncle’s an artist with a
+temp’rament. Sometimes he gets us governesses, and they say we’re queer,
+and sometimes we just do as we please. But—well, there isn’t anybody to
+show us things.”
+
+She looked at Winona wistfully, as if she thought she could show her how
+to be just like other children all at once.
+
+“Why do people always come to me to show them how?” wondered Winona to
+herself. “I don’t know any more about how to do things than the other
+girls.”
+
+She did not realize that it was her sunniness and sympathy—her
+Ray-of-Lightness, as Louise called it—together with a certain
+straightforward common sense, that made girls who wanted help come to
+her. They could be sure that she would not laugh at them, or tell anyone
+else what they had said, and they were sure of advice that had
+brightness and sense.
+
+“What sort of things do you want me to tell you?” asked Winona. “I’d
+love to help you, but some of the others know lots more about things
+than I do.”
+
+“It’s you I want to ask,” said Vicky decidedly. “It’s my clothes, to
+begin with. Are they right?”
+
+Winona stopped and looked Vicky over. They were out in the open by now,
+and it was bright moonlight, so she could see plainly what the little
+girl had on. It was a blue taffeta, very stiff and rustling, trimmed
+with plaid taffeta and black buttons. By its looks it had been bought
+ready-made, for it had a sort of gaudy smartness. It was of good
+material, but somehow, it was cheap-looking. Also by its looks,
+bread-and-butter had been eaten on or near it.
+
+“You mean your dress?”
+
+“Yes,” said Vicky. “It isn’t right, is it? But I don’t know what to do
+about it. I bought it myself.”
+
+“You mean your uncle gives you the money, and you go and buy your own
+things?” asked Winona.
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Vicky. “But the ones the governesses used to get weren’t
+much better. There was one governess who always picked out bright green.
+I hate green, anyway. And sometimes the cook used to. She would yet if
+I’d let her. But I won’t. I don’t think it’s any of her business.”
+
+“Well——” Winona hesitated.
+
+“Well, what had I better do?” demanded Vicky.
+
+“I don’t know!” said Winona frankly. “But I do know that that silk dress
+is wrong. Why don’t you get summer dresses, chambrays and ginghams and
+organdies?”
+
+“I don’t know,” said Vicky. “I never thought about it. Silk is better,
+isn’t it?”
+
+“I don’t think so,” said Winona. “It doesn’t wash. You see this dress
+isn’t very clean.”
+
+“No,” acknowledged Vicky. “Does being clean count such a lot?”
+
+“Goodness!” Words failed Winona. “I tell you,” she said finally. “Why
+don’t you come over here and join the Blue Birds, Vicky? Marie could
+tell you a lot of things and it would be the quickest way to learn a lot
+about being like other people, if that is what you want.”
+
+“I’d like to,” said Vicky, “but I sort of keep house.”
+
+“I have an idea, then,” said Winona. Now, when Winona had ideas her
+friends usually waited to hear what she had to say. “Why couldn’t some
+of the girls come up and stay with you, after Camp is over? It will be
+quite awhile even then before school opens. We could help you—show you
+how to do things.”
+
+“Oh, I’d like that,” said Vicky. Then she stopped, doubtfully. “That is,
+if I could pick out the ones.”
+
+“Of course, you’d invite your own guests,” Winona assured her. “And we’d
+pay what we cost your uncle extra.... But what about him? It’s his
+house, and he mightn’t like it.”
+
+“Oh, he’d never care,” said Vicky. “He never knows much about what goes
+on, anyway! And I know he’d like to have me learn how to be a well-bred
+little gentlewoman, because he talks about it sometimes. And anyway he’s
+going off somewhere where he can’t take us some time soon.”
+
+“Then I don’t see why we can’t manage it!” said Winona enthusiastically.
+“But I can tell you now about the clothes. You want to buy dresses that
+will wash. And you don’t ever want to play in silk dresses, or even
+organdies or batistes—tree-climbing, and things like that, I mean.”
+
+“I might get some middies, like you wear,” said Vicky thoughtfully. “And
+I suppose, long’s I’m going to reform, I might as well get Sand to keep
+her dresses on. She goes chasing out in her underwaist and petticoat
+sometimes.”
+
+“Oh, that was why she hadn’t any on when Louise found her!” said Winona,
+seeing a light.
+
+“Yes,” confessed Vicky. “What’s that noise?”
+
+“That’s the horn,” said Winona. “It must mean that it’s bedtime. She’s
+playing ‘taps.’ Mrs. Bryan signals us with it, always.”
+
+“I think I’d like to be a Blue Bird,” said Vicky. “But I like the other
+plan better,” she added quickly.
+
+“We’re going to be here quite a while longer,” said Winona, “so you’ll
+have lots of time to think whether you want us and whether your uncle
+will be willing.”
+
+“Oh, that’s all right!” said Vicky as the two went back to camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
+
+
+It was quite true that the Camp was not to break up for some time, owing
+to the Wampoag people’s appetite for Camp jellies and linens; but so far
+as Winona was concerned, life under the greenwood tree received a sudden
+check.
+
+It was a harmless-looking letter enough that the detachment of Blue
+Birds brought up from the post-office. Winona pounced on it with a cry
+of joy. “Oh, a letter from mother!” she said. “And we only had one
+yesterday, Florence!” So she tore it open.
+
+“Dear Little Daughter,” it said, in a rather shakier handwriting than
+was usual with Mrs. Merriam. “I am sorry to have to tell you, as you are
+having such a splendid time, that we need you here at home. Yesterday,
+just after I had mailed my last letter to you, I slipped on the wet
+cellar stairs, and went down from top to bottom, and the result is a
+badly wrenched ankle. The doctor says that it is a severe sprain. Clay
+is a good little soul, but he can’t do very much more than the helping
+out, and your father has to have his meals and everything. So I shall
+have to ask my little girl to come home and keep house for me. I will
+expect you the day after you get this. Your loving mother.”
+
+“_Oh!_” cried Winona. “Oh, poor mother!”
+
+“What’s the matter!” asked Florence.
+
+“Mother’s sprained her ankle on the cellar stairs,” said Winona, “and I
+have to go home. You needn’t, Floss.”
+
+“I shall, though,” said Florence—and the younger Miss Merriam was a
+very determined little person. Her eyes filled with tears. “Frances and
+Lucy and I had a secret hike all planned,” she said. “Oh, dear, it is so
+nice in camp! But I won’t let you go home and nurse mother all alone,
+and you needn’t think it!”
+
+Winona didn’t argue. She gave the letter to her little sister to read,
+and went off in the woods to be by herself. She climbed up to the
+platform that two of the girls had built, and sat there. There was no
+use denying it, she did not want to go home. She was going, of course,
+and going to nurse her mother just as well as she possibly could, and
+look after her father with all the powers she had learned in the Camp
+Fire activities. And she was sorry her mother’s ankle hurt her—very,
+very sorry. But—oh, dear! There was a beautiful new dance that Edith,
+who went into Wampoag and got lessons, which she passed promptly on, had
+been going to teach her. There was a new kind of cooking she had been
+going to teach a group of Blue Birds. There was a new dive—well, there
+were any amount of things, that if anyone had asked her about, she would
+have said she simply _couldn’t_ break off. But she had to. And cooking
+at home in August was very different from doing it in the woods with a
+lot of other girls—and everyone she knew well was going to stay here—
+
+Winona sat up and mopped her eyes.
+
+“This isn’t the way to follow the law of the Fire!” she reminded
+herself. “I can glorify work just as well home as here—better, in fact,
+for it’s pretty certain there’ll be more work to do!” She laughed a
+little.
+
+“Coming up, Winona!” called Helen from below.
+
+“Come on!” called back Winona.
+
+“What’s the matter?” inquired Helen when she gained the platform.
+“You’ve been crying.”
+
+“I’ve got to go home.” Winona gave the news briefly. “Mother’s sprained
+her ankle.”
+
+“Oh, what a perfect shame!” said Helen.
+
+“I know I’m taking it like a baby,” said Winona with a gulp, “instead of
+being noble and acting as if I liked going home. And of course I’m
+going. Only—only I do wish mother had picked out any time but this to
+sprain a perfectly good ankle!”
+
+“Can’t she get somebody else to come take care of things?” asked Helen.
+“I don’t know how on earth we’ll get along without you, Win. You never
+say much, but somehow you’re the centre of things. We’ll miss you
+awfully!”
+
+Winona blushed at the compliment, and reached down to pat Helen’s hand.
+
+“You’re a dear, Helen, to think so. But you’ll all get along all right.
+It’s I that will have most of the missing to do. No, there’s nobody
+mother could get. Aunt Jenny’s off in the White Mountains, getting well
+from something herself. And all we have at home is Clay—the little
+colored boy mother got at the Children’s Aid. From what Tom said he’s a
+regular Topsy. No, I have to go home. Oh, think of it, Helen! Hot
+housekeeping all August and half September, with every single girl I
+know well up here, canoeing and swimming and folk-dancing and all sorts
+of splendid things! You’ll all have beads down to your feet.”
+
+This time it was Helen who patted Winona.
+
+Presently Winona mopped her eyes again and threw back her shoulders.
+
+“Come along, Helen; I’ve had my little weep out. Now I’m going to tell
+Mrs. Bryan about it, and trot off home looking pleased to death at the
+prospect.”
+
+They swung themselves down from the tree-house, and started back to camp
+at a slow run. There was a good deal to do. There was everything of
+Winona’s to pack, and Florence’s, too, if she was really going, and she
+insisted that she was.
+
+“I won’t be a bit of trouble,” she said, “and I’ll be a real help.
+You’ll see!”
+
+So they packed everything, and said good-bye to everybody, and were
+paddled up the lake to Wampoag, where they were to take the train for
+home. They had to stop over at the Scouts’ camp and break the news to
+Tom. But Winona invited him fervently to stay where he was. She knew
+that with the best will in the world to be useful a boy makes more work
+than he does, and has to be cooked for to quite an extent. Tom said he
+would be down the next day to see his mother, but he would go back
+again.
+
+“Good-bye, dears,” said Mrs. Bryan, who was seeing them off, when she
+parted from Florence and Winona at the dock, “I know you’ll be happy.
+Remember we’ll miss you all the time, Ray-of-Light. And I don’t know
+what I’ll do without Florence to run errands for me. Come back as soon
+as your mother can spare you.”
+
+“We will,” said Winona. “Only it feels like the poetry—don’t you
+remember?
+
+ “Remember what I tell you, says the old man to his son—
+ Be good and you’ll be happy—but you won’t have any fun!”
+
+“Just the same,” said the Guardian, “being what you are, Winona, I’d
+venture to promise you that in the long run you will get more happiness
+out of being happy than out of having fun.”
+
+Winona laughed as she kissed her good-bye.
+
+“I’m going to plan ways for glorifying work and being happy all the way
+down on the train,” she said, “but I haven’t any—well—thoroughly
+planned—yet!”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was nearly nightfall when Winona reached home, for she had not
+started till a late afternoon train. She found her mother established in
+the living-room, where a door opening on the hall gave her a good view
+of the kitchen, and Clay in it. She looked well, but tired, and her foot
+was bandaged and on a pillow.
+
+“You’re sure you didn’t mind coming home, dear?” was the first thing her
+mother said. “It was a shame you had to!”
+
+Winona had to reassure her mother so fervently about her being willing
+to come back, and even liking to, that she began to find she really did!
+It was pleasant there, after all. The garden was full of blooming
+flowers, and it was a cool, pleasant day.
+
+“What shall I do first, mother?” she asked, as she and Florence sat each
+with one of their mother’s hands, and tried to tell her all about
+everything at once.
+
+“The first thing for you to do,” said Mrs. Merriam, “is to get baths and
+put on cool dresses, both of you, and come down to dinner. Your father
+and Clay are getting it. You aren’t to do a thing till to-morrow, dear.
+You must be tired with your trip.”
+
+“I don’t think anything could tire me!” said Winona blithely. And she
+and Florence, as each of them in turn took baths in the one thing a camp
+doesn’t possess—a bathtub—felt that it was good to be home and have
+mother pet you, after all!
+
+“It certainly is good to have you back, children,” said their father, as
+he sat with a daughter on each side of him after dinner. They had their
+mother out on the back porch with them. It was nearly as large as the
+front one, and she could be moved, couch and all, through a front window
+with very little trouble. “Now I can have an afternoon off from
+housekeeping. But I’ve done well, haven’t I, Mary?”
+
+“You certainly have,” said Mrs. Merriam, “and it’s been hard for you,
+too. But now that I have my Camp Fire Girls back nobody’s going to need
+to do one thing.”
+
+“Not a thing!” said Florence. “We’ve learned ever so many things,
+mother. We’re going to house-keep better’n you ever did!”
+
+The family shouted. It was so like Florence.
+
+“I don’t think quite that,” said Winona modestly. “But we’re going to
+have a lovely time running things, anyway!”
+
+So next morning the “lovely time” began.
+
+It seemed queer to waken on a mattress instead of on a pine bed; still
+stranger to hear the alarm-clock go off. Winona did not like
+alarm-clocks, and she threw a pillow at it before she stopped to think.
+But she got up as it told her, for all that, and was downstairs in
+twenty minutes. She had put on a blue ripplette work-dress, fresh and
+pretty. It was pleasant to have on a pretty frock instead of the camp
+uniform.
+
+“There are lots of nice things!” she said to herself sturdily. “I’m
+going to enjoy myself every minute, if I have to tie a string to my
+finger to remind me!”
+
+She found Clay, whose acquaintance she had made the night before,
+already down. The cereal was in the double boiler and the coffee in the
+percolator, already.
+
+“Hit ain’ much to do fo’ breakfast,” said he encouragingly. “Ah do it
+maself, mos’ly.” And indeed he proved so expert that all Winona found
+left her to do was gathering the flowers for the table, and cutting the
+oranges. Breakfast had more frills than usual, though—Winona had come
+home prepared for work, and she found some to do. The oranges were
+loosened back from their skins like grape-fruit, there were finger-bowls
+with flower-petals floating on top, the cereal dishes had little plates
+underneath, and even the hot corn-bread, which Winona, by the way,
+discovered Clay did not know how to make, was stacked in a highly
+artistic log-cabin pattern. Winona, with a little white apron over her
+fresh blue dress, sat and poured the coffee importantly. Her father
+smiled with pleasure, as she sat opposite him, flushed and pretty and
+dainty.
+
+“Well!” he said. “This is certainly a fine beginning, Winnie! Did you
+learn all this in the woods?”
+
+Winona colored with pleasure.
+
+“No, I think I knew most of it before I went,” she said. “That is, all
+but the corn-bread—that was an experiment.”
+
+“And see!” said Florence. “Flowers in the finger-bowls!”
+
+“But you mustn’t work too hard, little daughter,” said her father, as he
+went into the living-room to bid his wife good-bye before he went to
+business.
+
+Winona followed him closely with her mother’s tray. Mrs. Merriam was
+dressed, and Mr. Merriam had helped her downstairs and to her couch. It
+had been rather fun to arrange the tray with doilies and the daintiest
+china. She carried it in as her father came out.
+
+“Good-morning, mother!” she said gayly. “Things are going beautifully,
+and housekeeping’s fun!”
+
+“That’s my brave little girl!” said her mother. “But I must warn you,
+Ray-of-Light, that you’ll get over-tired if you try to put on too many
+trimmings. The trouble with housekeeping is, you never get a vacation.
+It keeps on all day long. Simplify all you can.”
+
+Winona laughed. “I refuse to start on your tray!” said she.
+
+She made her mother as comfortable as she could, then went back to the
+kitchen.
+
+“Now, Clay,” she said, “Mrs. Merriam’s sent for me to come home to run
+things. You and I are going to get as much fun out of the work as we
+can, and do it just as well and as fast as we know how. Aren’t we?”
+
+“Yas’m,” said Clay doubtfully. “But dey ain’ no fun to be got outen
+washin’ dishes,” he added with conviction.
+
+Winona looked thoughtful.
+
+“No, I suppose there isn’t,” she admitted. “But there ought to be. Up at
+the Camp we got credit for what we did, if it was done right. I
+wonder——”
+
+“You mean dem credits what folks buys groceries with?” interrupted Clay.
+
+“No,” said Winona. “But—I’ll tell you, Clay, I have a plan! I’ll put a
+chart up here on the kitchen wall. Every time you get the dishes washed
+and put away in half an hour, without breaking them, three times a day
+for a week, you get credit—for fifteen cents. What do you think of
+that?”
+
+“Ah like it!” said Clay. “But Ah rather have de two cents a day.”
+
+“All right,” promised Winona rashly. “Now go ahead with the dishes while
+I put fresh paper on the shelves.”
+
+“Don’t take it too hard, dear,” Mrs. Merriam warned her once more, when
+Winona ran in, breathless from vigorous bedmaking, to report progress.
+“What are you going to do now?”
+
+“Now? Nothing till lunch time. I’m so glad we have dinner at night.
+It’ll be lots easier to get the hardest meal when it’s cooler, and
+there’s been a rest between.”
+
+“You dear child!” said her mother, reaching out her hand to Winona where
+she sat by the sofa. “You’re bound to look on the bright side.”
+
+“I’m bound to glorify work and be happy,” said Winona gayly. “Now,
+mother, I’d like some money. I’d rather not start with a regular
+housekeeping allowance till Monday. But right now I want a dish-mop, and
+a soap-maker, and some new white oil-cloth for the kitchen dresser. Can
+I have all that?”
+
+“Certainly,” said her mother. “Keep the kitchen as spic and span as you
+can. The fresher the surroundings, the easier it is to work.”
+
+So after luncheon, which wasn’t much trouble because there was no man to
+cook for, Winona and Florence went shopping, leaving Clay singing “Ma
+Honey Man” cheerfully over his dishes. The money their mother had given
+them bought not only the things Winona went after, but pink and blue
+chambray for aprons for herself and Florence, and red for Clay.
+
+“The pretty aprons will make it more fun to be in the kitchen—don’t you
+think so, Florence?” asked Winona.
+
+Florence, naturally, thought so, too, and they bought them and made them
+up before the day was over. Florence asked of her own accord for
+definite things to do. And an idea came to Winona—that they start a
+system of home honor-beads.
+
+“Of course they won’t really count,” she explained to her little sister,
+“but they’ll always be there to remind us of our work.”
+
+“That will be lovely!” said Florence, “but what will they be like?”
+
+“Wait and see,” said Winona.
+
+That day was all used up making the new long aprons and the mob-caps to
+match, dainty and Kate-Greenaway looking. But the next morning after the
+beds were done they went to sit with their mother. She said they could
+make the beads there with her. Winona ran out into the garden and
+brought back a handful of flowers that she put in water, and set beside
+her mother’s couch.
+
+“How do you feel, mother?” she asked.
+
+“It doesn’t hurt badly at all,” said her mother cheerfully.
+
+Winona carried out the tray, and moved about, straightening her mother’s
+room a little more before she sat down to her work.
+
+“You’re sure we’re not in your way, mother?” she asked.
+
+“Indeed you aren’t!” said her mother. “You don’t know how lonely I’ve
+been with all my children gone. And do let in all the air and sunshine
+you can, dear. It may be hot later, so that we’ll have to shut out the
+light a part of the day.”
+
+“All right,” said Winona, doing it. Then she called to Florence.
+
+“Florence, will you get the oil-paints that we use for stencilling?” she
+asked. “I can borrow them, mother, can’t I?”
+
+Mrs. Merriam was perfectly willing, and while Florence was getting the
+tubes of paints, and the brushes, Winona brought out a jar of ordinary
+kidney-beans from the kitchen. She spread newspapers on the floor and on
+the table, and when Florence came back with the paint she set to work.
+
+“Just beans!” said Florence scornfully. “You can’t make beads out of
+_them!_”
+
+“Can’t I?” said Winona, “Well, if you don’t like them when they’re done,
+I’ll buy you a string of any kind of colored ones that you want.”
+
+“Thank you,” said Florence, settling down to watch her sister.
+
+The first thing Winona did was to pierce each of the beans lengthwise
+with a steel knitting-needle, which she heated in the alcohol lamp’s
+flame. This was the longest part of the work. Next she strung them all
+on a long piece of cord. Then while Florence held one end of the cord
+and she the other, Winona dashed each bead in turn with touches of
+color, one after another—rose, blue, green and violet. She finished
+them with little flecks of gold paint, and fastened one end to the
+chandelier, where the beads could swing free and dry soon. The girls got
+luncheon while the beads were drying.
+
+After luncheon was eaten and cleared away the girls went to work on
+their beads again. Florence held the string while Winona went over them
+with shellac.
+
+“I think we’d better put them outdoors this time,” she decided. “The
+smell of the shellac may worry mother.”
+
+So they swung the beads from the hammock rope.
+
+“Do you think you will want to wear them?” she asked Florence, as she
+came back and began to clear away the paint-spotted newspapers.
+
+“I should just think I would!” said Florence enthusiastically. “Why,
+they look just like the ones in the Wampoag stores, only lots prettier.”
+
+“Who told you how to make them, Winnie?” asked her mother. “They are
+certainly lovely.”
+
+“Nobody,” said Winona. “I saw some like them, and thought I could do
+it—that’s all.”
+
+“I think you ought to get a real honor-bead for that,” said Florence.
+“I’m going to put down everything you do that I think might get honors
+for you.”
+
+“I’ll keep track, too,” said Mrs. Merriam. “That’s a good idea,
+Florence. Then perhaps Winona’s having to leave the Camp won’t be such a
+setback. Give me a pencil, dear, and that little black notebook by it.”
+
+They wrote down the making of the beads.
+
+“We must keep watch, you and I, Florence,” Mrs. Merriam said.
+
+Winona looked radiant.
+
+“I’m going to write to Camp now, mother,” she said, “and I’ll ask Mrs.
+Bryan about counting things like this. It would be lovely if I got on as
+fast here as there—but I don’t believe it’s possible.”
+
+“Wait and see,” said Mrs. Merriam.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
+
+
+Of course, things didn’t always go smoothly, even with Winona’s young
+energy and good-will hard at work. “Accidents will happen in the best
+regulated families” was a proverb whose meaning Winona learned
+thoroughly before she was through. There was, for instance, a tragic
+Saturday when she made ice-cream with most of the ice in the ice-box,
+and forgot to telephone for more. A sizzlingly hot Sunday dawned, with
+no ice to be had. So the Sunday chicken and lettuce were badly spoiled,
+not to mention various tempers. Winona, tired, hot, and with a
+consciousness of guilt, spent most of Sunday afternoon in the kitchen
+trying crossly to invent a Sunday night supper which did not need milk,
+eggs or salad. The day ended with a found-at-the-last-minute meal of
+potted tongue and canned peaches, and a general forgiveness all round,
+but it was a long time after that before Winona forgot it; indeed, she
+was known to get out of bed to take final peeps at the ice-chest and
+make sure it was filled.
+
+Nevertheless, and in spite of all the mishaps that are bound to worry
+housekeepers, a light heart, a strong body and the fixed intention to
+make the best of things carried Winona triumphantly past her worries.
+Presently she found that things were settling into a regular routine,
+and that housekeeping was more interesting than hard. Best of all, she
+found she had a great deal of time to herself.
+
+Then Tom came home. The Scouts had had to break up earlier than they
+expected, for two or three reasons. One was that Mr. Gedney had to get
+back to his business, another was that several of the boys worked, and
+had to get back, too. So Tom descended on his family, and Billy appeared
+next door. And things began to happen.
+
+Tom tried faithfully not to be any trouble, and succeeded pretty well.
+And Mrs. Merriam’s ankle got better, slowly, as bad sprains do.
+Presently she was well enough to be taken in a wheel chair to see her
+friends. She usually went to spend the day.
+
+One day everything seemed particularly calm and serene. Tom had wheeled
+the mother to the other end of town, early in the morning, and she was
+going to be taken for a long automobile ride by one of her friends. Tom
+had taken a pocketful of sandwiches, and gone off for a fishing-trip. So
+Winona built a mound of more sandwiches for herself and Florence, and
+prepared to take a day off.
+
+She was curled up on the front porch in a hammock, reading, when the
+first thing occurred.
+
+“Does Miss Winona Merriam live here?” inquired a familiar voice; and
+Winona, looking up, saw Louise, dusty and beaming.
+
+“Oh, Louise, you angel! How lovely it is to see you!” she said, jumping
+up and hugging her friend.
+
+“Yes, isn’t it?” said Louise, hugging back. “I came down on the train,
+and I’m here to spend the day, if you want me.”
+
+“Want you! I should think I did!” said Winona. “Come in and get cool.”
+
+“I’m not hot,” said Louise, “but I _would_ like a drink of water.”
+
+They were in the kitchen, fussing about pleasurably together, when they
+heard steps clattering up the porch.
+
+“It’s the ice-man,” said Winona. “I must pay him.”
+
+She ran upstairs, and Louise went on helping herself to sandwiches. She
+had eaten three, and was considering whether she really wanted anything
+more till lunch-time, when a large, fishy hand dropped over her shoulder
+and took a handful of ham-and-lettuce ones.
+
+“Tom Merriam! There won’t be enough for lunch if we both eat them! I
+thought you’d gone off fishing for the day.”
+
+“So did I,” said Tom leisurely, “but I found I hadn’t. Where did you
+blow in from?”
+
+“Camp,” she said. “Winona’s upstairs hunting for change. She thought you
+walked like the ice-man.”
+
+“Poor Win! She has that ice-man on her mind,” said Tom. “Nay, nay,
+little one. For far other reason am I here.”
+
+He struck an attitude, with the sandwich he hadn’t finished waving over
+his head.
+
+“Got hungry?” asked Louise prosaically.
+
+“Not at all,” said Tom. “It was this way. As I was purchasing bait, I
+met my father.”
+
+“Well—did he send you home?”
+
+“Not exactly. Only—there’s a convention in town. A ministers’
+convention. And father’s met two long-lost college chums, which—or
+who—are coming here to dinner to-night. One has a wife. Better tell
+Winona, and have Clay put on some extra plates. And—I forgot—here’s a
+fish I caught before I used up my bait and met father. Have him boiled
+or something for dinner with some of that stuff like mayonnaise dressing
+with green things in.”
+
+“Your father?” asked Louise frivolously.
+
+“No, the fish!”
+
+Tom rushed upstairs to change his clothes, while Louise thoughtfully ate
+another sandwich and called Winona.
+
+Winona came running down the back stairs.
+
+“Did you keep him?” she said. “I couldn’t find where I’d put the
+change.”
+
+“It wasn’t the ice-man,” said Louise, “it was Tom.”
+
+“Tom?” asked Winona. “But he was gone for the day.”
+
+“Anyway, he’s back. And—Winona Merriam, we’ll have to make more
+sandwiches for supper, or dinner or whatever it is. Two ministers and
+one wife are coming here to dinner to-night.”
+
+Winona sprang to her feet and snapped her book shut.
+
+“_Sandwiches!_” she said scornfully. “Don’t you know you have to _feed_
+convention people? Mother would die, and the Ladies’ Aid faint in a
+body, if we gave them sandwiches for dinner. No. They have to have a
+course dinner!”
+
+“Where are you going to get it?” asked Louise meekly.
+
+“Here!” said Winona. “I found one in a magazine the other day. Let’s see
+what we can do with it.”
+
+Louise looked at Winona with respect. “Do you often rise to occasions
+this way?” she asked.
+
+“This is the almost human intelligence that I have sometimes,” said
+Winona.
+
+“Sure it’s intelligence?” asked Louise doubtfully.
+
+Winona led the way upstairs toward her scrapbook without deigning to
+reply. Both girls bent eagerly over the course dinner she had pasted in
+on the last page.
+
+“Shellfish, soup, fish, salad, roast, entrees, vegetables, dessert,
+black coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins,” she read. “These, in the order
+named, constitute a simple dinner.”
+
+“I’d like to know who brought up the woman who wrote that,” commented
+Louise. “The Emperor of Russia, I should think.”
+
+“Anyway, I am going to try to have it,” said Winona. “We can have
+oysters to begin with, because Tom always has some around for bait.”
+
+“That kind mayn’t be good to eat,” objected Louise.
+
+“Never mind. Perhaps these people won’t know the difference, just think
+they’re a brand-new kind.”
+
+“You don’t open them till the very last thing, and then you serve them
+with ice on their heads to keep them cool, and lemon slices. I know that
+much,” said Louise, following Winona downstairs again.
+
+“Then we won’t open them till the very last thing, and forget all about
+them till Tom comes downstairs again,” said Winona with decision.
+“Soup—let’s see. Oh, I know! Mother had me make some bouillon this
+morning, for old Mrs. Johnson down in Hallam’s Alley. We’ll serve that
+in the bouillon cups, and make Mrs. Johnson some more to-morrow, or take
+her chewing-tobacco instead. She’d much rather have it, she says.”
+
+“All right. And Tom brought some fish in,” supplied Louise.
+
+They went out to inspect the fish, and found that there would be plenty,
+if it was carefully distributed.
+
+“Doesn’t everything dovetail beautifully?” said Winona thankfully.
+“What’s next?”
+
+“Salad,” said Louise, consulting the scrapbook. “Haven’t you any lettuce
+in the garden?”
+
+“Of course we have!” said Winona. “All there is to do is to pick it.”
+
+“Well—the roast?”
+
+But here there was a deadlock.
+
+“There isn’t a thing in the house to roast,” said Winona, “and this time
+of year you have to telephone early to get things.” She moved to the
+telephone, and pulled herself back in dismay. “This is Wednesday!” she
+said. “And all the shops are closed Wednesday afternoon!”
+
+“It isn’t afternoon, yet,” said Louise.
+
+“Look at the clock,” said Winona.
+
+And it was afternoon—one o’clock.
+
+“Perhaps that’s a stray butcher,” said Louise, as they heard a long,
+loud knock at the kitchen door.
+
+But it was only Billy Lee, who explained that he had tried every door
+but this in vain. He had a note to Winona from his sister. He perched
+himself on the stationary tubs while she read it, on the chance that she
+might want to write an answer.
+
+“Come over and stay with me this afternoon,” it said. “I have a
+headache.”
+
+“Oh, I can’t, Billy!” explained Winona, looking up from the note. “We
+have dinner to get for two ministers and their wife, and—Billy, you
+have a great deal of steady common sense. I heard father say so. What
+would you do if there wasn’t any meat, or any time to get any, or any
+place to get it?”
+
+Billy tucked his foot under him, and looked serious, mechanically taking
+a sandwich as he thought. The girls were eating them, too, for it had
+been silently agreed that that would be all the lunch they would bother
+with.
+
+“Why not try Puppums?” he suggested. “If they’re missionaries they’re
+used to roast dog. Every missionary has to learn to like it in the last
+year of his course.”
+
+“Yes, or we might roast Clay,” said Louise scornfully. “Why don’t you
+suggest that? He isn’t any use, goodness knows, and they may have been
+missionaries to the cannibals!” She glanced at the small darky, who was
+sitting on the cellar door in happy idleness, singing fragments of
+popular songs to himself.
+
+“You ought to make him useful,” said Billy. “Here, Clay, get up and help
+your young ladies.”
+
+“Ah _is_ helpin’ ’em,” said Clay with dignity; nevertheless he rose and
+came in for further orders.
+
+“Down home,” continued Billy, “we always kill a chicken when we expect a
+minister.”
+
+“But we haven’t so much as a papier-mache Easter chick,” objected
+Louise.
+
+“The people next door but one have,” said Winona excitedly, starting up.
+“It’s against the law to keep chickens within the city limits, but they
+do it. But they’re away for the day.”
+
+“They’re always getting into your garden and tempting poor old Puppums
+to chase them,” said Billy sympathetically.
+
+Winona, acting on his suggestion, went to the door and looked out.
+
+“Yes,” she said. “There’s one there now. There nearly always is.”
+
+Louise lifted one eyebrow. “Well?” said she.
+
+“Very well,” said Winona. “Come on, ladies and gentlemen. We are going
+to catch a next-door-but-one chicken, and pay the Janeways for him
+to-morrow.”
+
+“When Puppums caught one last week,” said Florence, appearing suddenly,
+evidently in full possession of the conversation, “you tied it round his
+neck!”
+
+She went down under the tubs to extract the wronged animal and
+sympathize with him on the injustice of life. But only Puppums heard
+her, for Billy and Winona, hindered by Clay, were careering wildly about
+after a vociferous, very agile fowl. It was finally captured with a
+crab-net, and led away to execution by Clay. It appeared that he, also,
+had had experience in chicken-killing for clergymen. He had often done
+it, he said, very artistically.
+
+As he and the rooster passed on their way to the scaffold, Winona ran
+into the kitchen, and out again with a scream.
+
+“It’s Henry!” she said wildly. “It’s Henry! We’ve caught the Janeways’s
+pet rooster! Clay! Clay!”
+
+“Yas’m!” said Clay, appearing with Henry’s head in one hand and his body
+in the other. “Dis heah roosteh she certn’ly is good an’ daid! I c’n fix
+’em!”
+
+“And they loved him so!” said Winona tragically. “They were telling
+mother only yesterday how intellectual he was. ‘Not clever, merely,’
+Mrs. Janeway said, ‘but really intellectual, my dear Mrs. Merriam!’”
+
+Billy clutched the tubs in order to laugh better, and Louise sat down
+just where she was, on the floor.
+
+“What’s the matter?” called Tom, running downstairs very clean and tidy.
+
+“Winona’s murdered the Janeways’s intellectual rooster!” explained
+Billy; and lay back on the tubs again.
+
+Tom, too, began to howl.
+
+“What—Henry?” he said, when he could speak. “Oh, Winnie, you _have_
+done it! They’ve had him in the family since their grandfather’s time
+anyway. Well, you’d better make the best of it, and have Clay take out
+his interior decorations. Maybe we can eat him if you boil him long
+enough. I could have robbed the Martins’s tank of their tame goldfish if
+I’d known you wanted a dinner of household pets.” He sat down on the
+tubs by Billy and went off again.
+
+“I suggested Puppums in the first place!” gurgled Billy.
+
+“Never mind, Win,” said Louise, going over to Winona, who stood
+mournfully by the window, “I’ll attend to Henry. We’ll boil him first
+and then bake him, and he’ll be quite good. I’ll make the stuffing for
+him, too. I know how quite well.”
+
+“Oh, thank you, Louise!” and Winona brightened up.
+
+“Oh,” teased Billy, “then the remorse isn’t because he’s Henry, but
+because he’s tough?”
+
+“It’s both,” said Winona, “but there’s no use being uselessly remorseful
+when you have work to do. I can feel ever so badly about it when I go to
+bed to-night. I often do. The fish is all right, anyway, and I’m going
+to make some sauce hollandaise for it out of the cookbook. Really all
+you need to know how to cook is a cookbook and intelligence.”
+
+“I see the cookbook, but where——” began Tom.
+
+“Billy Lee,” said Winona firmly, “if you came to see Tom, won’t you
+please take him out on the front porch and see him?”
+
+“I didn’t!” said Billy coolly. “I came to bring Nataly’s note, and I’m
+staying to see you invent a ten-course dinner, if you’ll let me. Let me
+stay to dinner, Henry and all, and I’ll make your fish-sauce. All you
+need is a cookbook and intelligence——”
+
+“Two clergymen,” counted Winona, “one wife, father, Louise, Tom,
+me—Florence is going out to supper, she said this morning. You’ll just
+make eight, Billy. Come and welcome, only please leave the fish-sauce
+alone.”
+
+But Billy had already tied himself into a big pink apron, and was mixing
+butter and flour in a saucepan with every sign of knowing what he was
+about.
+
+There was a brief, tense silence while the chicken, some white potatoes
+and onions, were put on to boil, sweet potatoes laid in the oven to be
+baked, and Clay sent into the garden for lettuce and radishes. They did
+not light any of the gas-stove burners except the one under the late
+Henry, because the afternoon was yet long. They went out on the porch
+and talked for a couple of hours. There was a general feeling that they
+mustn’t get too far away from the dinner.
+
+About four Winona remembered to say to Tom, “Have you any bait-clams or
+oysters? We need them for our first course.”
+
+“Bait!” said Tom. “Considering we’ve stolen the meat from the neighbors,
+and robbed the poor of the soup, and I caught the fish, we can afford to
+buy a few blue-points. I’ll go down and get them. Is there anything else
+you’d like while I’m down town?”
+
+“Is it too late to order ice-cream?”
+
+“I’m afraid so,” he said. “The ice-cream places won’t be open till
+five-thirty, and then only for an hour, you know.”
+
+“The dairies are,” Winona remembered. “Please buy some cream on your way
+back, and we’ll find a receipt and make it. There are nuts and raisins
+in the house. Crackers—cheese.... I think we’ll have enough for
+dinner.”
+
+“I shouldn’t wonder!” said her brother thoughtfully, as he walked away
+to get his wheel.
+
+The others went back to the kitchen, and Billy went on with his sauce
+hollandaise—that is, he took it out of the bowl of water where it had
+been cooling, and put it in the ice-chest.
+
+“Why, it’s good!” said Winona, rather impolitely, having sampled it on
+its way.
+
+“Of course it’s good!” said Billy serenely. “Didn’t I ever tell you
+about our old cook down south, and how I adored her? I used to tag round
+after her all the time when I was small—never would stay with my
+nurse—and I learned a lot of things. And seeing I’m going to be invited
+to this banquet, looks like I’d better make the ice-cream for you.”
+
+“Oh, can you?”
+
+“Watch me!” said Billy for all answer.
+
+As a matter of fact, when Tom got back with the blue-points and the
+cream, he and Billy went to work together, and they compounded a
+pineapple ice-cream that was fit for the gods. Louise, meanwhile,
+stuffed the parboiled fowl and put him in to roast. The boys captured
+Clay, who had gone back to his cellar door and his songs, and set him to
+crushing ice. Winona sat down on the tubs where Billy had been, and gave
+herself up to deep thought. The entree had not yet been solved.
+
+“Pancake batter?” she said aloud at last, in a mildly conversational
+tone.
+
+“I’m sure of it,” said Billy, poking his head in from the back porch.
+
+“If I take that pancake batter I got ready for to-morrow morning,
+sweeten it, and put butter and eggs and peaches in it, I don’t see why
+it wouldn’t be peach fritters. Anyway I can try ... then you drop them
+in the lard....”
+
+She thought it over a little longer silently. Then she jumped down, and
+went into the cellar for the batter and the peaches, and brought them
+out on the back porch, near the ice-box, to experiment with. Tom had
+gone back to the pantry to see if there was cake enough, but Billy was
+still packing ice and salt around the ice-cream.
+
+“Dear me!” said Winona, setting down her load on a low shelf. “I hate to
+see you doing all this. You’re company, you know, and here we’re letting
+you get a lot of the dinner. It worries me!”
+
+“Don’t let it,” counselled Billy, tossing a lock of hair out of his eyes
+and going on with the packing. “I’m having a good time. To tell you the
+truth, I always have a good time over here. I rather feel as if I
+belonged to the family—and that’s a nice feel to have. You’re a good
+little chum, Winnie.... If you don’t let me pack all the freezers and
+things I want to I’ll just have to go back to merely being let in once
+in awhile, like company.”
+
+“I feel as if you belonged to the family, too, Billy,” said Winona
+sincerely, “and if your packing freezers is any sign you do, go right
+on, please.”
+
+“I am,” Billy assured her with his usual placidity.
+
+“The lard’s hot, Win! Come see if they’ll frit!” called Louise from
+within; and Winona dashed off with her batter. But it was nice to have
+Billy feel that way about things. He was certainly the nicest boy she
+knew....
+
+They began together, she and Louise, to drop the yellow batter into the
+fat, while Clay and the boys turned the freezer by turns. Louise and
+Winona had become so excited about their dinner by this time that a mere
+fritter-sauce was nothing. They made one, it seemed to them afterwards,
+looking back, without knowing how they did it, and it was very good at
+that.
+
+“Oysters, soup, fish, salad,” muttered Winona for the twentieth time. “I
+believe everything’s ready but the cream, and that must be almost
+finished. Boys!” she called out through the back door, “will you please
+go and deck yourselves for the feast? Wear your tuxedos, please. We’re
+going to keep up the Merriam reputation for hospitality, or die in the
+attempt!”
+
+“All right—just wait till we pack it,” Tom called back.
+
+But she saw that they had separated in quest of their evening clothes
+before she left. Tom had just acquired his first set, and wasn’t
+particularly fond of them. But he put them on meekly, just the same.
+
+“We’d better dress, too,” said Louise. “I’ll run over home and slip some
+things in a suitcase, and be right back again.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
+
+
+Louise was as good as her word. She was back in a very few minutes, and
+in Winona’s room again. She found her friend standing in the middle of
+the floor, her dress exactly what it had been when she left.
+
+“Better hurry,” warned Louise. “We haven’t overmuch time.”
+
+“Hurry!” said Winona despairingly. “How can I? Do you know what I’ve
+done? I’ve hung away every single thin dress I own in the wardrobe,
+instead of putting them in the wash. I knew there was something I’d
+forgotten, and I couldn’t think what it was.”
+
+“Oh, how dreadful!” said Louise. “You’ll have to put on something
+gorgeous, to match the boys’ clothes.”
+
+“What can I do?” asked Winona sadly, and swung open the doors of her
+wardrobe. There, crumpled, forlorn, dejected, hung a line of dresses
+each hopelessly past wearing in its present state.
+
+“Isn’t that a nice trick for a Camp Fire Girl?” inquired Winona
+scornfully. “It’s the kind of thing you’d lecture a Blue Bird kindly but
+firmly for doing, and make her see what a wreck she was going to make of
+her whole life if she kept on.”
+
+“Never mind,” said Louise soothingly. “You’ve had so many other things
+to do, it’s no wonder you couldn’t remember that. Haven’t you anything
+but wash dresses? Where’s your yellow silk voile?”
+
+“I _did_ remember that!” said Winona with a reluctant grin. “I sent it
+to the cleaner’s day before yesterday. It won’t be done till Saturday.”
+
+“What about your flowered dimity? Is all the freshness out of that? You
+don’t wear it often.”
+
+“I sent for it from camp, for one of the girls to use in the Samantha
+tableaux, and the girl still has it, I suppose. She never gave it back.
+I forgot to ask for it, in the hurry of getting home. There’s no use
+trying to think. I’ve thought and thought, and everything else is too
+hot to wear, or soiled. There’s nothing for it but a shirtwaist and
+skirt.”
+
+“Anything of mine would be up to your knees, and baggy,” said Louise
+thoughtfully. “Wait a minute, Win, till I think.”
+
+“I’ll do my hair while you’re at it,” said Winona.
+
+“Why couldn’t you borrow something of your mother’s?” was Louise’s next
+thought.
+
+“Mother wears long dresses,” said Winona. “If she didn’t I could—I’m
+nearly her build.”
+
+“Couldn’t you pin them up?”
+
+“I declare, I believe I’ll try,” exclaimed Winona daringly. She ran out
+of the room, while Louise went on with her own dressing, and came back
+in a minute with a fresh, silk-lined black organdy over her arm.
+
+“This is all there is for it,” she said. “Mother would be willing, I
+know, if she were here. She always wants me to wear her things.”
+
+“It’s lovely,” said Louise admiringly, as Winona’s pink cheeks and blue
+eyes appeared above the soft black, “but I’m afraid we’ll hurt it if we
+put pins in it.”
+
+“I won’t pin it up, then,” said Winona. “The guests will never know the
+difference. I don’t suppose father has mentioned my age.”
+
+“You’ll look awfully old!”
+
+“I don’t care! Have you any black hair-ribbons you could let me have,
+Louise? I see where I never get the honor bead for not borrowing, by the
+way!”
+
+“You won’t lose it on account of my ribbons,” said Louise, “because I
+haven’t any. But I don’t believe hair-ribbons and your gown would match.
+Did you know you had a train?”
+
+“No!” said Winona joyfully. She loved “dressing up,” and this was
+beginning to look very much like it. “I’ll do my hair up on top of my
+head, and nobody’ll think I’m younger than twenty!”
+
+“Good!” said Louise, and helped. They wound the goldy-brown mass up on
+the very top, and completed the effect by hunting out a pair of plain
+glass eye-glasses, which Tom had brought from the ten-cent store once
+long ago.
+
+“You look twenty-five anyway!” exclaimed Louise, and Winona fitted the
+glasses on her nose and assumed a severe expression to match. “Put your
+hair back off your forehead—that way.... That’s splendid!”
+
+“I do look old!” said Winona, with a pleased expression. She trained up
+and down the room and looked at herself in the glass. “I’ll go down
+now.”
+
+“I’ll be there in a minute,” said Louise. “Don’t wait for me.”
+
+When Winona sailed down in her disguise to put the finishing touches to
+the table she found that Tom was already dressed, and was standing
+meekly at the head of the board. And also he had found time to decorate
+it.
+
+“How do you like it?” he asked in a tone even meeker than his attitude.
+
+Winona looked, pulled off her glasses in order to see better, looked
+again—and dropped down in a hopeless heap in the opposite chair. She
+did not say anything—the situation was beyond words.
+
+“Don’t you like it?” said Tom again sweetly.
+
+“Like it!” said Winona, beginning to giggle.
+
+Four half-barrel hoops had been wreathed in smilax, and arched across
+the table at regular intervals, one at each end and one between each two
+places. In the middle of the table, completely hiding the olives, lay a
+half-opened gridiron, also wound with smilax. It was all very neatly
+done, for Tom was very neat-handed; but the general effect was rather
+startling.
+
+“It—why, it looks like somebody’s grave!” said Winona protestingly.
+
+Her tone was so stern that Puppums rose from beneath the table and tried
+nervously to hide under the sideboard, revealing as he went a decoration
+of smilax round his neck, continued in a garland down his spine,
+fastened at the tail. He did not seem to like it.
+
+“That’s what it is!” said Tom complacently, as Winona pounced on the
+abject dog and unwreathed him. “Here’s the magazine I got it from. You
+said to. All there was in this month’s copy was a page of neat and
+inexpensive grave decorations. I copied the handsomest one in the bunch,
+‘William R. Hicks; complete cost of decoration three dollars and twenty
+cents.’ That thing in the middle’s a Gates Ajar, or the nearest I could
+get to it. It got a prize, too.”
+
+“Do you suppose I want William R. Hicks’s grave, or anybody’s grave, on
+the table when we’re having a special hand-made dinner that I’ve spent
+most of the afternoon on?” demanded his sister, laughing in spite of her
+objections.
+
+“What’s the row?” asked Billy cheerfully, appearing in the door with an
+armful of roses and ferns.
+
+“I followed Win’s directions about the table, and she doesn’t seem to
+like it,” said Tom in a voice that was intended to sound injured.
+
+“What’s the gridiron for? A gentle reminder of the Cannibal Isles? We
+don’t really know yet that they’re missionaries!” said Billy.
+
+“Sorry you don’t know a Gates Ajar when you see it,” said Tom, grinning.
+
+“I do,” said Billy decidedly. “That isn’t one. Here are your roses,
+Winnie. You look like somebody’s step-mother in all that train and
+glasses. Where did you get them?”
+
+“Winona!” called Louise, tearing downstairs, “I’ve just remembered that
+Clay has been calling the fritters ‘crullers’ ever since we made them.
+He’ll send them in with the ice-cream if he isn’t told not to.”
+
+She fled to the kitchen.
+
+“Step-mother.... M’m,” said Tom with a light of mischief in his eye; and
+followed Louise.
+
+“_Look_ at the table!” Winona implored Billy.
+
+Billy looked, took in the whole effect, and, as Winona had done, sat
+down to laugh in comfort.
+
+“It’s not so bad, after all,” he said comfortingly when he was through.
+“Let’s take the bones out of these green wicket-things, and lay the
+vines straight across the table. They’ll get into the eats, likely, but
+we can’t stop for that. Can’t you do anything with that gridiron ajar? I
+should think the stuff on it would look all right around a low bowl of
+roses.”
+
+“Maybe it would,” said Winona with renewed courage, and set to work
+stripping it while Billy took the supports from the smilax arches, and
+laid it flat, with an occasional rose at intervals. They found a low,
+wide bowl that, filled with roses, and wound with smilax, made an
+excellent centerpiece.
+
+Winona stepped back to view the general effect with a sigh of
+satisfaction.
+
+“Billy! I’ll remember this afternoon of you to the longest day I live!”
+she said.
+
+“Billy! We want you!” called Louise from the kitchen in a smothered
+voice. Winona would have gone, too, for she was sure she heard giggles,
+but just at this moment Clay came in, and his inability to understand
+why he shouldn’t add a wide red cheese-cloth sash to his white apron
+drove everything else out of her head. By the time she had argued him
+out of it the others were back, suspiciously grave.
+
+“Not here yet!” sighed Louise. “I feel as if I couldn’t wait to have
+them taste my stuffing! Let’s go into the living-room and sing, or go
+out back and play tag, or something.”
+
+“Dar dey is!” shouted Clay, running to the window.
+
+The rest rushed, too, and looked over his woolly head.
+
+“A big one and a little one and a middle-sized wife, like the Three
+Bears,” commented Winona. “They’re coming in by the front way. Oh——”
+
+That was because the fritter-sauce boiled over just as the guests were
+ushered in. Both the girls forgot their manners, and ran to the kitchen
+to rescue it. So only Tom and Billy were in the living-room to be
+introduced.
+
+“My wife and daughter will be here presently,” said Mr. Merriam, who had
+evidently forgotten that Mrs. Merriam was expected to stay away till
+about nine. “Tom, will you run up and tell your mother and Winona that
+our friends are here?”
+
+But even as he spoke Winona, a little breathless, but trained,
+psyche-knotted and eye-glassed, appeared in the doorway with Louise
+behind her. She came in with an air of dignity which her mother could
+not have bettered, and greeted her guests regally, in her excitement
+forgetting to wait for an introduction.
+
+Not so Tom.
+
+“My step-mother, and my sister,” he whispered in the ear of Mr. Driggs,
+the tall minister, who promptly addressed Winona as “Mrs. Merriam.”
+Winona thought he said “Miss,” and went on talking excitedly about
+everything she could think of. Her father was deep in conversation with
+Mr. Donne, the other guest, who was a classmate of his. Tom’s murmured
+“Mother isn’t home yet—Winona’s managing things——” scarcely stopped
+the flood of reminiscences.
+
+“I never heard that your father had a second wife,” remarked Mrs. Driggs
+to Louise, who had selected her to talk to.
+
+“It’s quite recent,” said Louise sadly; and Mrs. Driggs did not ask any
+more questions.
+
+Before things got more complicated Clay announced dinner in an awestruck
+voice, and fled instead of holding aside the portieres for the guests,
+as he had been instructed. He had a good deal on his mind, for he could
+not read very well yet, so they had had to sketch each particular thing
+with a pencil, and pin the series of pictures against the wall in their
+order as they were to come. The pictures of the oysters and the sweet
+potatoes were very much alike, and, as Clay confided to Winona
+afterward, they worried him considerably.
+
+Winona seated her guests with the same dignity which had been hers ever
+since the train had; and led the conversation in the ways it should go,
+nobly assisted by Billy. It appeared Billy could talk like a grown-up
+person of forty when he wanted to—which wasn’t often, for Billy was a
+rather silent person ordinarily. Tom and Louise were never, either of
+them, troubled by shyness, and except that they seemed to laugh a little
+more than the facts warranted they were just as usual.
+
+Every course, from old Mrs. Johnson’s stolen bouillon to the black
+coffee, came on in its proper place and was eaten with enthusiasm. As
+the third course came on without mishap, Winona began to relax, and by
+the end of the dinner was quite at ease. Mr. Donne, beside her, was
+liking his dinner so much that for quite awhile Winona did not have to
+do any talking. When he did talk it was about Ladies’ Aid Societies. Now
+Mrs. Merriam was the President of the Ladies’ Aid of her church, not to
+speak of various things that she held minor offices in, and she was
+quite an authority. Mr. Donne had been told this, and he thought he was
+talking to Winona about something she was an authority on. Winona was
+rather bewildered, for she had never attended a Ladies’ Aid meeting in
+her life, and like the inventor of the Purple Cow, till she was grown up
+“never hoped to see one.” Nevertheless she struck out valiantly, and was
+getting on fairly well when Mrs. Driggs’s voice struck across the
+general tide of talk.
+
+“Mrs. Merriam,” she said, “I’m sorry to trouble you, but I never can eat
+fish without a sprinkle of nutmeg. Could you have a little grated on
+this delicious bit for me?”
+
+“Why, yes!” said Winona cordially. “Clay——!”
+
+“Hit ain’ none, Miss Winnie,” interrupted the small servant in a
+distressed whisper.
+
+“Then go borrow one at Mrs. Lee’s, and hurry!” whispered Winona.
+“Anything, so you only get it and have it for Mrs. Driggs’s fish.”
+
+Clay looked black for a moment. Then a comprehensive grin dawned on his
+face. He trotted out with Mrs. Driggs’s fish, and brought it back again
+a few moments later, liberally nutmegged and very much to the lady’s
+taste. She ate it all and was happy.
+
+“You seem to have no difficulty in keeping discipline in your family and
+among your step-children, Mrs. Merriam,” said Mr. Donne, almost directly
+after the nutmeg episode. “You must seem more like a sister than a
+mother to these tall young people.”
+
+Winona was struck dumb with astonishment for a moment. She looked across
+at Tom, who looked back at her imploringly. She could see what had
+happened out in the kitchen, that time that the three others had been
+there alone and giggling. But this was no time to have a scene. She
+braced herself and settled her glasses more firmly, after one
+reproachful look at the three culprits, whose faces were tense with
+apprehension.
+
+“Yes,” she replied quietly, talking, as Tom afterwards said, like a
+seraph, “They do seem like that. They are charming children, really.”
+
+Mr. Donne went on talking about it. Winona went on replying with serene
+dignity. Even when he praised the cook she took it serenely, and when
+the Ladies’ Aid came in sight again she called to mind a visit from the
+secretary at which she had been present, and quite overwhelmed Mr. Donne
+with particulars.
+
+Mrs. Driggs had been a little quiet and hard to talk to at the beginning
+of the meal, but Billy—Billy the quiet, Billy the shy among his own
+kind—proved to have the art of talking to grown people down to a fine
+point. He not only kept his end up, but he steered nobly away from risky
+questions of relationship, and other such perilous topics.
+
+“It certainly gives you confidence to be a married woman!” thought
+Winona, as she excused herself and went to see about unpacking the
+ice-cream. Clay’s performance so far had been perfect, but she did not
+trust anybody but herself to get the cream successfully out of the
+freezer, without getting salt into it.
+
+“Where did you find that nutmeg, Clay?” she asked curiously, as they
+arranged the cakes and ice-cream, and put melted chocolate in a pitcher.
+
+“Law, Miss Winnie,” said Clay, his smile nearly coiling itself around
+his ears, “I done tole you hit wasn’t none. I des took dis yere ole
+wooden button-hook what hangs on a nail here, an’ grate a li’l bit of it
+off. De minister’s wife she never know de diffunce.”
+
+Winona caught her breath, but this was no time to be overcome. The
+dessert had to be served. They were all laughing at something Louise was
+saying, when she came back. “I wonder if they would look so happy if I
+told them about the nutmeg!” she couldn’t help thinking, but it did not
+seem a very good thing to tell anyone, just then—although it was too
+good to keep always. The Camp Fire heard about it afterward.
+
+Coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins, all appeared and disappeared, and then
+Winona led her sated guests out on the porch. She felt triumphantly
+virtuous. The dinner had been good straight through, the talk had gone
+smoothly, and the company seemed very happy and pleased. She sat down by
+Mrs. Driggs and went on talking. She was going on prosperously when Mr.
+Donne’s voice, from the other end of the porch, stopped Mrs. Driggs’s
+account of her last maid.
+
+“How long did you say you had been married, Mrs. Merriam?” he inquired.
+
+“Married?” echoed Winona desperately, trying to think of a way out.
+
+She was spared giving her answer. There was a sound of footsteps and
+wheels within the house, and Mrs. Merriam’s wheel-chair, propelled by
+Florence, appeared in the doorway.
+
+“I got back sooner than I thought I should, Frances,” said the real Mrs.
+Merriam’s cheerful voice. “Florence came over and told me that our
+friends were here, so I had her wheel me back as soon as I’d had my
+supper. We didn’t get home from the ride till a little while ago, and I
+couldn’t get here for the meal.”
+
+Winona did not wait to hear more. There was a long open window at her
+back. One spring—and all that remained to tell the tale of “young Mrs.
+Merriam” was an overturned porch-chair and the distant sound of a
+tearing garment. Up in her room, pulling down her hair and slipping on
+her fresh middy-blouse and white skirt, Winona heard the laughter, and
+knew the others were being forgiven, and the whole tale told.
+
+“Anyway!” she said to herself as she took off her glasses, shook down
+her hair, washed her hot face and prepared to walk downstairs and meet
+the family. “Anyway, that couldn’t have been a better dinner if I’d been
+married sixteen times!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
+
+
+“This paying for deceased poultry,” said Tom, “is getting monotonous.
+First there were those pedigreed geese up on the river, and now Henry. I
+know Henry never cost as much as the Janeways say he did.”
+
+“I think we’re paying for all it cost to send him to prep school and
+college,” suggested Louise, who was staying over a day. “You forget that
+Henry was intellectual.”
+
+“He was tough,” agreed Tom, “if that’s any sign! So was paying for him.”
+
+“Oh, Tommy dear!” said Winona penitently. “Henry was really my fault. I
+oughtn’t to let you join in with me. I can pay for Henry very well
+alone.”
+
+“I think I see you!” said Tom. “No, Winnie, united we stand, divided we
+fall. I help pay for Henry—see you later—just remembered how late it
+is.”
+
+He bolted upstairs, leaving Winona, Louise and Billy on the porch
+staring at each other.
+
+“What’s struck Tom?” asked Billy. “First time I ever knew him to be in a
+hurry.”
+
+“Why, I don’t know,” said Louise. “I thought you two generally hunted
+together.”
+
+“Not to-night,” said Billy. He vaulted the railing casually, and walked
+out into the middle of the lawn, where he could see Tom’s lighted
+window. “He’s up there with all the lights on, walking the floor as if
+he had something on his conscience, trying to tie all his neckties, one
+after another,” reported Billy. “There—there goes the third one. He’s
+going to try a red one now.”
+
+“I know what it is,” said Winona, seeing a light. “I’ve just remembered.
+He’s going to call on a girl. He’s been going to for all week, and just
+got braced up to it. He’s been wearing me out all day, asking me for
+things to talk to her about. I suppose he’s trying to decide on the
+necktie that matches his socks best.”
+
+“But, great Scott, he’s been to see girls before!” protested Billy.
+“I’ve been along when he’s been seeing girls, and fellows, and even old
+gentlemen, and he never took it so hard.”
+
+“It’s a very particular, grown-up call,” explained Winona, “with a
+card-case and a cane, and everything like that.”
+
+“What’s the cane for?” asked Billy, who had come back to his seat on the
+porch. “Girl collecting them?”
+
+“I think it must be for moral support,” put in Louise.
+
+“I didn’t know he had one,” said Billy. “Where did he get it?”
+
+“Christmas present last year,” explained Winona briefly. “Billy, don’t
+you wish we were all back at Wampoag, having a moonlight swim?”
+
+“I certainly do,” said Billy. “Not but that your porch is nice, too,” he
+added with the politeness he never seemed to forget.
+
+Before they could lament camp life any further, Tom rushed down the
+stairs.
+
+“Winnie! Winnie! Where’s my blue scarf?” he called from inside the front
+door.
+
+“On Louise,” Winona called back promptly. “Don’t you remember, you asked
+her if she didn’t want to wear it with her sailor-suit?”
+
+“Can I have it, Lou?” he asked, coming out. “I wouldn’t ask you, but it
+just matches my hatband.”
+
+“Certainly you can have it,” said Louise, with chilly politeness,
+unfastening it and handing it to him.
+
+“Good-evening, Mr. Merriam,” said Billy, grinning, and rising in order
+to make a very low bow. “I never thought you were this far on the way to
+being a perfect lady, old boy—Mr. Merriam, I mean.”
+
+“Going to call on an awfully correct girl,” said Tom off-handedly. “I
+say, Lou, can I have that blue class-pin of yours?”
+
+“Certainly,” said Louise again, still more coldly, detaching it and
+holding it out. “Anything else you think you’d like?”
+
+“Not that I can think of,” said Tom, taking the class-pin. “That’s a
+good old Lou,” he ended, adding insult to injury. Then he sat down and
+pulled out his mother’s celluloid memorandum tablets. He laid them on
+his knee and looked at them earnestly, as he adjusted the tie and the
+class-pin.
+
+“Did you think of any more things for me to say after I landed the
+California Exposition on her?” he asked his sister.
+
+Winona looked over at Billy to see if he saw the funny side of it. There
+was no use looking at Louise, for in her present sulky frame of mind she
+would not have seen anything funny in a whole joke-book.
+
+“How would the next election do?” she suggested gravely.
+
+“M-m—all right,” said Tom, entering it. “That won’t last forever,
+though, because all you can ever do is guess which man will get it. I
+think you might help a fellow out, Lou. You’re generally so clever.”
+
+“Ask her how she likes her hats trimmed,” said Louise scornfully,
+without turning around to him.
+
+“Oh, no,” said Tom, “that’s too silly a question.” But he put it down
+just the same. “Let’s see. That ought to carry me on till nearly
+nine.... Cæsar! It’s time I went! Don’t mind if I go off and leave you,
+do you Bill?”
+
+“Not a bit!” said Billy calmly. “I’m all right. But”—Billy’s eyes
+twinkled—“don’t you really think you ought to wear your tuxedo, old
+fellow? Much more correct, you know. I saw it in a Hints to Best
+Dressers’ column awhile ago. It said that no true gentleman was without
+evening clothes in the evening.”
+
+Tom looked uneasy, but he was firm.
+
+“I won’t get into that thing for anything less than a dance or a
+hand-made clerical dinner,” he said, thoughtlessly jamming his hat down
+over one ear the way he usually wore it, then putting it straight with a
+jerk. “Great Scott! I must hurry!”
+
+“My ears and whiskers! The Duchess! Won’t I catch it if I’m late!”
+quoted Louise scornfully from Alice in Wonderland, as Tom dived down the
+steps.
+
+“What on earth’s got into Tom!” asked Billy. “The idea of doing that
+because you like it!”
+
+“I don’t know,” said Winona. “It is queer, isn’t it?”
+
+“Going off acting like he was all grown up!” mused Billy, still lost in
+wonder at such a waste of a perfectly good evening.
+
+“I do wish you wouldn’t always say ‘like’ for ‘as if,’ Billy,”
+interrupted Louise sharply. “I hate it.”
+
+“We always say it that way down home,” said Billy.
+
+“That’s no reason for your doing it here! Being born in China doesn’t
+make it good manners for you to eat with chopsticks,” said Louise,
+walking into the house and slamming the screen-door behind her.
+
+“Can’t Ah help yo’ find yo’ tempah, Louise?” Billy called teasingly
+after her, with a purposely exaggerated Southern accent. There was no
+answer.
+
+“You’d be cross, too, if you were Louise,” Winona defended her friend.
+“One of the things she stayed down from camp over to-night for was that
+she and Tom were going off to kodak some cloud effects for a magazine
+prize. And she was going to try to get some photographs that would count
+in Camp Fire work, too. And Tom’s walked off, forgetting all about it.”
+
+“Why didn’t you remind him?” asked Billy sensibly.
+
+“Louise wouldn’t let me. She said she’d go straight back if I did.”
+
+“Well, she needn’t have taken it out on me,” said Billy plaintively. “I
+didn’t break any engagements. I suppose she has a red-haired temper.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile Louise, after she banged the screen-door, had gone straight
+through the house to the back. Mrs. Merriam was in the living-room,
+which prevented her crying there. She was very much hurt at Tom’s
+forgetfulness. They had been chums for a long time, and this particular
+expedition after cloud effects had been something they had planned long
+before the Scouts’ camp broke up. And now Tom had gone gayly off,
+forgetting all about it. It really was horrid.
+
+Crying on a bed is hot work in summer, so she decided to go out back and
+do it. She sat on the porch, put her arms on the back of a chair and
+began to cry.
+
+But circumstances seemed to be against her. Puppums, who had been asleep
+under a chair, got up, yawned, sauntered across the porch, and sat down
+by her. Then he proceeded to whine for her to turn around, make a lap,
+and take him up into it.
+
+“Oh, do stop!” said Louise indignantly, when the whining had gone on
+steadily for some minutes. But if you took any notice of Puppums he
+merely argued that a little more work would get him what he wanted, and
+went on begging. In the present instance he answered Louise by lifting
+his nose further up in the air, and howling, as if he wished to assure
+her that he felt for her.
+
+“You mean old dog!” said Louise, jumping up. “I’ll settle you!” Puppums
+was very much pleased. He had an optimistic disposition, and he thought
+it was a game. He ran around and around the porch, finally, when he
+began to see that Louise was in earnest, hiding under the ice-chest,
+where he knew nobody could follow him. Louise stopped short, and eyed
+the ice-box. It occurred to her that she was thirsty.
+
+“This is what you might call being guided,” said she, and opening the
+lid, looked in. She found a bag of lemons, a bunch of bananas, and she
+thought she remembered where Winona kept the bottled cherries and the
+cookies. She went into the kitchen and began work, and in a very little
+while was on her way back to the front porch with a tray, designed to
+show her remorse for being cross, piled with cookies and fruit lemonade.
+Mrs. Merriam, to whom she offered the first glass, pronounced it very
+good indeed, and sent her on her way. Puppums danced wildly about her,
+with the idea that she was clearing a table, and he might get bones.
+
+Winona and Billy were still talking as placidly as if Tom had not been
+wrestling with a formal call, and Louise with a bad temper, for the last
+twenty minutes.
+
+“Cookies—oh, and fruit lemonade! Louise, you dear!” cried Winona, while
+Billy took the tray and put it on a table.
+
+“Won’t you have some, Billy? I know you like it, and—and I _do_ like
+your Southern accent,” she added in a rush.
+
+“Thank you, Louise,” said Billy. “I like your accent, too—and your
+fruit lemonade—very much.”
+
+They both laughed. “Let’s bury the hatchet,” he added. “Louise, these
+certainly are fine cookies.”
+
+The three were still sitting comfortably over their refreshments, even
+Puppums crunching cakes contentedly in a corner, when Tom hurried up the
+steps and banged himself down in a chair. His hat was jammed to one side
+in the old unceremonious fashion, his gloves had vanished, and even his
+cane was nowhere to be seen.
+
+“Have some,” said Billy tactfully before Tom could say anything. They
+pushed the cakes toward him, and poured him some lemonade in Winona’s
+glass, and after he seemed less gloomy they got him to talk.
+
+“Tell us all about it,” said Winona soothingly.
+
+“Nothing to tell!” said Tom in something rather like a growl.
+
+“Have another cooky, and tell us all about it,” repeated his sister in a
+persuasive voice. And after awhile, when he had had some more cookies
+and another glass of lemonade, he told them, gradually.
+
+“Well, I sent in my card, of course,” he began. “Asked for Miss Davis.”
+
+“Of course!” said Winona; for her brother’s usual custom was to call up
+from the sidewalk, “I’m coming over to-night,” and then to walk
+unceremoniously in whenever he thought of it, that evening.
+
+“I did that all right, thank goodness!” said Tom. “The maid kept me
+waiting about a year, with a copy of Snowbound, and a Gems from
+Shakespeare, and a pug-dog made out of plaster, to amuse me. The Davises
+never seem to sit around in their rooms and on their porches like other
+people. Just as I got to the point of thinking I’d better go back home
+_Mrs._ Davis walked in. I was so surprised at seeing her, instead of
+Elsie, that I couldn’t think of a blessed thing to say—so I fished up
+this!”
+
+He jerked the tablets out of his pocket and threw them to Winona.
+
+“Keep ’em away from me,” he said. “I never want to see the blessed
+things again. First thing I found was ‘Civil War.’ I’d picked out that
+for a start anyway—thought it would be nice and general, and we had it
+in History last term, so I knew a lot about it. You’d have thought that
+would have lasted awhile, wouldn’t you?”
+
+“Seeing that the real thing lasted four years or so, I think it might
+have,” answered Billy.
+
+“Not a bit of it!” said Tom mournfully. “Mrs. Davis turned out to have
+had a grand-uncle or something in it, and she said it was a painful
+subject. I don’t think she ever had a grand-uncle. I believe she didn’t
+know anything about it, and just invented the old fellow to get out of
+talking about it!”
+
+“Mercy, what suspicions!” said Winona, laughing. “You certainly have
+nearly ruined your lovely disposition. Never mind, Tommy, I sympathize
+with you. What did you tackle next?”
+
+“Tariff-reform, I think,” said Tom.
+
+“What is tariff-reform?” asked Winona. “I never could understand it
+exactly.”
+
+“Don’t ask me to say it all over again!” begged Tom. “I was getting
+anxious by that time for fear I wouldn’t have subjects enough left to
+use on Elsie. You know she isn’t much of a talker. But I had to say
+something, and Mrs. Davis didn’t, and I couldn’t think of anything but
+this foolish book. Mrs. Davis didn’t seem to care much about
+tariff-reform, either, so I gave that up and looked at the list again,
+and chose ‘Weather.’ She did warm up a little at that. But the best
+weather won’t last forever, and you could just hear the silence bump
+every little while.
+
+“Then I got desperate, and used up Politics and Canoeing and the
+California Fair, and all the rest. Folks, I finished off every last
+thing I was going to talk to Elsie about, before she ever appeared!
+Except about trimming hats—that seemed such a foolish thing to ask a
+woman that old about.”
+
+“They discussed Measles and Mice, and Music, and everything else that
+began with an M,” quoted Louise from her favorite Alice in Wonderland.
+
+“Don’t mind her,” said Billy as soberly as he could. “Just go on. Did
+Elsie Davis ever come down at all?”
+
+“Yes,” said Tom, “she did. Just as I finished my last subject, if you
+please! She seemed to be dressed for a party, but she said she wasn’t.
+She sat down at the other end of the room, and tried to see if she
+couldn’t keep as still as her mother. Mrs. Davis stayed right there,
+too, and smiled like an alligator—and there was I without an idea in my
+head or on the memorandum!”
+
+“Didn’t they even show you the photograph album?” inquired Louise,
+forgetting to be offended.
+
+“They wouldn’t talk, I tell you!”
+
+“Well, what _did_ you do?” asked Louise.
+
+Tom grinned a little, shamefacedly.
+
+“Well—I simply yanked out that old tablet, and began at Civil War
+again. I said ‘As I was just saying to your mother!’ and I gave her
+every subject over!”
+
+His hearers howled, and after a minute Tom himself joined in. “Did it
+work better this time?” asked Winona at last, wiping her eyes.
+
+“Not a work,” said Tom cheerfully, reaching for the last cooky. “That
+is, all but the hat one. That was clever of you, Lou. She got almost
+human over that, and began to talk about how many engagements she
+had—had to break half of them. And I said ‘I don’t believe in breaking
+dates,’ and suddenly I remembered the one with you to take the
+pictures—and I left then and there, like a streak of lightning. I left
+my cane—I don’t care—she can have it to remember me by. Louise, I owe
+you an apology the size of the house. Why didn’t you remind me about
+those snapshots?”
+
+“It’s not too late,” said Louise amiably. “The moon’s just about right,
+now.”
+
+Tom went into the house after the cameras, sending his hat flying up to
+the hat-tree, followed by his gloves.
+
+“Let’s go, too,” said Billy.
+
+“All right,” said Winona. She leaned back, and laughed, as they waited
+for the others to come out.
+
+“I don’t believe Tom will try any more formal calls till he’s eighteen,
+anyway,” she remarked.
+
+“It seems a pity, though,” said Billy, getting up. “He wasted a
+perfectly good cane!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
+
+
+Louise went back to camp next day, and Winona went on with her work at
+home. Louise had left all sorts of presents and messages from the girls,
+and taken a great many from Winona away with her. Louise’s visit cheered
+Winona up very much. There was only one hard thing about it—the news
+Louise had brought that the girls had extended the time of their stay
+again. The plan now was to stay in Camp Karonya till the fourteenth of
+September. School opened on the fifteenth. It seemed a long time to wait
+to see her friends again—for the doctor was certain that her mother
+would not be able to bear her weight on the injured ankle for a month to
+come.
+
+Meanwhile Winona wrote to the girls, and her mother and Florence kept
+track, in what Winona considered a very wild way, of the things she did
+that should entitle her to honors. The honor-list and a sheet of blanks
+lived under her mother’s pillow, Winona was sure. If it gave her mother
+pleasure she was glad to have her do it; but it occurred to Winona the
+day after Louise left that it mightn’t be a bad scheme to collect a few
+honors herself, things that she was sure would count. Also she wanted
+some fun, and she had found that the acquiring of honors usually led to
+it. So Winona proceeded to “start something.”
+
+To begin with, next door lived Nataly Lee. Winona went over there the
+very afternoon of the day Louise left, and spent the most persuasive
+three hours of her life, explaining to Nataly that they, as the only two
+Camp Fire Girls in town, ought to start some good times for other
+people, who, not being Camp Fire Girls, probably didn’t know how. And
+before she went back to get supper she had persuaded Nataly she was
+right.
+
+Next day she and Nataly, cheerful and enthusiastic, made a canvass of
+the girls in their classes who were staying home. Winona had rather gone
+on the principle that nearly everyone was off somewhere else, but she
+found it wasn’t so at all. There were six girls beside herself and
+Nataly who were ready and willing to join a Porch Club that was to meet
+once a week, and have a picnic one week and a party the next.
+
+Winona and Tom and Billy, with Nataly, even, helping once in a while,
+spent some time in furnishing the Merriam porch with chairs and hammocks
+and screens and lanterns. Then the boys went forth and invited their own
+friends with a lavish hand. The first porch party was a grand success,
+although there were about three boys to one girl. But that righted
+itself next time, which was three days later, for the Porch Club made an
+unanimous and prompt decision that it wanted to meet twice a week. And
+more girls wanted to join. So, although they were not like her own old
+comrades, Winona found that she was making friends whom she would never
+have had at all, if it had not been that she was cut off from her own
+set of girls, still having good times at Camp Karonya. As for Nataly,
+she was a marvellously different person. The work of management, of
+social entertaining, proved to be exactly what she could do best. And
+having to teach things to others (for the Porch Club added an afternoon
+session, devoted to hand-craft work and reading aloud), made her find
+that she could do things very well here that she hadn’t liked doing in
+camp at all! As for Winona, she let Nataly run things as much as she
+wanted to. She herself was just what she had always been, Ray of Light,
+holding the girls and boys together by her brightness and her fondness
+for them. She was the centre of things, after all. Not that she realized
+it, particularly; she only thought how queer it was that there were so
+many nice, friendly people in the world, willing to do nice things and
+have nice times if you only suggested it. And there are, too.
+
+“And, Helen and Louise dear,” Winona wrote to her own two best friends
+back at Camp Karonya. “Some of the girls in our classes that we scarcely
+knew, and thought were quiet and stupid, are as nice and bright and
+funny as ever they can be, and ever so Camp Firey! I believe we can
+organize another Camp Fire this fall. And I have my housework arranged
+so that I have two hours in the morning, and most of my afternoon and
+evening, to do what I please with. So I have a gorgeous time working for
+honors. It’s a scheme I shan’t tell you about till it’s all worked out
+and over with, but I think it’s going to work all right. Florence
+suggested it, bless her heart. Love to the whole Camp Fire, and ask them
+to take a hike for me!”
+
+Winona’s supplementary plan for honor-winning had been suggested to her
+this way:
+
+One day she was on the back porch, mending, and Florence had four bosom
+friends out in the back garden, making a most fearful racket. Mrs.
+Merriam had a headache, and Winona knew that in a little while the
+headache would be worse, or that she would have to go and send
+Florence’s friends home, which meant hurting that independent young
+person’s feelings.
+
+“Florence,” called Winona, “wouldn’t you and the other girls like me to
+come down to the end of the garden and tell you fairy-stories?”
+
+The little girls seemed to very much want to. So Winona took her mending
+and her rocker, and they sat down in the shelter of a big tree. Winona
+told them stories till it was time for her to go in and see about
+supper. By then her mother’s headache was over. But after supper
+Florence came up to Winona, and said, “The girls want to ask something.
+They want to know if you won’t tell them stories other times, too!”
+
+“Why, what a lovely idea!” said Winona. “Of course I will!”
+
+So to the Porch Club and the housekeeping Winona added two hours every
+other day, telling stories to Florence and her small friends. She felt
+rather shy over it at first, but gradually it began to be more and more
+easy. When the fairy-tales ran low she went to the library and hunted
+out the Robin Hood and Arthur legends, and even history stories once in
+awhile. And one day when she was rummaging the card catalogue for more
+stories about King Arthur she found out that the Malory book was only a
+very little of what there was to be told. Everything seemed to lead
+somewhere else. So the story-hours kept to King Arthur, except for one
+fairy afternoon a week, for the rest of the month, and Winona learned a
+good deal about him that she would never have found out by herself.
+
+After one or two meetings, sewing as she talked, she began to show the
+children a little about darning, too. They brought stockings after that,
+and kept quieter, she found, when they were working as well as she. The
+most surprising thing of all to her was that she had time enough for
+everything. The story-hours took care of all the household mending that
+her mother did not do; the Porch Club, which met at different houses in
+rotation, was no trouble at all, merely a good-times affair. The
+housekeeping was running smoothly, and Winona got time for
+letter-writing and walks with the boys, and even practice on the piano.
+There were lots of places where she and Nataly and Tom and Billy could
+go trolley riding on hot evenings, and there were always boys and girls
+running in and out, asking her to go places and do things. Winona
+discovered, as others have before her, that you can have a very good
+time by staying home in the summer.
+
+One night, toward the last of August, her mother asked her a question.
+
+“How would you like to go back to camp to celebrate your birthday,
+dear?” she asked.
+
+Now Winona’s birthday, her fifteenth, was on the eleventh of September,
+just two days before the girls were coming back.
+
+“I would, very much,” she said, “but do you think you will be able to
+spare me?”
+
+“I am quite sure of it,” said her mother. “Indeed, I might be able to
+take charge of the house again by next week, if my ankle improves as it
+is doing now.”
+
+“Oh, no,” said Winona, “I won’t take the risk. Besides, I couldn’t leave
+the story-hour children, and the Porch Club has to have some things
+planned for it that I think I’d better help with. But if I can go up
+there over my birthday it will be lovely.”
+
+“You’ll have to get somebody else to tell the stories while you’re gone,
+then,” said Florence. “I don’t want my story-hour broken up!”
+
+“By all means, don’t break up Florence’s private story-hour!” said Tom.
+“Why don’t you do the story-telling yourself, Floss?”
+
+But, “That’s true, Florence,” said Winona. “I think I can find one of
+the girls in the Porch Club who will do it. You see, mother dear, I’ll
+need to get all the loose ends up out of the way if I go back even for
+three days!”
+
+But all the loose ends tied themselves up neatly. Ellen Marks, one of
+the nicest of the Porch Club girls, promised to tell the stories for the
+two days Winona would miss. Nataly could look after things elsewhere,
+and by the eleventh Mrs. Merriam was nearly as well as ever. So the
+morning of that day saw Winona on her way back to Camp Karonya, with joy
+in her heart, and her ceremonial costume over her arm, in a special bag.
+
+The whole crowd of girls rushed out to meet her, and sang a cheer from
+the time her motor-boat was in sight till she landed. They surrounded
+her, and carried her into camp, where supper was nearly ready.
+
+It seemed very good to be back. The pine needles smelled as woodsily as
+ever, and the long wooden table looked very homelike, with its brown,
+chattering girls surrounding it, all trying to tell her everything at
+once. As soon as supper was over Helen and Louise swept her off to her
+old tent.
+
+“Hurry,” said Helen. “Get into your ceremonial costume, honey. Heap big
+Council Fire to-night.”
+
+“Council Fire?” said Winona in surprise. “Why, is it the night for it?”
+
+“This is an extra-special,” explained Helen hastily. “Here, Win, let me
+help you.”
+
+She began to unfasten Winona’s travelling suit.
+
+“You have a lot more beads than you had,” Winona observed a little
+wistfully, as Helen took her own gown down from the wall and began to
+put it on.
+
+Helen laughed as she slung the long string of colored honor-beads around
+her neck.
+
+“Maybe you’ll catch up,” she remarked carelessly. “You’ll doubtless get
+an honor or so to-night.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Winona. “I ought to get a bead or two for home-craft,
+and I did some story-hour work, too.”
+
+“As if that was all you did!” said Helen indignantly; and stopped
+herself short.
+
+“Hurry up, girls!” said Louise, sticking her bead-banded head into the
+tent. “Time to begin. Hear the drum!”
+
+“Oh, the nice old drum!” cried Winona happily, as she heard its
+well-remembered monotonous sound in the distance. The three girls linked
+arms, and hurried to the council hill.
+
+“Oh, but it’s good to be back!” said Winona for the third or fourth
+time, as she sank into her place in the circle around the first place.
+She listened dreamily as the ceremony of fire-lighting and all the rest
+went forward. Things had been happening, it appeared. The reports were
+given one by one. Winona listened on, and Hike the Camp Cat trotted
+noiselessly over the ground and curled himself into Winona’s lap. Even
+he remembered her. She stroked him and listened.
+
+Helen, they told, had managed to coax an old farmer down the road, the
+identical one they didn’t buy the music-box of, to stop setting traps
+that hurt rabbits. Louise had, after many hoppings about in solitude,
+actually managed to master five folk-dances. Adelaide and little Frances
+had made an emergency dash down the river to get the doctor, when one of
+the other little girls had fallen from a tree and broken her wrist.
+There were other things as thrilling.
+
+“And all I did was stay home!” thought Winona as the tales went on, and
+the beads were awarded. Then she sat up and began to listen more
+closely, for Mrs. Bryan, Opeechee herself, was rising to give this
+report, and that was something sure to be special and worth while. When
+Opeechee related what a girl had done it was an honor worth having.
+
+“You have all done well, and deserved the honors you have been awarded
+on this, our final Council in the open,” began the Guardian. “Here,
+together in the woods, it has been easy to follow the law of the fire.
+We have found it so, I know.
+
+“But now I want to tell you about a watcher of the Camp Fire who has
+been following the law without any of the helps we have. She gave up the
+camp and its good times, and went back to assume the duties of a
+woman—the tending of the real Fire of home. She had charge of the
+household. She kept a family of four beside herself, including an
+invalid mother, comfortable, well taken care of and happy, for one
+month. She made a pleasure out of her duties, and showed others how.
+Besides this, she collected girls who had not much social life and gave
+it to them. She led them for a month, three times a week. She told
+children stories and taught them sewing every other day for a month. And
+through it all she was happy, and made light for others wherever she
+went. She has carried the Torch of happiness and health and work and
+love, and passed it on undimmed to others. Winona, the Flashing Ray of
+Light, is just fifteen to-night. That is the earliest age at which
+anyone can be made a Torch-bearer—but I think she deserves the rank,
+Sisters of the Camp Fire. What do you say?”
+
+Before the girls could answer Winona was on her feet with the kitten in
+her arms, scarlet and protesting.
+
+“But I didn’t do all those wonderful things, Opeechee!” she cried. “I
+just did what there was to do. I like to plan things and have people
+have good times. I just wanted to get as good a time out of it all as I
+could. And I don’t believe I have enough honor beads to be a
+Torch-bearer.”
+
+Mrs. Bryan paid her protest very little attention.
+
+“What do you say, Sisters of the Camp Fire?”
+
+The girls burst out into cheering.
+
+“Winona, Flashing Ray of Light, is to take the rank of Torch-bearer
+to-day,” repeated Mrs. Bryan inexorably. “Rise, Winona.”
+
+And as Winona stood up again (she had sat down hastily after her first
+objection) Mrs. Bryan repeated the honors she had won, and that her
+mother and Florence had kept track of so faithfully. She had expected
+the honor for story-telling, but the one for marketing—and the one for
+folk-songs—and—why, that Alice Brown pantomime had meant an honor
+bead! So had bringing in and arranging her mother’s invalid-tray, and
+the Porch Club and the story-hour had given her a double right to the
+Torch-bearer rank, which requires leadership of a group. Then, of
+course, the wood-craft honors she had won before she went home—she had
+known about those. But to think that everything, even that hilarious
+ten-course dinner she and Louise had planned, had been good for a bead!
+Winona had far more than the fifteen required honors for the highest
+rank of the Camp Fire.
+
+“Repeat the Torch-bearer’s Desire, Winona,” said Mrs. Bryan, and Winona,
+half in a dream, said,
+
+ The light which has been given me
+ I desire to pass undimmed to others.
+
+Mrs. Bryan stepped forward, and threw a string of beads over her head.
+She had not been in Camp till now, and so the beads had not come one by
+one as they generally did. She fastened the pin on Winona’s breast, and
+stepped back, while the girls sang a tempestuous cheer.
+
+Winona sat down on the grass, still bewildered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Well, how does it feel to be a Torch-bearer—the only one in Camp?”
+asked Helen late that night, as the girls were undressing together.
+
+“Wonderful—only I don’t believe it, yet!” said Winona. “Think of all
+those honors that I never even dreamed I was getting—and to think I was
+having such fun getting them, too! It seems as if I ought to have worked
+so hard it was uncomfortable, somehow, to deserve them.”
+
+“It was dreadfully hard to keep the surprise a secret, sometimes,” said
+Helen. “When your letters were a wee little bit lonesome, sometimes, we
+had hard work keeping Louise from telling. Oh, Winona, all the girls are
+so glad!”
+
+“I’m glad, too,” said Winona soberly. “And oh, Helen, I _am_ going to
+keep on carrying the torch, too—as high as ever I can!”
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Winona of the Camp Fire
+
+Author: Margaret Widdemer
+
+Release Date: August 26, 2011 [EBook #37207]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THEY DESCENDED IN A BODY ON ADELAIDE'S TENT _Page 125_]
+
+
+
+
+ WINONA OF THE
+ CAMP FIRE
+
+ By MARGARET WIDDEMER
+
+ Author of
+ "Winona of Camp Karonya," "Winona's War
+ Farm," "Winona's Way."
+
+ A. L. BURT COMPANY
+ Publishers--New York
+
+ _Published by arrangement with J. B. Lippincott Company_
+
+ Printed in U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ONE
+
+
+The room they called the Den in Winnie Merriam's house was dark, except
+for the leaping wood-fire in the big stone fireplace. Around the fire
+sat and lay five girls. They had been toasting marshmallows, but they
+were past the point where you eat the toasted ones with pleasure, or
+even steal the raw ones--which don't taste burnt--to eat
+surreptitiously.
+
+"Helen Bryan, you've been feeding Puppums all your marshmallows for the
+last ten minutes," accused Winnie, sitting up. She had been draping
+herself along a pile of cushions for the last fifteen minutes--thinking,
+evidently, for she had been quiet--a very unusual thing for chattering
+Winnie.
+
+Winnie Merriam was fourteen, but people usually took her for a year
+older, because of her slim height. She had big blue eyes in a face that
+was not regularly pretty, perhaps, but so gay and pink-cheeked and
+quick-smiling that people always _said_ she was pretty--which does quite
+as well.
+
+Her chum, Helen, defiantly fed a last marshmallow to the fat
+near-fox-terrier in the centre of the circle, who didn't particularly
+seem to want it.
+
+"I've got to be polite to my hostess's dog, haven't I?" she retorted.
+"And he asked for them so pathetically!"
+
+"I expect the poor old pup will look more pathetic this time to-morrow,"
+said Winnie. "He'll probably look like Buster Brown's Tige in the last
+pictures--both paws up over his aching head. Then you'll have to come
+back here and hold ice on his fevered brow, won't she, Puppums?"
+
+"Or yours, maybe," suggested Marie Hunter, the quiet brown girl in the
+corner. "What's the matter, Win? You haven't said a word for ages. I've
+been watching you."
+
+"I've been _thinking_!" explained Winnie, nodding her curly brown head
+with dignity.
+
+"For the first time?" suggested Helen. "Don't do it if it hurts, honey."
+
+"No," said Winnie placidly, "I've often been known to do it."
+
+"Well, what were you thinking?" asked Edith Hillis, lifting her yellow
+curls from Marie's lap. Edith was the fluffy member of the crowd, small
+for her age, yellow-haired and blue-eyed and rather too much dressed.
+She was supposed to care more for her complexion than for anything else
+on earth except Marie Hunter, but she was as sweet-tempered as she could
+be, and everybody liked her. "You looked as if you were thinking about
+something awfully interesting."
+
+"Well," said Winnie slowly, "I was thinking about _us_. We know each
+other very, very well, and go together, and have gorgeous times--I was
+thinking that it would be nice if we made ourselves into a club, or some
+sort of a society."
+
+"Oh, say! That's a perfectly gorgeous idea!" exclaimed chubby,
+red-haired Louise Lane, from behind Helen. "I vote we _be_ a club, right
+away!"
+
+"But is five enough?" asked Marie doubtfully. Marie was always the one
+who thought of things. She was a good deal of a bookworm, and did a
+great deal of beautiful embroidery, and never said much. But she was the
+one the girls were apt to ask advice of if they needed it badly. She was
+nearly a year older than Winnie and Edith. Louise wasn't quite fourteen,
+and Helen would be fifteen in two months.
+
+"I think five's plenty," said Louise.
+
+"I don't, exactly," demurred Winnie. "Seems to me there ought to be
+seven or eight anyway, or we'd be like an army all major-generals."
+
+"All right," came from Helen sleepily. "But that can wait. I think the
+thing to make up our minds about first is--what would it do if it was a
+club? I mean clubs have to have some object."
+
+"Why!" exclaimed Winnie blankly, "I never thought of that!"
+
+"Well," still opposed Louise, "I don't see why we have to have an
+object. Just meet, and have a president and secretary and things, and
+enjoy ourselves."
+
+"What about an embroidery club?" suggested Edith. "Marie and I like to
+embroider."
+
+"I _don't_," said Louise flatly.
+
+"Nannie was telling me about a walking-club she belonged to," Helen
+suggested pacifically.
+
+Nannie was Helen's step-mother--not at all like the step-mothers in the
+fairy-tales, but a pretty, gay woman of about twenty-eight, who was
+great friends with her step-daughter and the step-daughter's chums.
+
+"A hiking-club?" asked Winnie. "That would be fun. Why couldn't we
+combine both those things in one?"
+
+"Lovely!" jeered Louise. "I can see myself trotting along up a mountain,
+embroidering as I go!"
+
+"Listen to Louise being sarcastic!" said Helen. "I think the idea of
+combining two or three things is a splendid one."
+
+"What's splendid?" asked a bright voice from the darkness at the other
+end of the room.
+
+"Oh, are you there, Nannie?" called Helen. "We're planning a club--a
+very fine combination club where you do everything."
+
+"It sounds like a Camp Fire," said Nannie. "Your father's downstairs,
+Helen. I ran up to tell you that we're ready to go whenever you are."
+
+"Oh, not yet, please!" begged Winnie. "What is a Camp Fire, Mrs. Bryan?
+Do come sit down by us, and have some marshmallows."
+
+"It corresponds to the Boy Scouts," Mrs. Bryan explained, dropping down
+among the girls, "and it includes doing about everything there is to do.
+It's national, though, and you're affiliated with headquarters."
+
+[Illustration: THEY MADE HER TELL THEM ALL SHE KNEW ABOUT CAMP FIRES]
+
+"Regular dues and meetings?" asked Helen, pricking up her ears. "Oh,
+stay here, Nannie, and tell us all about it!"
+
+They surrounded Mrs. Bryan, and made her tell them all she knew about
+Camp Fires, which was a good deal.
+
+"I like it!" announced Louise when Mrs. Bryan was done. "Me be heap big
+chiefess--wahoo-oo!"
+
+She jumped up as she spoke and waved Helen's best hat above her head for
+a hatchet.
+
+"Oh, my hat!" cried Helen, making a wild dive for it. Puppums thought it
+was all a game for his special benefit, and dived after them--and the
+meeting broke up in disorder. But not before the girls had decided to
+_be_ a Camp Fire, and made Mrs. Bryan promise to act as their Guardian.
+
+Winnie, after the girls had gone, returned alone to the fire, and sat
+down by it, thinking over the things she had been hearing.
+
+"It's going to be heaps of fun," was the first thing she thought, and
+then, "It's going to take lots of time!"
+
+Then she got up and shook herself. "Anyway, I love it!" she decided.
+Then she put the lights out and went to bed.
+
+Helen Bryan was over early next morning.
+
+"Oh, Winnie!" she called up to her friend's window.
+
+"Come on up!" called Winnie back. "I've just had my bath, but I haven't
+finished dressing."
+
+Helen came in by the open back door, spoke to Mrs. Merriam, who was
+getting breakfast, and tore up the stairs to Winnie's room.
+
+"Oh, there's such heaps to tell!" she announced before she was well
+inside the room. "Rings and bands and dresses and ceremonies
+and--everything! Only we will have to take more girls in. You have to
+have at least seven to start with."
+
+Helen stopped for lack of breath, and dropped on the bed. Winnie, who
+was doing her hair before the mirror, turned around.
+
+"It's like the Boy Scouts, only it's girls," she decided thoughtfully.
+"Helen, I don't see why we can't have just as good times as they do.
+Tom's always telling about the glorious times his patrol had last
+summer, camping up near Wampoag. I don't see why we shouldn't go
+camping, too, and have heaps of fun!"
+
+"Why, of course we can!" agreed Helen. "None of your mothers will mind
+if Nannie goes along, and she'll have to if she's Guardian."
+
+"Come on down and have breakfast with us," invited Winnie, straightening
+up from her last shoe-lace. "You haven't told me half the things there
+are to tell."
+
+"Well, I've had breakfast," said Helen, "but----"
+
+"Oh, you can eat some more," insisted Winnie. "We're going to have
+flapjacks and maple syrup."
+
+"Well, all right," said Helen, weakening. Flapjacks and maple syrup did
+sound good. So they went down together to the breakfast table.
+
+Winnie's family, her father and mother and her brother Tom, and
+eight-year-old Florence, had to be told all about it.
+
+"Can't I be a Fire Camp Girl, too?" demanded Florence on the spot.
+
+"I don't know yet," said Helen. "We'll have to find out."
+
+"I will be, whether you find out or not," said Florence, who was a
+determined young person, and something of a tagger.
+
+"Well, thank goodness, to-day's Saturday," and Winnie changed the
+subject cheerfully. "We have all day to find out in, and there's
+scarcely any home-work to do. Have you any, Helen?"
+
+"Only a little history," said Helen, "and I can do that to-night."
+
+"Such heaps of good times coming!" sang Winnie rapturously as she sprang
+up from the table, to get a fresh supply of flapjacks.
+
+"If you have as good a time as the Scouts do you'll have fun, all
+right," said Tom. "But I don't see how you can--just girls!"
+
+Helen laughed, but his sister flew up.
+
+"We can, and better, too," she flashed. "Just you wait and see!"
+
+"Seeing's believing," said Tom mischievously, passing his plate for the
+flapjacks as Winnie brought in the heaping plate that had been keeping
+hot in the oven.
+
+"That's true," said his father gravely, putting a pile of buttered
+quarter-sections on his son's plate. "At least, nobody who hadn't seen
+it would believe you could eat so many flapjacks and not explode!"
+
+Everyone laughed; but Tom calmly went on eating.
+
+"They're awfully good, mother," he said. "I'll tell you, Winnie, if you
+could learn to make as good flapjacks as mother with your Fire Camping,
+as Florence calls it, you'd be doing something worth while."
+
+"Oh, I don't suppose there's anything about flapjacks in it--do you
+think there could be, Helen?" asked Winnie.
+
+Mrs. Merriam laughed a little.
+
+"Well, do you know, my dears," she said, "I have a strange feeling that
+there _is!_"
+
+"I don't see how," doubted Winona. "But maybe, if I get time, Tom, I'll
+learn how to make them. Come on, Helen, let's go back to Nannie and ask
+her all the questions we can think of."
+
+The two girls ran out hand-in-hand.
+
+"Are there flapjacks in it, mother?" asked little Florence.
+
+Mrs. Merriam laughed again as she began to clear the table.
+
+"There are, and a great deal besides, or I'm much mistaken, dear!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWO
+
+
+Within the next week Mrs. Bryan had sent for and filled out and returned
+the application blanks, and now the girls were merely waiting for the
+return of the blanks and their charter. Meanwhile, out of school hours,
+Winnie helped her mother about the house.
+
+"I mayn't have time for much housework when I belong to the Camp Fire,"
+she thought, "and I'd better do all I can now."
+
+So she learned a good deal about cooking, and helped regularly with the
+dishes--and with the supper-getting and tidying. Finally--it was almost
+the end of May by then--the charter came, and material for the
+ceremonial dresses, and various other things; and the girls held their
+first Camp Fire. It was at Winnie's house, with its big fireplace, that
+they had it. Mrs. Bryan invited two other girls to join, to make up the
+number; Dorothy Gray and Adelaide Hughes. Dorothy the girls all knew and
+liked--she was everybody's choice for one of the vacant places--but
+nobody knew much about Adelaide, who was a newcomer in town, except that
+she had no mother, and lived with her father and her younger brother and
+little sister in one of the few apartment-houses that were beginning to
+be put up in the little town where the girls all lived. She was a quiet,
+rather sullen girl, and she dressed badly--almost untidily. The girls
+were surprised at her joining, for she seemed to keep away from people
+almost as if she did it on purpose. But Mrs. Bryan wanted her in, and
+the girls would any of them have done anything for Mrs. Bryan. Only they
+confided to each other that they hoped Adelaide wouldn't spoil the fun.
+
+As each girl came, the night of the first meeting, she was taken, not
+into the living-room, but to a little room beside it, and asked to wait
+there for the rest. Edith Hillis was the last to come, and then they
+were summoned into the other room. It was lighted only by the blaze of
+the fire.
+
+Helen explained things to the girls, as her step-mother had explained to
+her.
+
+"When the drum begins to beat we are to come in, Indian file," she
+reminded them, as a soft, measured beat began to be heard in the next
+room.
+
+Putting herself at the head of the line, she led the seven girls into
+the room to the rhythmic beating. They circled around it once, then sat
+down in a ring about the fireplace, and looked at Mrs. Bryan with
+admiration.
+
+She had on a straight brownish gown, with deep fringes at its bottom.
+She sat on the floor by a curious drum, of a sort most of them had never
+even seen pictures of. She was beating it softly, Indian fashion, with
+her closed fist.
+
+"Welcome," she spoke clearly, rising as the girls came to a halt around
+her. "Have you come desiring to make a Camp Fire and tend it?"
+
+"Yes," answered all the girls. It was then that they dropped into their
+places, in a semi-circle around the fire and their Guardian.
+
+Then each of the girls, in turn, rose and repeated her wish to become a
+Camp Fire Girl, and follow the Law of the Fire. When they had all
+finished Mrs. Bryan leaned back in her corner, and talked to them about
+the Law--what each of the seven parts of it meant.
+
+"Why--it covers everything!" said Winnie.
+
+"It certainly does!" seconded Louise. "All I have to do, it seems to me,
+is to go on living, and I'll acquire unnumbered honor beads."
+
+"You may think so," Helen warned her, "but you'll find there's plenty to
+learn about it. I've been studying it out."
+
+"Oh, that's all right!" said Louise airily. She caught up the manual as
+she spoke, and ran her eye down the list of honors by the firelight.
+"Wash and iron a shirtwaist--I love to wash things. Make a bed for two
+months--I'd be hung with beads if I had one for every two months I've
+made my bed. Abstain from gum, candy, ice-cream--oh, good gracious!"
+
+"That counts as much as the rest," said Winnie mischievously, "and think
+how good it will be for you!"
+
+"I'll get thin," Louise remarked thoughtfully. "What are you going to
+start with, Winnie?"
+
+"Health-craft, I think." Winona had taken the book in her turn, and was
+looking through the pages. "I've always wanted to learn horseback
+riding, and I think perhaps father'll let me, now it's in a book as
+something you ought to do." Then she remembered what her brother had
+said about the flapjacks, and she shook her head as she passed on the
+book. "No," she corrected herself, "I don't believe that will be the
+first thing I'll do. I think I need home-craft quite as much as I do
+learning to ride."
+
+"What about you, Helen?" asked Louise.
+
+"Why, clay-modelling and brass-work, or things like that," was the
+prompt answer. "I want to take up art-craft when I get older, and I
+might as well begin."
+
+"Can you clay-model in camp?" asked Louise.
+
+"Just as well as you can make a shirtwaist," replied Helen, unruffled.
+
+"I like the hand-crafts, too," said Edith Hillis. "I think I shall
+specialize on fancy-work."
+
+"Always a perfect lady!" teased Louise, who was something of a tomboy,
+and frankly thought it was silly of Edith to refuse to get her hair wet
+in the swimming-pool, and wear veils for her complexion.
+
+The other three girls, Marie Hunter and Dorothy Gray and Adelaide
+Hughes, did not say what honors they were going to work for. Everybody
+was pretty sure that Marie was going to write a play, and Dorothy did
+beautiful needle-work. But as for Adelaide, silent in her place, nobody
+could guess.
+
+"You mustn't any of you forget that there's sewing to do, right now,"
+warned Mrs. Bryan. "And I want all of you to look at my dress, because
+each of you will have to make one like it."
+
+She stood up again, and they all examined the straight khaki dress with
+its leather fringes.
+
+"That won't be especially hard to make," concluded Marie, who did most
+of her own sewing. "There's a pattern, isn't there, Mrs. Bryan?"
+
+"Oh, yes, and I have it. And there's one more thing, girls--two, rather.
+We must each choose a name, and a symbol to go with the name. Then we
+have to name the Camp Fire."
+
+"A name--how do you mean?" asked Winnie.
+
+"I mean that, of course, our Camp Fire has to be called something.
+Beside that, so does each Camp Fire Girl. I like birds and bird-study,
+so I am going to call myself 'Opeechee,' the Robin, and take a pair of
+spread wings for my symbol. It's to put on one's personal belongings
+like a crest--see? as I have it on this pillow-top."
+
+The girls clustered around her to see the symbol, stencilled on the
+pillow-cover on her lap. She told them she was going to burn it on her
+shirtwaist box as well, and showed them where she had woven it into her
+headband, a gorgeous thing of brown and orange-red beads.
+
+"It would go on a paddle-blade, too," said Helen thoughtfully.
+
+"It shall on mine to-morrow," declared Marie. "That is, if I've thought
+of a symbol by then," she added prudently.
+
+"I think this new name idea is perfectly gorgeous!" cried Louise
+enthusiastically. "I've always hated my name--you'd expect a Louise to
+be tall and severe and haughty--and look at _me!_"
+
+She jumped up in the firelight and spread out her plump arms tragically.
+
+"We see you!" nodded Helen calmly, and Louise sat down again.
+
+"You'll be glad you have red hair when you're grown up," consoled Edith.
+"It's supposed to be very beautiful."
+
+"Well, it _isn't_," said Louise energetically, "with people always
+asking after the white horse. I wonder why red-haired girls and white
+horses are supposed to go together?"
+
+But nobody could tell her. They were all clustered about Mrs. Bryan and
+the manual, choosing names, and planning symbols, and you couldn't hear
+yourself think. Winnie and Helen and Mrs. Bryan had planned to finish
+the evening by playing games, but all the girls were so busy talking
+that it was impossible to get a game in edgewise.
+
+Presently Mrs. Merriam and little Florence came in with cocoa and
+sandwiches. And then, at about ten-thirty, the meeting broke up, after
+planning a bacon-bat for the next Saturday.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Winnie Merriam sat, as she loved to sit, by the dying fire. Her mother
+began to clear away the dishes, but Winnie stopped her with:
+
+"Please wait a little while, and talk to me, mother. I haven't had half
+enough sandwiches, and besides, the nicest part of a party is talking it
+over afterwards."
+
+"Very well," said Mrs. Merriam, sitting down across from her daughter
+and helping herself to something to eat. "I didn't get much chance at
+the refreshments either, I was so busy helping you serve them. What was
+it you wanted to say particularly, dear?"
+
+"I wanted to ask you about my name, mother. I wasn't christened
+'Winnie,' was I?"
+
+"Why, no, dear--you know that. You were christened 'Winona,' after your
+grandmother--only somehow, we never called you that."
+
+"It's a real Indian name, isn't it?" asked Winnie.
+
+"It certainly is," her mother assured her. "Why, dear, I've told you the
+story of it many a time."
+
+"Not for a long time now," persuaded her daughter. "I think I've
+forgotten some of it. Didn't a real Indian give it to grandmother?"
+
+"The Indian didn't exactly give it to her, it belonged to the Indian's
+baby."
+
+"Oh, tell me the story!" urged Florence sleepily. "I want to hear, too!"
+
+Mrs. Merriam made room for Florence in her lap, and went on above her
+with the sandwich and the story.
+
+"Your great-grandfather was an Indian missionary, and when he and your
+Great-grandmother Martin went out to live among the Indians, they took
+with them their little baby daughter, so young they had not named her
+yet. Well, one day, while your grandmother was sitting on the steps of
+the log house where they lived with her baby on her lap, a squaw came
+along with _her_ baby. She had it strapped to her back, the way they
+carry them, you know. She was a stranger, not one of the mission
+Indians, and oh, so tired and ragged and dusty!
+
+"Great-grandmother Martin couldn't understand her language, but she
+beckoned her into the house and gave her food for herself and milk for
+the baby. And then, by signs, she asked the baby's name. And the Indian
+woman said 'Winona--papoose Winona--yes.' It seemed she could speak a
+very little English. So then Great-grandmother Martin asked the woman
+what the name meant--for all Indian names have meanings, you know. But
+the woman hadn't enough English words to answer her. So she got up from
+the floor where she had been sitting and took the bright steel
+bread-knife that lay where great-grandmother had been cutting bread for
+her. She held it in a ray of sunlight that crossed the room, and shook
+it so the light flashed and was reflected, bright and quivering, in the
+room.
+
+"'That Winona!' she explained.
+
+"After she was rested she wouldn't stay. She went on her travels,
+wherever she was going,--great-grandmother never saw her again. But she
+didn't forget the name, and as soon as she could she asked the Indian
+interpreter what 'Winona' really meant. He told her that it was the name
+of another tribe for 'ray of light that sparkles,' or 'flashing ray of
+light.'
+
+"So Great-grandmother Martin named her own little girl Winona. The name
+was pretty, and the meaning was prettier still. And she grew up and
+married Grandfather Merriam--and when you came we named you for her."
+
+"Then it really is a sure-enough Indian name," said its owner. "And the
+meaning is lovely. 'A ray of flashing light'--you couldn't ask to be
+anything better than that, could you, mother? I believe if I can I shall
+keep my own name for the Camp Fire. It is prettier than anything I could
+make up or find."
+
+"It certainly is," said her mother.
+
+"Why didn't I have a Nindian name, too?" clamored Florence aggrievedly,
+sitting up and rubbing her eyes.
+
+"Because your other grandmother didn't," said her mother, kissing her.
+"One Indian maiden in a family is enough. What names have the other
+girls chosen, Winnie?"
+
+Winona began to laugh.
+
+"Louise says she is going to call herself 'Ishkoodah'--don't you
+remember, in Hiawatha, 'Ishkoodah, the Comet--Ishkoodah, with fiery
+tresses?' she says she thinks she can make a lovely symbol out of it.
+It's funny, but Louise is always doing funny things. I think she's
+really in earnest about this. And Helen says she's going to call herself
+'Night-Star.' We don't know the Indian for that yet, but we're going to
+hunt it up at the library. She thinks she will specialize on
+astronomy--learn what the constellations are, you know. I'd like to do
+that, too. All I know is the Big Dipper, and that the slanty W set up
+sidewise is Cassiopea's Chair. I learned that from the little Storyland
+of Stars you gave me when I was seven."
+
+"I want to know chairs, too," said Florence drowsily.
+
+"All right, dear, you shall," soothed Winona. Then she went on talking
+to her mother.
+
+"So all the girls said they'd take sky names, and we decided to call our
+camp by the Indian name for the sky, because we want to camp out as much
+as we can."
+
+"I think that is a good idea," said Mrs. Merriam.
+
+"It was mine," said Winona. "But Mrs. Bryan remembered an Indian name
+for it--Karonya. We're Camp Karonya--isn't that pretty? And then Marie
+remembered the Indian name for South-Wind, one of them, Shawondassee,
+and took it. But the rest couldn't think of Indian names, so we waited
+to hunt some."
+
+"Do the names have to be Indian?"
+
+"Oh, no," Winnie answered sleepily, "but it's better."
+
+"Come!" said her mother, setting Florence, who was fast asleep, on her
+feet. "We'd all better go to bed, or we'll be too sleepy to go to church
+to-morrow."
+
+"And the sooner I go to sleep the sooner next Saturday will come, as you
+used to say when I was a little girl," added Winona. "Oh, I can scarcely
+wait to find out what a bacon-bat really is on its native heath--or
+anywhere, for that matter."
+
+"Didn't they tell you what it was?"
+
+"No--Marie is planning it, and she wouldn't say, except that it would be
+heaps of fun, and I was to bring a dozen rolls and some salt and a
+jack-knife. I'll have to borrow Tom's. Good-night, mother dear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THREE
+
+
+"Have you got everything, Winnie?" asked Helen anxiously, as they met
+half-way between Winnie's gate and Helen's, about ten o'clock on
+Saturday morning.
+
+"I think so," answered Helen a little uncertainly. "Marie told me to
+bring a pound of bacon--that's all. What are you bringing?"
+
+"Two dozen humble, necessary rolls," said Winnie, "and salt. I had to
+buy a knife, because Tom lost his yesterday. He loses it regularly, once
+a week."
+
+"Pity he picked out to-day," commented Helen as they fell into step. "Do
+you suppose we'll be late?"
+
+"Mercy, no!" said Winnie, "We're more likely to be the first!"
+
+"We won't be"--and Helen laughed--"Louise is always the earliest
+everywhere. She says she's lost more perfectly good time being punctual
+than any other way she knows."
+
+"Well, we'll be ahead of Edith, anyway," Winnie remarked cheerfully. She
+adjusted the two dozen rolls more easily, for that many rolls, when you
+have far to carry them, have a way of feeling lumpy.
+
+"It's a good thing it isn't far to the trolley!" said Helen. "I didn't
+know how nubbly this bacon was going to be."
+
+"So are my rolls! Let's trade," suggested Winnie brilliantly.
+
+"Almost human intelligence!" gibed Helen; so they traded, and each found
+her load much more comfortable than the one she'd had before--which says
+a good deal for the powers of imagination.
+
+"Don't let's sit up on the benches of that trolley-station--they're the
+most uncomfortable things in town!" objected Winnie. "Come on, Helen.
+Let's be real sports, and sit on the grass."
+
+"I do believe we're the first!" was Helen's sole reply, as she eyed the
+little trolley-station worriedly.
+
+"Oh, we _can't_ be," said Winnie confidently, "unless Louise has died or
+gone West. If she's in the land of the living I know she's here. Once I
+asked the crowd over in the afternoon to make fudge, and she got there
+just as I was in the middle of sweeping out the kitchen, at one
+o'clock!"
+
+"You never told me about that!" reminded Helen interestedly. "What did
+you do?"
+
+Winona laughed. "Do! I didn't have to do anything. Louise did the
+doing--she took the broom out of my hands, and sent me flying upstairs
+to dress, and did the sweeping herself! Oh, and there she is!
+Lou-i-ise!"
+
+"Here I am!" Louise answered placidly, rising up in her white blouse
+from the very centre of the field by the station, and looking, with the
+sun shining on her brilliant hair, like a large white blossom with a red
+centre. "I got here long ago. Come on over here on the grass. It's
+horrid on the benches, and I'm making friends with the nicest little
+brown hoptoad."
+
+"Ugh--no!" shuddered Helen, who did not care for hoptoads. "Here's
+Nannie, with Adelaide and Dorothy."
+
+So the girls ran over to meet their Guardian, and the hoptoad was
+averted. Just behind the newcomers arrived Marie and Edith, Marie
+dignified and neat, as usual, in her dark-blue sailor-suit, and Edith in
+a fluffy pink dress that did not look as if it could stand much
+strenuous picnicking.
+
+"Did you bring the rolls, Winnie?" called Marie.
+
+"Certainly I did, and Helen has the bacon."
+
+"And I have the hard-boiled eggs," said Louise gayly, "and here is the
+trolley--it sounds like a French lesson. We mount the trolley that we
+may go to the picnic. Come on, girls."
+
+The girls were bound for a little wood, five miles out, where nearly
+everybody that went on picnics had them. They sat down on a rear seat in
+a giggling row, while Marie went ruthlessly on counting supplies.
+
+"Adelaide, did you bring condensed cream? And who was to bring
+cake--were you, Edith? Dorothy has knives and forks and a kettle."
+
+"Cake?" from Edith blankly. "Why, no, Marie, I brought eggs. I thought
+you said to--I thought we were going to fry them with the bacon."
+
+A howl of laughter went up, in which Edith joined in spite of herself.
+
+"How did you think we'd do it, dear?" Mrs. Bryan asked at last, trying
+to straighten her face.
+
+"That's easy," promised Louise cheerfully. "You just peel the eggs
+carefully, throw away the shell, poke the raw egg on the point of a
+stick, and toast it over the fire till it's all gone."
+
+Edith giggled. "Well, I don't see how you could expect me to get it
+straight over the 'phone, anyway. If I'd known you expected me to bring
+a cake--I don't believe it was me you--ow!"
+
+For a lurch of the car had sent the satchel in which Dorothy had the
+knives and forks smashing against the raw eggs they had been talking
+about; and as Stevenson said of the cow when they asked him the immortal
+question about the cow meeting the locomotive--it was "so much the worse
+for the eggs." They broke promptly, and one fatal corner of the bag that
+held them began to leak on Edith's pretty pink dress.
+
+Dorothy tried to repair damages with her handkerchief, but there was a
+yellow smear on the front breadth, for all they could do. As it proved
+afterwards, it was poor Edith's hoodoo day.
+
+"Poor little eggs!" Louise lamented pensively. "Nobody's wasting any
+sympathy on them--and they're all broken up."
+
+"Oh, what an awful pun!" cried everybody; but Louise went on. She lifted
+the limp bag gingerly, and looked at it as if she was very sorry for it
+indeed.
+
+"Let's serenade the eggs, girls!" she said. "Just follow me!"
+
+And the people in the front seats of the trolley heard a hearty chorus
+of young voices ringing out from the two back seats:
+
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye--
+ Don't cry, little eggs, don't cry;
+ Although you break for our sweet sake
+ While we're marching away upon a picnic--
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye--
+ By and bye, little eggs, by and bye
+ We'll be eating up our lunch, but we won't have
+ you to crunch--
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye!
+
+The girls were in fits of laughter by the time they had done singing
+Louise's doggerel.
+
+"And yet--it really is silly!" said Marie consideringly when they were
+done.
+
+"Don't insult my beautiful, high-brow pome," said Louise cheerfully,
+hopping out of the trolley, for they were at their journey's end. "Who's
+going to fetch water? Don't all speak at once."
+
+"We'll get the water," Edith promised, speaking for herself and Marie.
+"It won't be as hard on my poor clothes as frying bacon."
+
+So the two of them took the kettle and started off.
+
+The place the girls had chosen for their bacon-bat was a little wood at
+the end of the trolley-line, which possessed a spring, and an open,
+sheltered sort of ravine where picnickers were wont to build their
+fires. The girls sauntered along in ones and twos till they reached this
+ravine, set down the things they carried, and scattered to look for
+sticks.
+
+Winnie and Helen, peacefully gathering wood as they went, suddenly heard
+screams, and dropped their wood and ran toward the sound.
+
+"It's--it's near the spring," panted Winona to Helen. "Oh, I do hope
+nobody's fallen in!"
+
+They arrived at the spring just as Adelaide Hughes and Mrs. Bryan
+reached it from another direction.
+
+Now the spring was not an untouched, wildwood affair at all. The
+authorities had done things to it which made its water a great deal
+better for drinking purposes, but much less picturesque--and deeper. Its
+bed had been widened and lined with concrete, and barred across at
+intervals, whether to keep the earth back or the concrete solid nobody
+but the Town Council that had done it knew. And although falling between
+the bars didn't seem very easy even for a slim, small girl, Edith seemed
+to have accomplished it. She was wedged between two of the bars across
+the water, and what was more, she had managed to drag Marie Hunter down
+with her in her fall. Marie only had one foot in the water, and she was
+struggling to get out, though the force of the stream was making it hard
+for her, for the pool was about four feet deep. But Edith, wedged
+between the bars, was devoting her energies exclusively to screaming for
+help. The reason was apparent when the rescuing parties came closer. One
+arm was caught down beside her, so that she could balance herself, but
+not get out. Winona took one look at the situation.
+
+"We'll get Edith out!" she called to Mrs. Bryan. "Can you manage Marie?"
+
+Mrs. Bryan was a slender, delicate-looking woman, but she was stronger
+than Winona realized.
+
+"Certainly!" she encouraged. And Helen and Winona began eagerly trying
+to extricate their friend.
+
+It was impossible to reach Edith and take her free hand to pull her out
+by--the bank each side the sluice, or stream, or whatever you choose to
+call it, was too deep. Winnie thought a minute. Then she took off the
+long, strong blue silk scarf she wore in a big bow at the neck of her
+blouse.
+
+"Can I have yours, too, Helen?" And Helen handed hers over promptly.
+Either alone was long enough, but Winnie wanted the two to twist
+together, for fear one would not bear Edith's weight.
+
+"Can you get around to the other side with your end, Helen?" she said.
+
+Helen scurried around up back of the source. Then she and Winnie, each
+holding an end of the scarf-rope, walked down either side of the stream
+till they were parallel with Edith. They knelt down and lowered the
+scarf till Edith could slip her free arm over it, and pull herself up.
+With its aid as a brace, she managed to free the caught arm, jammed
+against her side. After that it was easy enough, and in a few minutes
+she extricated herself entirely, and half dragged, half pulled herself
+up the steep bank. By the time the girls were done pulling her out she
+and they were pretty well worn out, and they dropped on the grass, Helen
+and Edith on one side and Winnie on the other, and took time to find
+their lost breaths.
+
+Mrs. Bryan and Marie came up to them now--getting Marie out of the water
+had been a fairly easy matter--and made the others get up.
+
+"Edith and Marie must go straight and get off their wet things!" the
+older woman advised. "And Adelaide's feet are wet, too."
+
+"Where had we better go?" asked Marie, calm as ever, though nobody could
+have been much wetter than she was up to her waist.
+
+"Old Mary's is the quickest place," said Mrs. Bryan. "Hurry, now--run,
+or you'll catch cold. Adelaide and I are coming, too."
+
+The whole party--for Winnie and Helen wanted to see the finish--set off
+at a brisk trot for Old Mary's.
+
+Old Mary was an elderly Irishwoman who earned her living mostly by
+taking in washing, but also by selling ginger-ale, cookies and
+sandwiches to such picnics and automobile parties as came her way. Her
+little house was close to the picnic-woods.
+
+"They're sure of a good fire to change their things by, that's one
+comfort," said Winnie to Helen as they ran along in the rear of their
+dripping friends.
+
+"Yes, but----" Helen began to laugh. "What are they going to change to?"
+she inquired. "We didn't any of us bring our trunks--it isn't done on
+picnics!"
+
+"They'll have to go to bed!" was Winnie's solution, and they both began
+to laugh again.
+
+"It's a shame, though, to have them miss all the picnic," said Winnie,
+sobering down.
+
+But when they arrived on the scene they found the victims hadn't the
+least intention of going to bed.
+
+"Sure, I'll iron their bits of clothes dry," said Old Mary, "an' who'll
+be the worse if they borry a few clothes from me ironin' horse till the
+others are dry? The people that own 'em 'd never mind--I've an elegant
+trade in the washin' of clothes, an' there's plenty to fit yez all on
+the horse."
+
+It was not half-past eleven yet, and the girls would not be going home
+for some hours, so there would be plenty of time for the things to dry.
+So Edith and Marie accepted Old Mary's offer on the spot. Among the
+various family washes that she was doing were some things of their own.
+They managed to pick out enough dry clothing for all their needs--all
+but dresses. There were shirtwaists and blouses galore, but it was too
+early for many wash-skirts to be going to the laundress.
+
+However, there was an ample red cotton wrapper, the property of Mary
+herself, which at least covered Marie. But Edith was little, and there
+was nothing which came near fitting her but an expensively trimmed white
+organdy party-dress, which Mary said frankly she did not feel she could
+lend.
+
+"What shall I do?" asked Edith in desperation. "I can't sit here all day
+till my dress dries!"
+
+"I dunno, darlin'. Sure 'tis too bad. Wait a minute, though." She
+hurried out of the room, and presently returned waving something blue.
+"If ye wouldn't mind these overalls, now," she said, "they're just
+washed an' ironed for little James Dempsey to wear. An' the beauty of
+overalls is they fit anybody."
+
+"_Overalls!_" said Edith mournfully.
+
+But overalls were better than a day in bed, and the end of it was, that
+out of Old Mary's hospitable cottage walked a tall Irishwoman with two
+long braids over her trailing red wrapper, and a small Irishman with
+yellow curls over very baggy and much turned-up overalls, instead of
+neat Marie and fluffy Edith. They and Adelaide had put on dry stockings,
+and had many thicknesses of newspaper on their shoes till they could get
+to the fire to dry them.
+
+"Good-mornin'!" said Marie cheerfully to her astonished friends, as she
+sailed majestically up to the freshly-made fire.
+
+"Sure we're the world-renowned vaudeville team, Hunter an' Hillis."
+
+"Just back from doing their justly-famous diving stunt!" added Winnie.
+"Better come near the fire, girls, and try to get your shoes dry."
+
+The fire, which the rest had made during the "diving-stunt," was burning
+beautifully. The girls laid down waterproofs and blankets, and disposed
+themselves comfortably around it, for the fire-makers were tired, and
+the rescuers and rescued were particularly glad to lie down and be warm
+and dry and limp.
+
+"Two long hours to dinner-time!" from Winnie presently in a very sad
+voice. "I don't feel as if I could stand it."
+
+"Nor I!" several voices chimed in.
+
+"Then why do you?" suggested Mrs. Bryan sensibly. "If everybody's hungry
+we might as well have dinner now!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOUR
+
+
+At the mention of dinner everybody became energetic as by magic. Winnie
+split her two dozen rolls neatly down the middle, and set them in rows
+on a newspaper, ready for the broiled bacon. Marie, with her red wrapper
+pinned up out of harm's way, banked the fire, while Edith mixed cocoa
+and condensed milk industriously in the bottom of a gigantic kettle
+which was discovered, too late, to have been intended to boil the water
+in. It occurred to Winnie that Edith in overalls was much more fun than
+Edith in fluffy ruffles that she had to remember to take care of, as she
+watched her flying around with her curls waving in the wind, looking
+like a stage newsboy. Helen, on her knees by the heap of provisions, was
+unwrapping her bacon, and somebody else was peeling all the hard-boiled
+eggs.
+
+"Didn't anybody bring cake?" asked Louise plaintively. "Have we nothing
+but rolls, bacon and eggs?"
+
+"Why, what else do you want?" asked Marie with a dignity rather
+interfered with by the way her scarlet draperies flapped in the breeze.
+"All the bacon-bats I ever heard about they just had rolls and bacon--we
+have a lot of things extra."
+
+"Glad I never attended one of the just-rolls-and-bacon kind," Louise
+rebelliously declared.
+
+Winnie, who liked cake herself, and thought she had seen some, went back
+to the heap of provisions and began to dig at it like a small dog at a
+mole-hill.
+
+"Marie!" she called triumphantly in a minute, "There _is_ cake! And a
+lot of bananas!"
+
+"That's good," Marie serenely remarked. "Bring them along."
+
+Winnie reappeared in a minute, very flushed and triumphant, with a hand
+of bananas under her arm, and a huge chocolate cake, with almost
+undamaged icing, poised carefully before her.
+
+"Oh, I remember!" said absent-minded Dorothy, "I brought that cake. It
+was in the satchel with the knives and forks."
+
+"You certainly saved all our lives," said Louise feelingly, and went on
+whittling toasting-sticks for the bacon. "Here, Winnie, take a stick and
+start in to be useful."
+
+"How do you do it?" Winnie wondered--"cook bacon, I mean? I never did it
+this way before."
+
+"Just string it on the stick any way at all," Marie advised, and speared
+a slice scientifically as she spoke.
+
+"Easy when you know how!" laughed Winnie, sharpening her own stick a
+little more and threading some bacon on it.
+
+In a few minutes everybody had slices of bacon frizzling gayly, and
+getting more or less charred. When they were done enough they were
+popped between the opened rolls, and--eaten, cinders and all. The water,
+though it was boiled in something else than its own proper
+kettle--something remarkably like a dish-pan cunningly slung over the
+fire by a wonderful system of forked sticks--came to a boil without
+accident, and was poured on the cocoa. Each girl had brought her own
+drinking-cup, so there was no difficulty about crockery. It seemed to
+Winnie, balanced on one elbow on her rug, that nothing had ever tasted
+so good as the bacon sandwiches and hard-boiled eggs, washed down by all
+the hot cocoa you could drink.
+
+By the time the cake and bananas came the girls felt as if they couldn't
+eat another thing. But they did. It was delightful lying around the fire
+talking and eating and laughing. It was one of those mild days which
+come in May sometimes, bright, with a little breeze. After awhile
+somebody started a Camp Fire song, and one by one they all joined in.
+After that they lay quiet for awhile, talking and being lazy.
+
+When they began to clear away Edith declared that she didn't dare go
+near the spring again. So it was Winona and Louise who took the few
+things there were to wash, the cocoa-kettle and dish-pan and
+drinking-cups and the silver, over to the spring. It was pleasant, lazy
+work, not a bit like home dish-washing. Louise splashed the things up
+and down in the running water, and Winona dried them.
+
+"Isn't it nice?" sighed Winnie. "Oh, I do wish we could camp outdoors
+all this summer, instead of living in hot houses! Don't you always hate
+to sleep indoors when it's hot?"
+
+Louise rolled over on her back and looked at the sky.
+
+"Yes, I think I do," she spoke thoughtfully. "You have to, though. Out
+in California they say everybody has sleeping-porches, and never thinks
+of going inside at night. I wish people had them here."
+
+A brilliant idea came to Winona--which, by the way, she afterward
+carried out. "Our side-porch is almost all screened. I wonder if mother
+wouldn't let me sleep there? I'm going to ask her, anyway."
+
+"I wish I could, too," breathed Louise, "but our side-porch is where
+everybody goes by--that's the worst of living on a corner. I know I
+never could break the milkman and the baker of contributing rolls and
+milk on top of me in the early morning!"
+
+"What a splendid idea! Then you could have 'breakfast in your bed,' like
+Harry Lauder," said Winnie, and both girls stopped to giggle. "But
+honestly," began Winnie again, as she reached out for some long grass
+near her and began to plait it, "don't you think we can all camp out
+this summer?"
+
+"Here?"
+
+"N-no, not here--at least, I don't believe they'd let us, the people who
+own it, I mean. But there must be somewhere that we could go, somewhere
+not too far off to cost a lot to get there."
+
+"I wonder!" said Louise, pulling a thick red pig-tail around in order to
+nibble its end thoughtfully. She had a habit of gnawing at her hair when
+she thought hard. "What about Cribb's Creek?"
+
+"That's too near," Winnie opposed.
+
+"Well, where did the Boy Scouts go last year?"
+
+"Up on Wampoag River, a little way below Wampoag," said Winona. "They
+said it was a cinch, because they could sell all the fish they caught to
+the Wampoag hotel-keepers, and get things they needed, and yet it was
+just as wild as it could be if you went a little way along the river."
+
+Wampoag was a summer resort not far from them.
+
+"Well, how far's that?" asked Louise.
+
+"About ten miles to the boys' camp," answered Winona. "But there would
+be plenty of good camping-ground nearer home, and quite close to that
+little village--what's its name?"
+
+"Green's Corners," supplied Louise.
+
+"I wonder who Green was, and if he really _did_ have corners," Winona
+thoughtfully remarked.
+
+Louise giggled. "He was a square man, I suppose," she said, and Winnie
+gave her a shove. "Oh, don't!" she said. "That's an awful pun."
+
+"I thought it was a very good one. Well, to come back to business, the
+boys didn't go by train. Indeed, I don't think you can, unless you go
+away round. They hiked."
+
+"Well, why shouldn't we, too?" asked Louise.
+
+"Or part of the way, anyway!" added Winnie,
+
+"People would take us for a band of 'I won't works!' We'd look it, too,
+by the time we got to the end of the journey."
+
+"But we needn't do it all at once," said Winnie. "We could break the
+journey overnight. Don't you know, people in England have walking-tours
+that last for days and days? I've read about it. They stop in inns
+overnight and have adventures."
+
+"Well, I'd like the adventures, if they didn't mean falling into ponds
+and getting your clothes wet," said Louise.
+
+Winnie yawned.
+
+"I suppose they think we've tied the cups round our necks and jumped
+in," and she lazily started to get up. "Come on, Louise, let's find Mrs.
+Bryan and ask her about camping. She's sure to know about hikes and
+everything."
+
+Finding Mrs. Bryan proved to be hard, because she was not in the kind of
+a place where you would expect to find a grown-up step-mother. They
+finally discovered her by a flutter of blue skirt that hung down below
+the branches of an old apple-tree. She was sitting comfortably in one of
+its crotches, trying to carve herself a willow whistle.
+
+"Come on up, girls!" she hailed them cheerfully. "There's always room at
+the top!"
+
+"Where are the rest of them?" asked Winnie, beginning to climb. Louise
+followed more slowly, for Winnie was more slender and quicker in her
+movements.
+
+"Scattered all over, I suppose," said Mrs. Bryan. "Edith went back to
+old Mary's to see if her clothes were dry. Did you want them for
+anything special?"
+
+"No indeed," Winnie assured her. "It was you we wanted for something
+special."
+
+"Well, I'm here," and Mrs. Bryan dropped an affectionate hand on the
+pretty brown head beneath her. "What is it, dear?"
+
+"It's about camping out," spoke Winnie and Louise in a breath. "Do you
+think we can do it?"
+
+Mrs. Bryan laughed.
+
+"'Can we do it?' Why, my dears, that's just what we're for! What would
+be the fun of belonging to a Camp Fire if we couldn't go camping
+outdoors?"
+
+"Oh, lovely!" cried Winnie. "Then you'll go, too?"
+
+"I certainly will!" said Mrs. Bryan promptly. "It would have to be when
+Mr. Bryan was having his vacation, though, because it would never do to
+leave, not only my own hearth-fire, but my own poor helpless husband,
+untended. And, of course, it will not be till school is through."
+
+"Oh, oh, it begins to sound almost real!" Winnie cried with a joyous
+little jounce that shook several pink blossoms from the tree.
+
+"Just wait!" warned Louise from her lower limb. "When we start that
+twenty-five-mile hike, it will seem quite too real for comfort, take my
+word for it!"
+
+"Don't you think we could hike to camp?" appealed Winnie.
+
+"You'll have to practise shorter hikes first," was the answer. "If you
+do that there's no reason why we couldn't all walk the distance. I
+suppose we'll camp somewhere on the Wampoag River."
+
+"Yes, that's what we thought," said the girls.
+
+"Of course, we'd have to break the journey," Winnie went on.
+
+"Well, yes, I think so," Mrs. Bryan answered. "Oh, here are Helen and
+Marie now. Oh, Helen! We're up in this tree! No, don't come up--all the
+seats are full!"
+
+"Then come down!" called Helen. "We have something to show you."
+
+The something proved to be a small and very scared garter-snake, that
+Helen was carrying in a forked stick.
+
+"Poor little snakelet!" said Louise. "Do let him go home, Helen--I'm
+sure he's not grown-up yet."
+
+So Helen put down the snake and off he went.
+
+"Did you find your clothes?" Louise asked Marie rather superfluously,
+for she had on her sailor-suit, rather fresher-looking than it had been
+before.
+
+"It was all done when we got there," said Marie, "but Edith's dress was
+harder to do--all those ruffles, you know--so Mary's still ironing it."
+
+"Then we'd better sit here and wait for her," suggested Louise. "And oh,
+girls, we have a plan."
+
+"A real plan, all hand-made?" mocked Helen. "Do tell us about it."
+
+So then the camping-trip was discussed and votes taken about it. Helen,
+of course, could go. Marie was sure she would be allowed to.
+
+"Mother says I stay in the house and read too much anyway," she said.
+
+The other girls, drifting up one by one, were all wild over the idea.
+Edith, in her freshly-laundered frock, was a little doubtful about the
+hike, but as she said, if she fainted from exhaustion she could take a
+train or a carriage or something the rest of the way.
+
+They talked camping till it was time to go back and pack up things for
+the return trip. So the girls rose up from around the apple-tree, and
+stowed everything away in the baskets and satchels they had brought, and
+walked back to the trolley. First, though, they gave old Mary all the
+provisions they had left; cocoa, six rolls, and a generous half of the
+chocolate cake.
+
+"That certainly was a life-sized cake!" breathed Winnie as she set it on
+Mary's kitchen table. "But it won't be as hard to eat as it was to
+carry, will it?"
+
+"Sure ye needn't worry but what it'll get et," laughed Mary. "Many
+thanks, an' good luck to yez all."
+
+They piled into the trolley, rather sleepy with the long day in the
+wind, and, except for Marie and Edith, rather crumpled. Winnie's blouse
+had a grass-stain, and Louise's was marked neatly across the back, like
+a Japanese stencil, with a wet brown bough-mark. There were also burrs,
+more or less, on everybody. But what were burrs?
+
+Everybody heaved a sight of contentment as they settled down in their
+seats.
+
+"It certainly was a lovely picnic!" they said.
+
+"How beautifully fresh and clean Edith Hillis keeps her dresses!" said
+Mrs. Merriam to Winnie, as Edith turned to wave good-bye at the Merriam
+gate, and went down the street with Marie and Helen. "You'd think that
+pink dress had just been washed and ironed, and yet she's been out in
+the woods with the rest of you tousled-looking children all day!"
+
+And Winona laughed so that it was at least two minutes before she could
+explain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIVE
+
+
+"I'd advise you girls to hurry up with those squaw dresses," hinted Tom
+Merriam darkly, as he fled through the sitting-room on his way back from
+Scout-practice.
+
+Winnie looked up. She and Helen and Louise were sitting in a row on the
+window-seat, sewing for dear life on their ceremonial gowns.
+
+"We are hurrying all we can," she smiled. "These have to be done by
+to-night anyway."
+
+"They are, nearly," chimed in Louise, shaking out her garment and
+observing its fringes with satisfaction. "What's he talking about, Win?"
+
+"Tommy! Tom! Come back and tell us!" called his sister.
+
+"Can't!" shouted Tom down the stairs. "You'll find out in time--you're
+going to need 'em, that's all!"
+
+"What on earth do you suppose he means?" wondered Helen, as the last
+glimpse of Tom's khaki-clad form vanished up the stairs.
+
+Winnie laughed as she finished off a seam.
+
+"I don't believe it meant anything," she said. "Tom's always trying to
+get up excitements."
+
+"_I_ think it means something!" said Louise, beginning to take out
+bastings. She was the best seamstress of the three, and consequently was
+done first. "Here, Helen, let me finish that sleeve for you while you do
+the other one."
+
+She took up the sleeve, and jumped up and began to dance with the sleeve
+for a partner.
+
+ Something's goin' to happen, honey,
+ Happen, honey, happen mighty soon!
+
+"Oh, thank you!" said Helen gratefully, referring not to the song and
+dance, but to the aid. She hated sewing, and nothing but the Camp Fire
+requirements would ever have made her persevere till her gown was done.
+Winnie did not mind sewing one way or the other, and by a queer
+contradiction harum-scarum Louise loved it.
+
+The girls worked on, and discussed on. Winnie was sure Tom meant
+nothing, and the others were just as sure that he had some reason for
+saying what he had.
+
+That night the girls were to hold their first Council Fire. That was why
+they were hurrying so to finish their dresses.
+
+When it came Winnie's turn to answer the roll-call, she rose, slim and
+graceful in her khaki dress, before her turn was reached.
+
+"Opeechee, Guardian of the Fire, may I speak before my turn comes to
+answer to my name?" she asked.
+
+"Speak," said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Opeechee, I do not want to change my name. May I not be known in the
+Camp Fire as Winona? The name is one that an Indian gave one of my own
+people many circles of moons ago, and it is mine by inheritance."
+
+"Will you tell the Camp Fire about it?" asked Mrs. Bryan.
+
+So Winnie told the Camp Fire the story her mother had told her, of the
+weary Indian woman her grandmother had helped, and whose papoose had
+been called "Winona," "Flashing Ray of Light."
+
+"Could anything be better than to be a ray of light in dark places?"
+asked Winona. "I like the meaning of my name, and if the Camp Fire will
+let me keep it I promise to be a brightness wherever I can, always, that
+will light the dark places for people who need it."
+
+"What do you say, Daughters of the Camp Fire?" asked Mrs. Bryan when
+Winona was done.
+
+"If we all have different Camp Fire names, won't it seem strange for
+Winona to have the same name straight through?" objected Marie. "It is a
+beautiful name with a beautiful meaning, if it weren't that it is her
+every-day name."
+
+"Nobody ever calls me anything but Winnie," said Winona.
+
+"Why not use the translation?" suggested Helen. "'Ray of Light' is
+pretty. And then Winnie could keep the meaning."
+
+"You have spoken well!" said Mrs. Bryan. "What do you say to that,
+Daughters of the Camp Fire?"
+
+"Good!" from all the girls.
+
+"Kolah, Ray of Light!" spoke Mrs. Bryan.
+
+Then she went on with the business of the evening.
+
+"Two of our Camp Fire Girls are to become Wood-gatherers to-night. Will
+they rise?"
+
+Winona and Marie had qualified, and they stood up.
+
+"Ray of Light," Mrs. Bryan went on, "will you tell us how you chose your
+name?"
+
+"'Flashing Ray of Light' is the name my fathers gave me," clearly spoke
+Winona, "and I have told the Camp Fire the reason of its choosing. But I
+keep it because I intend to carry out its meaning. I have tried to earn
+my right to it by being bright, and helping all I could, no matter how
+dark the days were, nor how much nicer it would have been to be cross.
+As my symbol I have chosen the firefly, because it lights dark places."
+
+"Flashing Ray of Light brings brightness to our Camp Fire," said the
+Guardian. "We welcome you to your place in our Camp Fire Circle."
+
+She gave Winona her pretty silver ring with its raying fagots, and
+repeating the formula which went with it.
+
+When the girls had welcomed her rank and sung her a cheer, Winona sat
+down, she hoped, for the last time.
+
+"How does it feel?" whispered Louise, who sat next her. "I wish I'd
+collected my requirements as quickly."
+
+"It feels partly awfully proud and partly awfully relieved," Winona
+whispered back. "And I feel as if I oughtn't to have picked out such
+awfully easy honors to take. Anybody could make a shirtwaist and know
+about their ancestors and trim a hat----"
+
+"No, they couldn't!" contradicted Louise, who admired Winona very much.
+"You just happen to be cleverer than the rest of us, that's all."
+
+"I'm _not!_" said Winona as vehemently as it could be said in a whisper.
+"Marie's getting her Wood-gatherer's ring to-night, too."
+
+Mrs. Bryan's voice rose again in the same formula.
+
+"Shawondassee, tell us how you chose your name."
+
+"Shawondassee means 'South Wind,'" answered Marie's steady voice. "I
+chose the name because the South Wind coaxes instead of scolding, and I
+thought it was a good name to remind me to do the same thing. As my
+symbol I have chosen the willow shoots, because they come up year after
+year, no matter how often they are cut down, and I wish to have their
+perseverance."
+
+"Perseverance and cheerfulness!" whispered Louise. "Who would have
+thought Marie needed either of them?"
+
+"You can't tell much about Marie, because you never can get to her to
+talk about herself," answered Winona. "But she certainly is one of the
+hardest workers in the class at school."
+
+At this point the girls had to stop talking, to join in the
+Wood-gatherer's verses for Marie.
+
+Nearly all Marie's required honors were Patriotism, for she was the
+student of the crowd.
+
+"It fairly makes me shiver to think how much that girl knows," whispered
+Louise. "My honors are going to be plain home-craft--making pies and
+chaperoning ice-chests and massaging floors, and so forth."
+
+"Will your mother let you?" asked Winona; for Mrs. Lane kept two maids,
+having the money to do it, and a big family.
+
+"Let me!" exploded Louise. "She'll weep tears of joy if there's any
+prospect of my getting thinner!"
+
+Just as Louise spoke there fell one of those uncanny silences which have
+a way of occurring at the worst possible times. Louise's statement
+pealed cheerfully through the room, and poor Louise, blushing scarlet,
+tried to make herself very small--a hard matter.
+
+The girls could not help laughing, but Mrs. Bryan had mercy on her
+embarrassment, and went on with the awarding of the honor beads each
+girl had won since the last meeting. Winona's were rather various--a few
+from each class. Helen's were nearly all hand-craft--stencilling and
+clay-modelling. She had brought along a bureau-scarf she had done, to
+show, and a beautiful little bowl she had modelled and painted and
+fired. Louise had only three beads so far, one for identifying birds,
+one for preserving, and one for making her ceremonial dress.
+
+Edith Hillis, to everybody's surprise, was given an honor for
+folk-dancing, and proceeded, when she was asked, to get up and
+demonstrate. This held up the regular course of the meeting for quite a
+little while, because when she showed them the Highland Fling all the
+girls wanted to learn it. So for at least a half-hour they practised it,
+till the floor over Mr. Bryan's head, in his study beneath, must have
+seemed to be coming down.
+
+After they had all tired themselves thoroughly they sang for awhile.
+About midway of the second song Mrs. Bryan evidently remembered
+something, for she gave a start as if she were going to speak. As soon
+as they had finished she raised her hand for silence, and said:
+
+"I have a message for Camp Karonya. It should be delivered at the
+business meeting, I suppose, but--it won't keep till then. The Boy
+Scouts, Camp No. Six, of this town, invite the Camp Fire Girls to a
+dance given by them in the school-house assembly-room next Wednesday
+night."
+
+"Oh, how perfectly lovely!" cried Edith. "Of course we'll go!"
+
+A confused noise of voices broke out, all speaking at once. You could
+catch an occasional word--"blue messaline," "white organdy,"
+"orchestra," "how perfectly dandy!"--but for the most part it was just a
+noise.
+
+Mrs. Bryan waited placidly till it had quieted down.
+
+"What is your pleasure in this matter, Daughters of the Camp Fire?" she
+asked then.
+
+"Oh, we'll go!" cried everybody at once.
+
+"Then you'd better instruct the Secretary to write them to that effect,"
+suggested Mrs. Bryan gravely, for the tumult seemed inclined to break
+out again.
+
+Winona jumped up and put it in the form of a motion that the Secretary
+should reply, and actually induced the girls to second and ratify it.
+
+"I'll write the acceptance right away!" declared Helen with enthusiasm.
+
+She went into the next room, got paper and ink, came back, sat down in
+the middle of a ring of interested suggesters, and wrote a very pleased
+acceptance.
+
+Winona, robbed of her usual confidante, turned to the girl on her other
+side, to talk clothes.
+
+"I'm going to wear my blue organdy, with the Dresden sash and
+hair-ribbons," she said without looking to see to whom she was talking.
+
+"Are you?" said the other girl, hesitating a little.
+
+Winona looked at her, at the sound of her voice. She had thought she was
+speaking to Louise. But Louise was on the other side of the room, and
+the girl next her was Adelaide Hughes, one of the two girls Mrs. Bryan
+had brought into their Camp Fire.
+
+It was two months now since Winona and Adelaide had begun to meet each
+other weekly at the Camp Fire good times and Ceremonials, but when you
+have all the bosom friends you want it is hard to see such a very great
+deal of other people. Winona realized now that she had scarcely
+exchanged two consecutive sentences with Adelaide all the time she had
+known her.
+
+Adelaide was a thin, tired-looking girl of about thirteen, with big blue
+eyes and a sensitive mouth, and hair that had curious yellow and brown
+lights. She did not join very heartily, ever, in the frolics, but she
+seemed to enjoy everything with a sort of shy, watching intensity.
+
+"And what are you going to wear?" Winona asked, more out of friendliness
+than curiosity.
+
+Adelaide colored.
+
+"I--I don't know," she said. "I--a white dress, I think."
+
+"Voile?" asked Winona.
+
+Adelaide shook her head.
+
+"No, lawn--if I come. But maybe I won't be there."
+
+"Why, what a shame!" said Winona with the bright friendliness that was a
+part of her. "Of course you must be there. Helen accepted for all of
+us."
+
+"I know, but--but maybe I can't come," repeated Adelaide.
+
+"Of course you can!" insisted Winona.
+
+Adelaide's eyes filled with tears, and she shook her head.
+
+Winona slipped one arm around her. The two girls were sitting a little
+apart from the rest by now, in a dusky corner.
+
+"There's some reason why you think you can't, some horrid reason," she
+coaxed. "Now, just tell Winona what it is." She spoke as if she were
+petting her own younger sister, though Adelaide was only a year younger
+than she was.
+
+Adelaide's eyes overflowed, and she felt gropingly for her handkerchief,
+to dry her eyes.
+
+"Here's one," whispered Winona, slipping her own into Adelaide's hand.
+"Now, tell me, dear. It isn't very bad, is it? Maybe I could help."
+
+"You _can't!_" said Adelaide fiercely, "and I won't tell you a thing
+unless you promise not to."
+
+"All right," said Winona cheerfully, "I promise."
+
+"I--I haven't any party dress, and father can't afford to get me one,"
+choked Adelaide, "and all I have is an old white lawn I wear afternoons,
+and it's _horrid_. And--and, Winona Merriam, if you offer to loan me a
+dress I'll never speak to you again!"
+
+"I wasn't going to," comforted Winona, stroking poor sobbing Adelaide's
+shoulder, while her own quick, friendly mind cast about for a way out.
+
+For Adelaide must come to the dance, and evidently she wouldn't borrow
+anything from anybody.
+
+"Not borrow--how queer!" said Winona, voicing her thought. "Why, I don't
+know any of the girls I wouldn't borrow from, if I needed to, or they
+from me. Don't you ever borrow anything, Adelaide--except trouble?"
+
+"No, I don't," said Adelaide chokily but proudly. "It's--it's different
+when you _have_ to!"
+
+"I don't see why!" said sunny, friendly-hearted Winona, who always took
+it for granted that she liked people, and of course that they would like
+her! She had never known what it was to be rich, but never either what
+it was to be painfully poor. "Well, let's think of some other way. I
+suppose you haven't time to earn the money for a dress for this party.
+Opeechee was telling us last week that we ought to try to earn so much
+money apiece, and that there were lots of ways for doing it."
+
+"No, there wouldn't be time," answered Adelaide mournfully; but she
+stopped crying and began to look interested.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIX
+
+
+The two girls sat and thought hard for a moment; then Winnie suddenly
+thought of something.
+
+"Just a minute, Adelaide!" she whispered, and she went over to the
+corner where Mrs. Bryan and Marie Hunter were discussing business
+together. The rest were still all talking dance excitedly by the
+fireplace.
+
+"Opeechee," she said, "may I ask you something? Would there be any
+reason why the girls couldn't wear their ceremonial dresses to the
+dance?"
+
+Mrs. Bryan thought for a moment.
+
+"There's no actual reason why we shouldn't," she said. "Only the idea is
+that the dresses should be kept for rather intimate and private things."
+
+"But it would be such a good idea if we wore them," insisted Winona
+eagerly. "You see, perhaps--perhaps some of us mightn't be able to
+afford new party dresses, and maybe we mightn't have any old good ones,
+either."
+
+"Why, Winnie, you have that blue----" began Marie, and checked herself
+as she saw a light.
+
+"Some of us mightn't have any new party dresses," repeated Winona
+obstinately, but with an appealing look at Mrs. Bryan. She did so hope
+she would understand! "Anyway, the boys expect us to," she went on
+eagerly. "Tom said this afternoon that we'd better get the dresses
+ready, only we didn't know then what he meant."
+
+Mrs. Bryan looked at Winona's vivid, earnest face, and--understood.
+
+"I think you are quite right, Ray of Light. I'll speak to the girls."
+
+She stood up and struck lightly on the little Indian drum to call the
+girls' attention.
+
+"Girls!" she said, "as the dance that the Scouts have asked us to is an
+affair to which we have been invited as an official body, it seems to me
+that it would be only courteous for us to wear our ceremonial gowns. So
+I am going to ask that you all do it."
+
+There was a murmur of approval all over the room. When you have just
+acquired a beautiful new costume it's human nature to want to wear it
+early and often. There was only a plaintive wail, which Marie
+suppressed, from Edith Hillis:
+
+"Oh, my lovely new green messaline!"
+
+Winona crossed over to the place where Adelaide still sat.
+
+"Well?" she said triumphantly.
+
+"Did you tell Mrs. Bryan anything about me?" Adelaide demanded
+suspiciously.
+
+"No, I didn't," replied Winona rather indignantly. "What do you take me
+for, when I said I wouldn't?"
+
+"Well, I didn't know," apologized Adelaide. "And--thank you, ever so
+much, Winona! You--you don't _know!_"
+
+Winona laughed.
+
+"Why, yes, I do. At least, I've often wanted new clothes when I couldn't
+have them. But mother says if you can't the next best thing is to go on
+wearing what you have, and be so cheerful nobody has time to think what
+you have on!"
+
+"Nobody ever told me that," pondered Adelaide, as if it were an entirely
+new idea to her. "But my mother's dead, you see. And, anyway, it doesn't
+sound as if it could be true. Did you ever try it?"
+
+"Yes," Winona said, and laughed. "I did--it was funny, too. I was
+visiting some cousins of mine. I hadn't expected to stay, and I hadn't
+brought a single party thing, and none of their clothes would fit me.
+They had perfectly lovely dresses. And suddenly we were all invited to a
+party, and I had nothing but a blue linen; and all the rest of them in
+the fluffiest clothes you ever saw!"
+
+"Well," said Adelaide, "didn't it feel _horrid_."
+
+"Yes, it did for awhile," owned Winona. "But everybody was sitting
+around as stiff as stiff--you know, some parties are like that at first.
+And somebody just had to say something. And pretty soon I thought of a
+game that just fitted in, and asked them to play it. After that I was so
+busy thinking up games that I never remembered a thing I had on till we
+got home that night. And I only did then because my cousin Ethel said,
+'Oh, I've torn my dress!' and I said it was queer I hadn't torn mine,
+too--and then I remembered that it was linen and wouldn't tear. We
+certainly had a good time at that party!"
+
+Adelaide looked at Winona's shining eyes and flushed cheeks enviously.
+
+"Yes, you could do that," she said, "and people would be so busy
+watching you that they wouldn't know whether you had a flour-sack on or
+a satin. But I can't, because I keep worrying all the time about what
+people think of me."
+
+"Oh, I should think that _would_ be horrid," Winona sympathized.
+
+"It is," said Adelaide, "only I----"
+
+The rest that Adelaide had been going to say was drowned, because just
+then came the signal for the closing song, and soon the Council Fire was
+over.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"What on earth were you talking to Adelaide Hughes so long about?"
+demanded Louise curiously as they walked home, for their ways lay
+together.
+
+"Oh, just things," was Winona's answer. "I think she's awfully shy, and
+a little afraid of the rest of us, Lou."
+
+"And you think we ought to make a special fuss over her?" said Louise
+mournfully. "I knew that was coming. Well, I suppose we will--Helen and
+I always do what you tell us to. I wish I were shy, and people ran
+around saying, 'we really must make an effort to draw poor little timid
+Louise out!'"
+
+Winona burst out laughing--the idea of "poor, little, timid Louise" was
+so irresistibly funny.
+
+"It's going to be a gorgeous dance, though." Louise went on. "Wasn't it
+splendid of the Scouts to think of doing it? And what about my being
+right?"
+
+"You certainly were right," Winona admitted. "Are you sure you don't
+mind going on alone?"
+
+For they had reached the Merriam house.
+
+"Not a bit," said Louise cheerfully. "It's only a block, anyway.
+Good-night, honey."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Oh, it's lovely!" exclaimed Winona next morning when she ran
+downstairs. She flung herself on Tom bodily and hugged him hard as she
+spoke.
+
+"What's lovely?" asked Tom, detaching himself, or trying to. "Go easy,
+Winnie; it was just sheer luck that you didn't break any ribs or my
+collar-bone or something. Affection's all right in its place, but----"
+
+"But its place isn't on you, you mean?" retorted Winona, unwinding
+herself cheerfully from her brother. "Why, I mean the dance, of course."
+
+"Oh, that!" said Tom. "That's nothing! It ought to be pretty good fun,
+though, don't you think so?"
+
+"Oh, I know it will!" cried Winona fervently. "Are the boys going to
+wear their uniforms?"
+
+"Well," said Tom doubtfully, "we don't know. You see, we've hiked in
+'em, and rolled around on the grass in 'em wrestling, and done about
+everything to those poor old uniforms that you can do to clothes, and
+they really aren't fit for civilized society."
+
+"Meaning ours?" said Winona. "Thanks for the compliment! Why don't you
+have them cleaned? I suppose even khaki cleans!"
+
+"I don't know," said her brother, "I'll ask mother. Maybe we can manage
+it. But--oh, say, Winnie, there's something I wanted to speak to you
+about. You know, there are new people moved in next door. They're
+Southerners, here for the mother's health or something. There's a boy
+about my age, and a girl somewhere around yours. I don't know much about
+the girl, but Billy Lee's an awfully decent fellow, and we've got him in
+the Scouts. Now what do you think about taking his sister into your Camp
+Fire? She'd just about fit in as far as age goes, and it would be nice
+and neighborly. We'll have to ask her for the dance anyway, because
+there aren't enough of you Camp Firers yet to go around. The girl must
+need something to do, because Billy seems to worry about her rather.
+Stands to reason it isn't natural for a fellow to fret about his sister
+having a good time unless she needs it pretty badly."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," said Winona. "When you come to a strange place
+things are bound to be stupid till you get to know people. We've lived
+here always, you know. But I'll go over and see her as soon as I've done
+the breakfast dishes."
+
+Accordingly, when the breakfast dishes were done and the dining-room
+tidied, Winona washed her hands over again very carefully, and put
+cold-cream and talcum powder on them, for she did not like the smell of
+dish-water, especially when she was going calling. Then she made her way
+to the house next door.
+
+All the houses on that block stood in deep yards, which went all around
+them. Winona crossed the path and went up the porch, feeling a little
+shy. She had not asked anyone to join the Camp Fire before. They were to
+take in five new girls at the next monthly meeting, just before they
+went camping, but all of them had let the girls know that they wanted to
+join. Winona was a moving spirit in Camp Karonya, and she knew that
+anyone she vouched for would be welcome. But she did hope the next-door
+girl would fit in with the rest of them.
+
+The door was opened by a colored maid, but before she could say whom she
+was, a dark, handsome boy of about fifteen, in a Scout uniform, came
+running down the stairs.
+
+"You're Winnie Merriam, aren't you?" he asked eagerly. "I'm Billy Lee. I
+asked your brother to send you over to see Nataly."
+
+Winona liked Billy on the spot, he was so friendly and natural and nice,
+and very good-looking besides.
+
+"If his sister's like him she'll be splendid to have in the Camp Fire,"
+she thought, and her spirits went up with such a bound that she was able
+to smile brightly, and say enthusiastically as she held out her hand to
+Billy Lee:
+
+"Yes, indeed, I'm Winona Merriam, and I'm so glad Tom did send me. I
+know your sister and I are going to be friends."
+
+"Well, I do hope so," said Billy as confidentially as if he had known
+her for years. "I'm having a gorgeous time in the Scouts--went on a hike
+yesterday, and we never got back till nine o'clock, and three of the
+fellows got all stung up with a hornet's nest."
+
+This didn't sound much like a fine time to Winona, but she supposed boys
+knew what they liked. She couldn't help laughing, though.
+
+ If that's your idea of a wonderful time
+ Take me home--take me home!
+
+she hummed. She thought she'd sung it under her breath, but it was
+evidently loud enough to be heard, for Billy Lee burst out laughing,
+too.
+
+"Well, I didn't mean that getting stung was a pleasure exactly," said
+he, "but we do have dandy times."
+
+All this time they had been standing in the hall. Suddenly it seemed to
+occur to Billy that Winona had come to see his sister, not him. He
+ushered her hurriedly into the living-room.
+
+"I'll send Nataly down to you," he promised. But in another minute he
+came tearing downstairs again.
+
+"She says, would you mind coming up to her room?" he panted. "She hasn't
+felt so awfully well to-day, and she isn't exactly up."
+
+Winona followed him, consumed with curiosity as to what could ail a
+girl, not to be up on a beautiful spring morning, and what "not exactly
+up" meant. She found out in another minute.
+
+The bed-room where Nataly was had all its windows closed, and there was
+a close scent of toilet-water and sachet-powder and unairedness through
+the whole place.
+
+"Here's Winnie Merriam, that I told you about, sister," said Billy Lee,
+and bolted. He never seemed to walk, only to run.
+
+Nataly Lee rose from the couch where she had been lying, and came toward
+Winona.
+
+"I'm very glad to see you," she greeted Winnie languidly. "I think I
+have seen you--out in your back garden yesterday."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," said Winona. "I was playing tag there with my
+sister Florence and little Bessie Williams."
+
+"Do you still play tag?" asked Nataly, gesturing her visitor to a seat,
+and lifting one weary eyebrow.
+
+"Not as a confirmed habit," said Winona mischievously. "But you can't
+play it well with only two, and the children wanted me to, so--well, I
+just did, that was all. Don't you like tag?" she added. ("I was morally
+certain she'd faint," she confided to Tom afterwards, "but she didn't.")
+
+As a matter of fact, Nataly pulled closer the blue brocaded negligee
+that was obviously covering up a nightgown, and said, "I don't know much
+about games. I like reading better."
+
+"Oh, do you?" exclaimed Winona, interested at once. "I love reading,
+too, but somehow there's so little time for it except when it's bad
+weather. Don't you do anything but read?"
+
+"Not much," replied Nataly languidly. "Sports bore me."
+
+Winona gave an inward gasp of dismay.
+
+"Mercy!" she thought, "what a queer girl!" But outwardly she persevered.
+"Don't you ever dance?"
+
+Nataly opened her heavy hazel eyes with a little more interest.
+
+"Oh, yes, I dance, of course."
+
+"So do I," said Winona. "I love it."
+
+"Do you?" said Nataly. "I shouldn't think so--you seem so--athletic."
+
+"Oh, I'm glad," said Winona innocently, beaming with pleasure. "But I'm
+not, particularly. I can swim, of course, and row and paddle a little,
+and play tennis a little. But I've never played hockey or basket-ball,
+either of them, much. Or baseball."
+
+"Do girls play baseball up here?" demanded Nataly, sitting up and
+letting a paper novel with a thrilling picture on the cover slide to the
+floor.
+
+"They do," averred Winona solemnly, but with sparkling eyes. She was
+tempted to go on shocking her hostess by thrilling stories of invented
+boxing-matches between herself and her little schoolmates, but she
+thought better of it. "But that wasn't really what I came about," she
+went on, looking longingly at the closed window, for the airless room
+was beginning to make her cheeks burn. "Next week the Scouts are giving
+us Camp Fire Girls a dance, you know--and you are coming, aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," Nataly spoke slowly, lying back on the sofa and
+beginning to finger her paper novel again.
+
+"Well"--it came out with rather a rush--"would you like to join the Camp
+Fire? I think you'd like it."
+
+She went on enthusiastically telling Nataly all about it, till she was
+brought up short by a genuine and unsuppressed yawn on Nataly's part.
+
+"All that work?" said Nataly plaintively. "Oh, I couldn't do any of
+those things--I'd die!"
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," Winona was a little taken aback. The idea of
+considering whether things were too much trouble or not was a new one to
+her. She had always gone on the principle that--why--you _wanted_ to
+plunge into things head-foremost, and do them with all your might--that
+was the way to have fun! So the idea of lying on a sofa and shuddering
+at the idea of work was a great surprise.
+
+"No, I really couldn't join," said Nataly, with the first energy she had
+shown. "But I'm very glad you came to see me."
+
+"Yes, so am I," said Winona politely. "And you will come and see me as
+soon as you can, won't you?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," promised Nataly. She threw up her hand and pressed a
+button back of her sofa as she spoke, for Winona was rising to go.
+
+"Emma will show you the way downstairs," she said languidly, "and don't
+you want this? It's very interesting--I've just finished it."
+
+"This" was the paper novel with the melodramatic cover.
+
+"Why, thank you!" said Winona, taking it politely. "It's very kind of
+you. And you will come over?"
+
+"Oh, yes," responded Billy Lee's sister, "I shall be very glad to call."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well, how was it?" demanded Tom of his sister that evening.
+
+Winona laughed and shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"Why, very nice. Only Nataly Lee's about a million years older than I
+am, and she made me feel as if I were seven instead of fourteen. And she
+certainly is the _queerest_ girl! She doesn't seem to want to do
+anything for fear it will be too much trouble!"
+
+"What about joining up with your Daughters of Pocahontas?" inquired Tom.
+
+Winona didn't stop to rebuke him for his flippancy.
+
+"Well, about that," she replied, "she reminded me of one of the haughty
+ladies in the Japanese Schoolboy's housework experiences--don't you
+remember? 'I have not the want to,' she sniffed haughtily with
+considerable frequency! But she's coming to the dance."
+
+"Queer," said Tom. "There's no nonsense about Billy--he's a good
+all-around fellow. Well, you never can tell."
+
+"No," acquiesced Winona philosophically, "you can't, and it's rather a
+good thing, too!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVEN
+
+
+"You certainly are taking it easy, considering there's going to be a
+dance!" declared Tom. "Usually when anything like that is going to
+happen you run around like a hen with its head cut off!"
+
+"No reason why I should, this time," said Winona, laughing. "You Scouts
+are giving the dance, not we. Though perhaps it's because my dress is
+off my mind. You always have to press a frock out and clean your white
+shoes, and be sure your sash is all right, when you're wearing anything
+festive. But thanks to your suggestion about wearing the ceremonial
+dress, you'll see 'ten little Injuns' walking in to-night, headbands,
+moccasins and all--and I have nothing to worry about."
+
+Winona stretched herself out in the Morris-chair and looked provokingly
+comfortable and unoccupied.
+
+"I heard about it," said Tom.
+
+Winona flushed.
+
+"What did you hear?"
+
+"About you and your ceremonial dresses. But I guessed, too."
+
+"Who told you--and what did they tell?" demanded Winona, sitting up and
+looking ruffled.
+
+"Marie--that all the girls mightn't have party clothes," Tom placidly
+replied.
+
+"Marie hadn't any business to!" said Winona.
+
+"Well, I guessed the rest. You see, Lonny Hughes is in the Scouts, too,
+and he--well, he tells me things sometimes. And I know Adelaide felt
+pretty badly for awhile because she couldn't keep up with some of
+you--Edith mostly, I guess. He said he had to fairly bully his sister
+into joining you girls, even after Nannie'd coaxed her. You certainly
+were a good sport, Win! You know, there's just Lonny and Adelaide and a
+younger sister, and the father. They have one of those little flats over
+James's drug-store, in the Williamson Block, and Mr. Hughes doesn't get
+an awful lot of salary. Anyway, the kids keep house, and Adelaide has to
+look after herself all the way round. So she takes this hard, the money
+end, I mean."
+
+"I think she's silly!" said downright Winona.
+
+"Maybe!" said Tom wisely, and went on bestowing loving care on his
+repeating rifle, the joy of his life.
+
+Winona retired into a book, and Tom, looking up a second later, caught
+sight of its cover.
+
+"Great Scott!" he ejaculated, eying it. "Where did you get _that?_"
+
+"Where did she get what?" asked Louise, walking unceremoniously in.
+"Hello, Tom. Oh, Winnie, I want you to show me about this headband. I
+can't get the colors matched right--you know you have to be rather kind
+to beautiful golden hair like mine. It won't stand every color there
+is."
+
+"No rest for the wicked!" said Winona cheerfully, sitting up and
+abandoning her book. "You don't mean you're going to try to get this
+done for to-night?"
+
+"I certainly am," said Louise doggedly.
+
+"All right." And Winona, pulled up a little table between them.
+"Here--this is the way."
+
+The two girls bent over the little loom, their heads close together.
+Tom, meanwhile, finished cleaning his gun, wrapped it carefully in oiled
+red flannel, and looked around for more worlds to conquer.
+
+The first thing his eyes lighted on was the paper novel Winona had
+reluctantly laid down--the one Nataly had loaned her.
+
+"For the love of Mike, where did you get this?"
+
+"Your friend's sister, next door," said Winona mischievously. "Don't you
+like her taste in books?"
+
+"Crazy about it!" said Tom. "'Beautiful Coralie's Doom; or, Answered in
+Jest,'" he read from the vivid cover. "Say Louise, this hero was a
+dream. You ought to hear the amount of things he's called the heroine,
+and this is only the first chapter!"
+
+"Go ahead," urged Louise, while Winona tried vainly to get the book away
+from her brother, "I guess I can bear it!"
+
+"Let's see. Child, sweetheart, angel, cara-mia, little one--I'll have to
+start on the other hand, I've used up all my fingers on this one--loved
+one, petite, schatzchen--wonder what that is? The only thing he's left
+out so far is 'kiddo.' I suppose we'll come to that further on.
+'Lancelot looked down at her through his long, superfluous eyelashes,'"
+Tom went on, reading at the top of his strong young voice. "Those were
+well-trained eyelashes all right. I'll bet he hung by 'em every day to
+get 'em in shape to use so much. I've found six sentences about those
+lashes on one page, and every one the same."
+
+"You wouldn't expect him to have a new set every time, would you?"
+inquired Louise sarcastically.
+
+"It's a wonder he didn't have to. One set must have been pretty well
+worn out by the end of a chapter. 'Ah, you wicked fellow,' Coralie said
+archly," he went on, sitting down on the floor with the book. Winona
+made a dive for it, but she wasn't quick enough. "This wicked part's
+what gets me. There's an average of twenty-five 'wickeds' to every
+chapter, and the poor fellow's never even forgotten to return an
+umbrella!"
+
+"Or a book his sister was reading," suggested Louise.
+
+"And what's a 'saucy meow,' Winona? Coralie did 'em all the time. Can
+you?"
+
+But here Winona threw herself bodily on him, and this time she managed
+to recover her book, which she sat on.
+
+"Well, this literature class is very interesting, but my happy home
+wants me," said Louise, rising and taking up her loom and the headband,
+which was in a fair way to be properly finished now. "Thanks, ever so
+much, Ray of Light. You're the best girl as ever-ever-was. See you
+to-night, Tommy."
+
+"Now, _that's_ some girl," said Tom admiringly. "No nonsense about her.
+Do you want me to take you over, Winnie?"
+
+"That would be awfully nice of you, but we thought we'd 'attend in a
+body,' as the papers say," answered Winona. "Aren't you boys going to?"
+
+"Well, you see, there are extra girls," explained Tom. "There aren't
+enough of you Scoutragettes to go round, so we've asked some other
+girls, and we have to go after them. But we'll get them early, and be
+there to meet you when you get there."
+
+"Well, I don't want to croak." And Winona arose to go into the kitchen,
+for that way lay an honor bead, and it was nearly supper-getting time.
+"But I think the boy who goes after Nataly Lee _won't_ be drawn up to
+meet us, unless we kindly hold back the order of march for him."
+
+"Shouldn't wonder," called Tom after her. "Get something good for
+supper, there's a useful sister!"
+
+But though there was a slight delay in the order of march, it was Louise
+Lane, of all unexpected people, who was responsible for it: her headband
+went wrong after all, she explained when, flushed and panting, she
+appeared in her other one at the meeting-place.
+
+The girls fell into step and marched, two and two, out into the street
+up the short block to the school-house, where most of the public affairs
+in the town were held.
+
+"Oh, isn't it gorgeous?" whispered Winona irrepressibly as they came
+steadily and lightly up the centre of the hall, till they faced the
+Scouts.
+
+These last were drawn up in a military formation, in the order of their
+seniority, with the Scoutmaster at their head. He was a plump, cheerful,
+middle-aged man, the father of three of the Scouts, and vice-principal
+of the High School. But you would never have thought he had seen a
+class-room, he looked so military and colonel-fied, there at the head of
+his line of erect, soldierly-looking boys.
+
+"It's like real receptions!" whispered Helen to Winona, as the orchestra
+blared out "Hail to the Chief!" which was as near to "Welcome to the
+Camp Fire Girls" as the orchestra's resources could come. Then Mrs.
+Bryan and Mr. Gedney gave the order to break ranks, and the orchestra
+slid with surprising ease into a Paul Jones. So did the boys and girls.
+
+"We got here first, you see," whispered Tom to Winona as he crossed her.
+The round went on for quite a little while before the whistle blew for
+the breaking up into twos, so Winona was able to question and answer bit
+by bit as she and her brother met and parted.
+
+"What about the extra girls?" she whispered, for no extra girls were to
+be seen.
+
+"The fellows are going after them now," explained Tom. "This was a
+dance----" Tom had to leave, and finished on the next round, "for the
+Camp Fire. The others didn't come first, naturally."
+
+And sure enough, by the time the first dance was over, the extra boys
+were back, bringing partners with them--girls Camp Karonya knew, and who
+were presently going to form a second Camp Fire--for Camp Karonya's
+membership list was almost full now. The newcomers had evidently been
+asked to wear fancy costume, and the effect of the Indian dresses that
+the Camp Fire Girls wore, and the boys' military clothes, was lighted up
+and made more beautiful by the dash of color made by an occasional gypsy
+or Oriental lady.
+
+The hall had been decorated in a half-military, half-woodland fashion,
+with tents draped against the walls, crossed rifles, green boughs and
+lighted lanterns. It was a warm night, so they had filled the big
+fireplace at the side of the room with boughs. The entrance to the
+kitchen, where the cooking-classes were held in the school every Friday,
+was covered by a tent. Behind that tent, the exciting rumor spread, was
+a real colored caterer who was going to serve refreshments of
+unparalleled splendor at the proper time.
+
+But at about ten o'clock a frenzied rapping was heard from the place
+which was supposed to hold the mysterious caterer. It rose above the
+music. Mr. Gedney hurried to the door to see what had happened. An irate
+negro appeared--the city caterer who had been imported to lend grandeur
+to the scene.
+
+"Mr. Gedney," he said in what he may have thought was a tragic whisper,
+but which echoed through half the hall, "I'se been a-caperin' fo'
+nineteen yeahs, an' ah nevah had anything as shockin' happen to me as
+dis heah befo'."
+
+"Why, what's the matter, Thomas?" Mr. Gedney asked, while the more
+curious of the dancers marked time gently within earshot.
+
+"Dey done stole mah 'freshments!" wailed the darky, forgetting, in his
+emotion, to lower his voice. "Ah had de ice-cream an' de san-wiches an'
+de fruit-punch an' de fancy-cake"--a soft moan went up unconsciously
+over the room as the hungry dancers heard of these vanished
+glories--"an' Ah put dem out on de side poach till Ah wanted dem. Ah
+didn't know Ah was comin' to no thief-town. An dey's _gone!_"
+
+Mr. Gedney rose to the occasion nobly.
+
+"We'll find some of them, Thomas," he said.
+
+By this time nearly everyone in the room had paused about the door. Mr.
+Gedney raised his voice. "Ladies," he said, "if you will excuse your
+partners for half an hour they will go out on the trail of
+our--ah--vanished refection. Scouts, attention! By twos, forward--hike!"
+
+In an instant every Scout, with a hasty excuse to his partner, had
+vanished from the building.
+
+"It's that Bent Street gang," hissed Tom to his sister in passing. "We
+know where they hang out, and where they're likely to have cached the
+eats."
+
+"I only hope there'll be something left by the time the Scouts find the
+food," wailed Louise. "Don't look so happy, Winnie--it's insulting!"
+
+"She's swelling as if she had an idea," suggested Helen, who had come
+over. "What is it, Win?"
+
+"So I have!" said Winona, her eyes sparkling as they always did when
+Great Ideas came her way. She was rather given to them. She ran across
+to Mrs. Bryan and began to talk to her in an excited whisper.
+
+When she had done Mrs. Bryan nodded.
+
+"Splendid!" she said. "Tell the girls yourself, my dear."
+
+So Winona stood swiftly out in the middle of the floor, a slim, gallant
+little figure in her Indian frock and the long strings of scarlet beads
+she had added to it.
+
+"Girls!" she said. "Those refreshments mayn't ever come back. The boys
+won't be back with them right away, anyhow. Let's get together and make
+some more!"
+
+"Good!" called out all the girls at once, and came flocking around Mrs.
+Bryan and Winona for orders. But Mrs. Bryan wouldn't give any.
+
+"You manage it, Ray of Light!" said she as Winona turned to her.
+
+"We want sandwiches and fruit punch and cakes, and--we can't get
+ice-cream this late at night," she remembered.
+
+"We can get oysters," said Helen's competent voice from behind a group
+of girls. "That oyster house down on Front Street is always open till
+twelve."
+
+"Then we can make creamed oysters--good!" said Winona. "Let's
+see--sixteen couples--about fifty sandwiches, if you count three to a
+person. Six loaves of bread, about. Marie, you belong to a big
+family--do you think you have any bread in the house your family could
+part with?"
+
+"Three loaves, anyway," said Marie.
+
+"I'll bring the other three," spoke up Elizabeth Greene, one of the new
+members.
+
+They both threw on their wraps and hurried out. Fortunately, most of the
+girls lived close by.
+
+"We'll send Thomas for the oysters," suggested Mrs. Bryan next. "None of
+you want to go to Front Street this time of night."
+
+She produced her purse from the pocket of her ceremonial dress, and went
+to send Thomas for the oysters.
+
+"Has anybody got anything in their house to fill sandwiches with?"
+Winona went on.
+
+"We have two pounds of dates," offered Edith Hillis, "and some rolls of
+cream cheese."
+
+"And I have the other half of both sketches, peanut butter and
+lettuces," called out Louise, "three heads, and two big glasses."
+
+"All right, go get 'em," said Winona unceremoniously, and two more
+sisters of the Camp Fire hurried on their wraps and fled out into the
+night.
+
+"I have milk and butter, myself," went on Winona.
+
+"Nannie," hinted Helen to Mrs. Bryan, who had returned, "do you remember
+those three big layer cakes you made for the Presbyterian fair? I'll
+make them over again if I can have them now."
+
+"No you won't, my child, because they're my contribution," returned her
+step-mother briskly. "Thank you for reminding me. I'll get them, and
+pineapples and lemons for your contribution to the lemonade."
+
+Dorothy remembered that she had some oranges and bananas, and Adelaide
+finally recalled to the rest that creamed oysters need thickening, and
+went after flour and salt and pepper.
+
+A couple of the other girls had candy at home, beautifully fresh and
+home-made. In fifteen minutes every girl was back laden down, and all of
+them invaded the little school kitchen. Fortunately most of the sixteen
+had taken cooking lessons there, and knew just where to find everything,
+even to their own aprons. So there was no time lost searching for
+matches and knives and bowls, and other such necessaries.
+
+One group of four cut and squeezed and sliced fruit for the
+fruit-punch--or fruit-lemonade, to give it the only name it was really
+entitled to. Another set prepared the sandwiches, which, what with
+pitting and chopping the dates for the date-and-peanut-butter ones, and
+cutting and spreading six big loaves of bread, was quite an undertaking.
+Another group handled the creamed oysters. This last wasn't exactly a
+group, though, because, try as you may, it is impossible for more than
+two people to make one cream gravy, or white sauce. The rest cut cake
+and arranged plates and looked after the serving generally.
+
+Thomas the "caperer" sat in a corner and "shucked oysters," as he called
+it, with his two attendant waiters standing statue-like behind him. It
+made a very impressive, if rather useless group.
+
+Mrs. Bryan lent a helping hand here and there as it was needed, but in
+the main she left the guidance of the affair to Winona's generalship.
+
+"Why, I didn't know how easy it was to have people do things!" Winona
+whispered to the Guardian, when that lady came over to her once to
+advise a little more butter in the gravy.
+
+"You happen to have executive ability, that's all," explained Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+Winona laughed. "Oh, it doesn't take executive ability when people want
+to help!" she returned gayly.
+
+The boys got back in just forty-five minutes, with rather dirtier
+uniforms than they had taken away. They were panting, also, and had a
+general cheerful air of having had something happen. But with them they
+bore, triumphantly, the untouched freezer, full of beautiful molds of
+ice-cream; also a large pasteboard box full of untouched, but rather
+crumpled-looking, fancy cakes.
+
+The sandwiches, they explained regretfully, were beyond recall, and so
+was the salad. The Bent Street gang had been just about to begin their
+last course when the Scouts descended.
+
+"We had a bully time!" said Billy Lee to Winona, who emerged from the
+kitchen, trying hard to look unoccupied, as did all the rest of the
+girls. "We didn't expect a lark like that in the middle of this. But
+it's hard on you girls to miss half the refreshments!"
+
+"Don't worry," said Winona cheerfully. "We aren't going to miss any of
+the refreshments, and neither are you! What do you think Camp Fire Girls
+are good for?"
+
+"Lots!" said Billy honestly, "but I don't see----"
+
+"That's because you aren't looking," laughed Winona.
+
+She pointed towards the little tent that draped the kitchen door. From
+out that tent issued haughtily Thomas's two negro waiters, each bearing
+a steaming, creamed-oyster-laden tray.
+
+"You'd better sit down," suggested Winona, "Everybody else has."
+
+"Well, this is great!" cried Billy enthusiastically, between bites of
+creamed oysters and sandwiches, and sips of fruit lemonade that was
+really better than that the Bent Street gang had stolen. "You don't mean
+to say you girls did all this right off the bat, while we were hunting
+the hoodlums, do you?"
+
+"Why, of course we did," and Winona dimpled with pleasure. "There were
+such a lot of us that it wasn't hard at all."
+
+"Anyhow, whoever managed it was a mighty clever person," said Billy,
+meditatively eating his last oyster. "Don't you think so?"
+
+This happened to be a rather embarrassing question.
+
+"Why, no!" she said thoughtlessly.
+
+"Then it was you!" said Billy, jumping cleverly to his conclusion.
+
+"We all helped," said Winona, blushing. "Everybody brought something. I
+only thought of it first--that was easy."
+
+"Easy if you know how!" said Billy skeptically.
+
+"Winona knew how," asserted Helen's voice behind them. She began to talk
+to Winona and Billy very earnestly about several things that didn't seem
+to have much to do with life in general. They had to turn half round to
+face her, which was what she wanted, for it prevented Winona from seeing
+that all the members of the Camp Fire were clustered near her place. The
+first she knew of it was Mrs. Bryan's voice saying:
+
+"All together, girls--a cheer for Ray of Light, who saved the
+refreshments!"
+
+The girls' voices rang out in the triple cheer for Winona, who blushed
+harder than ever.
+
+"I didn't do anything but suggest it!" she explained uselessly. Then she
+remembered her manners and sprang up.
+
+"Thank you, Sisters of the Camp Fire--even if I _don't_ deserve it!" she
+said gayly.
+
+Then the band started up and dancing went on.
+
+The evening ended with a riotous Virginia reel (which, by the way, meant
+an honor bead for every girl, because the boys none of them knew much
+about reeling, and had to be shown) and a final ringing cheer for the
+Camp Fire Girls by the Scouts. Then the party broke up. Though broke up
+is hardly the word, for the girls marched out, as they had come, in a
+body, with a military file of Scouts on either side of them. Altogether
+it certainly was the most festive of parties, and everybody thought so
+even next morning, when the mournful things about a party are apt to
+occur to you.
+
+The Scouts insisted, by the way, on replacing the various things that
+had been taken out of various pantries. The girls had intended to pay
+their families scrupulously back, but the Scouts extracted an exact
+account of the commandeered supplies from their sisters and cousins.
+Then they saw to it that everything, from the last loaf of bread to the
+last peanut, was redelivered by four next day. And so ended "the very
+best party," as everybody agreed, "that we ever had."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHT
+
+
+"It _was_ a nice party!" sighed Winona, for the tenth time, next day.
+
+"It was," admitted Tom. "I enjoyed it myself. Also the eats were good.
+Very clever of us to give a party like that. The question is, if you
+girls had to manage a real meal what would happen?"
+
+"That's exactly what we're going to do," said Winona. "This very
+afternoon, at Mrs. Bryan's!"
+
+"Oh, can't I go?" clamored Florence.
+
+"Well, it's just Helen and Louise and Adelaide Hughes and I," Winona
+hesitated. "It's the maid's day out, and we're going to get the supper
+and clear it away. Four of the others are going to do it a day or so
+later. And we're all going to try to get the same supper at our own
+houses, the next night."
+
+"Then of course I want to go!" said Florence, "so I can get the same
+supper at home the next night."
+
+Still Winona hesitated. It certainly is a nuisance to have a small
+sister who wants to tag, when you are just starting off to have a
+particularly nice time with your most intimate friends. And to add to
+the charm of the situation, just then in rushed Puppums through the back
+door, and seeing Winona with her hat in her hand, promptly sat up and
+began to beg wildly. Winona began to laugh.
+
+"Oh, come on, then, the whole family!" she said.
+
+Florence and Puppums both yelped for joy.
+
+"Shall I send Tom over to bring you back this evening?" asked Winona's
+mother, who was sitting near.
+
+"Oh, no--it isn't far," said Winona, "and it won't be late when I get
+back. Besides, I'll have Florence and the doggie."
+
+"Very well," said her mother. "And don't try to cook things that are too
+gorgeous, my dear, because we haven't as much money as the Bryans, and
+it might turn out to be very expensive."
+
+"I'll remember," said Winona, starting off with her little sister beside
+her, and Puppums careering wildly about them both. But it was one of the
+things that never did worry the Merriams, whether or not they had as
+much money as their neighbors. The three children and the dog, as their
+friends said, "always did seem to be having such a good time!" They were
+handsome and light-hearted--that is, the children were. Puppums was more
+remarkable for brains than beauty, as Tom said; being part pug, part
+bull-terrier and part fox-terrier, with a dash of retriever suspected in
+his remote ancestry. However, as long as he had his own way and plenty
+of bones and enough laps to sit on, neither his looks nor anything else
+worried the Puppums dog. His family had intended to give him a very fine
+name, but as Puppums he started when he was a small, wriggling
+mongrel-baby, and to nothing but Puppums would he ever deign to answer.
+So the family made the best of it. It was a way they had, anyway.
+
+Florence began to career around her sister very much as the dog was
+doing, singing at the top of her voice meanwhile. So, as Winona did not
+have to talk, she began to think. What her mother had said about their
+not having so much money as the Bryans set her to wondering, not about
+herself, but about Adelaide Hughes. She had noticed that Mrs. Bryan
+seemed to want Adelaide to make friends with the other girls, and that
+Adelaide herself was very apt to leave the first advances to them. And
+the reason, she supposed, was that Adelaide felt she was too poor to
+keep up with them, or so Tom had said.
+
+"But I don't ever feel as if I had to keep up with Helen, and she has
+twice as many dresses and twice as much money to spend as I have,"
+meditated Winona. "I wonder if I could ask Adelaide about it without
+hurting her feelings. I will if I get the chance."
+
+About this time Winona and her caravan reached the Bryan house, and
+Florence ran ahead so quickly to ring the bell that Winona had to run,
+too, to be there when the door opened.
+
+"I've brought my family, Mrs. Bryan!" said Winona. "I hadn't any
+choice--they simply would come. It's really your fault for being so
+popular with them."
+
+"Your family's very welcome!" said Mrs. Bryan. "If it's willing to be
+useful. What about it, Florence,--will you run errands for us if we want
+you to?"
+
+"Course I will!" said Florence, flinging herself bodily on Mrs. Bryan
+and hugging her hard. "I want to work!"
+
+"Puppums wants to help, too," said Helen.
+
+"Well, you can't help that way, you little villain," said Louise,
+appearing aproned in the doorway and making a dash for the dog. He had
+his paws on the table, and was most ill-manneredly trying to find out
+what was wrapped up in the paper with the lovely meaty smell. Louise
+rescued the package, and carried it out to the kitchen.
+
+"Is everyone here?" asked Mrs. Bryan. "No, I miss Adelaide."
+
+"She's just coming now," said Helen from the living-room window. "I
+wonder if she's remembered to bring her apron?"
+
+"Oh," cried Winona, "I never brought mine!"
+
+"I'll go get it," said Florence. "You see, you need me already!"
+
+She flew off, with the dog at her heels.
+
+"Truly, I'm sorry, Mrs. Bryan," apologized Winona again, "but she would
+have felt so badly if I hadn't let her come!"
+
+"You ought to sit on her more," suggested Louise, popping her head out
+of the kitchen door again. "I do on mine."
+
+"Well, you have such a lot of brothers and sisters you have to," said
+Winona, for Louise was the oldest of six.
+
+"Bessie wanted to come," said Louise, "but I put my foot down."
+
+"On Bessie?" laughed Winona, as she ran to open the door for Adelaide.
+"I hope you didn't hurt her."
+
+"Did you bring your apron, Adelaide?" called Helen anxiously.
+
+"There! She's asked every one of us that question in turn," said Louise,
+coming out into the living-room for the fourth time in five minutes. "I
+do hope you did!"
+
+"Oh, yes, I did," said Adelaide. "I have it here under my arm."
+
+"And here's Florence back with mine!" said Winona. "Now may we start?"
+
+"It isn't quite time yet," said Mrs. Bryan. "If we plan for supper at
+six, one hour is a great plenty of time for supper-getting, especially
+with all of us at it. It's only four-thirty now, and I want to tell you
+a plan I have. Come here, Florence. It's about you and your friends."
+
+"Oh, a plan about me!" said Florence. "That is nice!"
+
+"You see, girls," went on Mrs. Bryan, "there are always little sisters
+or cousins of Camp Fire Girls, like Florence and Bessie and the rest,
+who want to play, too. They aren't old enough to belong to Camp Fires of
+their own, so the way we do is to make them an annex to ours, under the
+name of Blue Birds--the Blue Bird stands for happiness, you know. And we
+help them, and show them how to have good times, too, and--they don't
+have to tag any more."
+
+"I didn't mean to tag," said Florence, looking a little ashamed. "I just
+wanted to--to come, too!"
+
+"Well, if you will go and find Bessie Lane, and--Adelaide, you have a
+little sister about their ages, haven't you?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Adelaide. "Frances is nine."
+
+"Well, Florence, get Bessie and Frances if you can find them, and we'll
+discover something for our nest of Blue Birds to do."
+
+"I think it's lovely, being a Blue Bird," said Florence, very much
+impressed by belonging to a society of her own.
+
+"Well, if you're a bird, fly!" said Louise, giving her a little push.
+
+The girls talked for a while longer, then donned their aprons and went
+out into the kitchen, where they stood and waited for further orders.
+
+"There are four of you," said their Guardian. "There's the table to set,
+salad and dressing to make, meat and potatoes to prepare, and dessert.
+Cocoa and cake, too. You're welcome to anything in the ice-box, but the
+game is to get supper without buying anything extra, unless something
+like bread or sugar gives out--some staple."
+
+"That will be more fun," said Winona, who had had some experience lately
+with cooking. "It's much more interesting thinking out ways to make
+things out of other things, than when you cook straight ahead!"
+
+Adelaide stared as if Winona had said a very strange thing. But then
+Adelaide always did look at Winona more or less that way.
+
+"I think the most fun is eating out of paper bags," said Louise. "No
+washee dishee. However, I only think that--I wouldn't dare say it.
+How'll we divide?"
+
+"Decide that yourselves," said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Let's see what there is in the ice-box, first," Winona suggested
+prudently, when Mrs. Bryan had left them alone. So they investigated.
+
+"Eight large baked potatoes!" counted Louise. "How on earth did you
+miscalculate so badly as that, Helen, or are they there for our special
+benefit?"
+
+"No, it just happened," said Helen. "Father was going to bring a friend
+home to dinner last night, and neither of them could get here after
+all."
+
+There was also a large piece of cooked beefsteak, a head of lettuce, a
+dish of cooked peas and some beets. There were other things in the
+ice-box as well, but these were what the girls chose. They brought some
+apples up from down cellar, too, and stacked them in a row on the table
+with the other things.
+
+"Now, Nannie said that the game was to use as many leftovers as possible
+and do everything as inexpensively as we could and yet have everything
+taste good and not seem warmed over," said Helen.
+
+"That's something a lot of grown-up women never do," said Louise. "My
+aunt----"
+
+Mrs. Bryan came from the living-room to say. "I'll show you anything you
+don't know about, girls, but you must do the actual work yourselves, or
+you won't know how."
+
+"Yes!" said Louise. "Choose your poison, Ladies and Gentlemen!" She
+pulled her cooking-cap close down over her hair. "I'm going to do the
+potatoes. I think I know how to fix them."
+
+"Cold baked potatoes?" said Helen. "There isn't anything, except
+creaming them."
+
+"They're all right that way," said Louise, "but that isn't what I'm
+going to do."
+
+"Well, I'll take the cake," said Helen. "I saw some sour milk in the
+ice-box, and spice-cake is the cheapest cake I know."
+
+"I'll take the meat," said Winona. "There must be something I can do
+with a beautiful piece of steak like that, even if it is cooked."
+
+Adelaide had not said anything.
+
+"That leaves the salad for you, Adelaide," said Mrs. Bryan cheerfully.
+"Louise, you'd better see about some fruit for supper, for your potatoes
+won't take you long."
+
+Then Mrs. Bryan introduced them to the ways of the gas-range, and went
+back to lie in wait for her Blue Birds.
+
+Helen collected spice and molasses and flour and shortening around her
+corner of the table, and went systematically to work on her spice-cake.
+
+"It looks like gingerbread," said Winona, getting the bread-crumb jar.
+
+"It is, really, only it hasn't much ginger in," explained Helen. "Lots
+of people don't like ginger. What are you going to do with your steak,
+Winnie?"
+
+"Frame it!" advised Louise frivolously. "They say they have a four-pound
+steak under glass at the Metropolitan Museum, as a relic of the days
+when each family had at least one in a lifetime."
+
+"If you want to frame your share of it you may," said Winona. "I'm going
+to eat mine."
+
+"They're supposed to be eaten," put in Helen mildly. "But really,
+Winnie, I think you have rather a hard job. There's not nearly enough
+steak there for eight people. It was only intended for five in the first
+place."
+
+"That's the game, isn't it?" said Winona placidly. "Besides, I'm going
+to send Florence home to supper. It's all right for her to attach
+herself to the party for the afternoon, but I draw the line at her
+inviting herself to a meal--don't you think so, Louise?"
+
+"I'm wid yez," called Louise back from the gas-range, where she was
+doing something with sugar and water. "Bessie goes back, too."
+
+Winona got the chopping-machine, divided a big stalk of celery with
+Adelaide, made another excursion to the shelf over the ice-box for some
+peppers and onions, and began to grind her beefsteak.
+
+"Croquettes?" inquired Louise curiously.
+
+"No, scalloped meat," answered Winona. "The croquettes won't go as far,
+and there'll be the cream gravy extra, and we'll need milk for the
+cocoa. Besides, the deep fat to fry them would be another horrible
+extravagance."
+
+She put in a layer of meat as she spoke, then the ground celery and
+peppers and seasoning, and a generous layer of bread-crumbs.
+
+"But aren't celery and peppers an extravagance, too?" put in Adelaide,
+looking faintly interested. She was the only one of the four girls not
+busy. She had not started on her salad.
+
+"They would be if they weren't in the house," said Winona carelessly,
+"though I don't think they are costly this time of year. But I'm using
+them for their bulk. Mother flavors with celery seed when celery's too
+high."
+
+She continued to build up her edifice of meat and crumbs and so forth,
+and finally drenched it with cold water and put it in the oven.
+
+"Be careful of my cake when you look at your meat," reminded Helen,
+coming and tucking her spice-cake in beside the meat as she spoke. "How
+are you getting on, Adelaide?"
+
+"Not at all," said Adelaide ashamedly. "I don't believe I know how to
+make salads."
+
+"Come help me set the table, then," invited Helen.
+
+"All right," said Adelaide, getting up slowly from her kitchen chair,
+and flinging her long, untidy braids back over her shoulders.
+
+"No, Helen, please!" said Winona. "Let me show Adelaide. I think we can
+make a perfectly lovely salad in a few minutes."
+
+"All right, Winnie!" said Helen cheerfully, and vanished into the
+dining-room alone.
+
+"I don't see how!" said Adelaide. "I thought you had to have chicken or
+lobster or such things for salad--and I'm sure I'd curdle the dressing."
+
+"Of course you will if you expect to," said Louise, setting her syrup on
+to boil, and beginning to pare and quarter apples and drop them in cold
+water so they wouldn't brown. "Why don't you make boiled dressing?"
+
+"I didn't know about it," said Adelaide.
+
+"Good gracious!" said Louise. "How on earth do you manage at your
+house?"
+
+"Well, there's just father and Lonny and France and I, and mostly father
+brings home things from the delicatessen. And sometimes we roast meat
+and just eat at it till it's gone. I'm not old enough to know much about
+housekeeping, father says. But Lonny cooks sometimes."
+
+Winona and Louise both stared at her.
+
+"I'd go crazy," said Louise frankly. "I should think you'd get so you
+never wanted to eat anything."
+
+"Anyway, you can 'try this on your piano' when you go home," Winona
+threw in hastily, giving Louise a furtive, if thorough, pinch as she
+passed her, for she had seen Adelaide color up. "Boiled dressing's easy.
+You know how to make drawn butter, don't you--white sauce?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Adelaide, rising.
+
+"Well," explained Winona, "when you melt the butter in the pan to mix
+with the flour, you add some mustard, just a pinch, and salt and pepper.
+Then when you've put in the flour, and the milk, and it's just going to
+thicken, you put in the yolk of an egg. When it's cold you thin it with
+vinegar. That isn't hard, is it?"
+
+Adelaide was swiftly following directions as Winona talked.
+
+"Thin the egg with milk, and beat it a little--that's right," said
+Winona. "There--now take it off. The egg only wants to cook a minute.
+Now all you have to do is wait till it cools and add the vinegar,
+and--there's your dressing!"
+
+"Why, it isn't a bit hard!" said Adelaide wonderingly.
+
+"Nor a bit expensive," said Winona. "As for the salad, you can make
+salad out of any kind of vegetable that will cut up."
+
+"Let me see if I can work it out alone," said Adelaide.
+
+She washed the lettuce and set it on the individual salad plates Helen
+found for her. Then she began to combine peas and beets and celery quite
+as if she knew how.
+
+Winona watched her for a minute, then went over to see what Louise was
+doing. While she had been helping Adelaide Louise's syrup had cooked
+enough to have the quartered apples dropped into it, and now it was
+bubbling on the back of the stove. Just as Winona came over Louise took
+off the apples, cooked through, but not to the point of losing their
+shape, and put them outdoors to cool. Then she turned her attention to
+the baked potatoes of yesterday.
+
+She had heated them through, and now she cut off the tops and scooped
+out the inside, and was mixing it with milk and butter and a little
+onion, and beating it till it was creamy.
+
+"They're harder to do than if they were fresh," she said, pounding
+vigorously, "but I guess they'll come out all right, when they've been
+browned a minute."
+
+"They'll be browned just about the time my scalloped meat's done,"
+responded Winona, dropping to her knees before the oven. "Oh, Helen,
+come take out your cake! It's all done--I've tried it with a straw."
+
+"Oh, it isn't burned, is it?" cried Helen, dashing in.
+
+It wasn't. She put it on the shelf over the range, to keep warm, and
+headed a party bound upstairs to tidy up.
+
+"You didn't set places for those little taggers?" called Louise to Helen
+on the way up.
+
+"Not at our table," said Helen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINE
+
+
+When the four girls came down and put on the supper they found a
+surprise waiting for them. Beside the large table the little
+sewing-table had been moved in, spread with a white cloth and set; and
+around it, very flushed and important, sat Florence, Bessie Lane,
+Frances Hughes, and Edith Hillis's little sister Lucy. Before Frances,
+who was the oldest, sat a big dish of creamed potatoes, a platter of
+Hamburg steak, and in front of each girl steamed a bowl of tomato soup.
+
+"Well, where----" began everybody. All the small sisters answered at
+once.
+
+"We cooked 'em on the gas-stove in the back parlor!"
+
+"All but the soup," added conscientious little blonde Lucy. "We dumped
+that out of a can."
+
+"Well, we cooked it, too, didn't we?" inquired Frances.
+
+"So that was what was in the package Puppums wanted!" said Winona.
+"Where _is_ Puppums, anyway?" she added as she set down her scalloped
+meat.
+
+"I d'no," said Florence carelessly.
+
+But just at that moment Puppums accounted for himself. He came in from
+the direction of the half-open back door, in his mouth a neatly done up
+package.
+
+"_Oh!_" cried Winona and Florence in one despairing voice, "he's been
+stealing again! Drop it, you little wretch!"
+
+Mrs. Bryan went around to Puppums, who was proudly sitting up on his
+haunches over his spoils.
+
+"It isn't ours," she said, opening the bundle.
+
+"What is it?" asked Winona. "I might as well know the worst."
+
+"Chops," answered Mrs. Bryan briefly. "Two pounds of very nice lamb
+chops, with nothing at all to tell where they belong!"
+
+"Oh, Puppums!" said Winona and Florence together tragically. The rest
+were all laughing but to Puppums's family it was far from a laughing
+matter.
+
+Puppums Merriam was a splendid watch-dog. He was sweet-tempered and
+intelligent and obedient and cheerful, and everything a family dog
+should be. But he had one fault. He would occasionally snoop around back
+porches in search of anything the butcher might have left. The fact that
+he got three good meals a day, and was losing his figure far too fast
+for such a young and sprightly dog did not matter to him at all. Neither
+did he mind the fact that he got a good whipping every time Tom caught
+him at it. Happy indeed was the week wherein the Merriams did not have
+to apologetically return roasts or steaks to furious owners; or--if the
+condition of the prey made it necessary--buy new ones. But this last did
+not happen very often, for Puppums rarely brought home the bills with
+him, and it is hard to trace anonymous meat.
+
+So when he proudly presented his contribution to the feast there was
+nothing to do but to pick up the chops and put them away.
+
+"I can't spoil the fun by whipping him, and he always thinks my
+whippings are fun anyway, and wags his tail!" mourned Winona. "And we'll
+never know whose chops they were!"
+
+"They're Puppums's chops now," said Louise. "Go on, give 'em to him,
+Winnie. If you went out and gathered chops you wouldn't want to be
+scolded."
+
+"Well, I suppose he may as well have them," said Winona still sadly. So,
+although it was very wrong, and as she explained to the dog, it didn't
+create a precedent, soon the collector of chops was happily crunching
+them outside the back door, while the Camp Fire Girls ate made-over meat
+within.
+
+"What about our camping out?" Louise demanded, after the first pangs of
+appetite were over. "What's the use of being us if we can't camp?"
+
+"We _can_ camp," answered their Guardian as she helped Helen to some
+more salad. "This is lovely dressing, Adelaide. I didn't know what good
+cooks all of you were. I have been looking things up, and I don't see
+why we shouldn't go in a short time now, if all of your parents are
+willing and can spare you."
+
+There was a great commotion over at the table where the Blue Birds sat,
+and then hurried whispers--
+
+"You ask, Lucy."
+
+"No, you ask, Frances!"
+
+Finally Florence spoke up.
+
+"Can't the Blue Birds go camping, too?"
+
+"Why, of course they can!" said Mrs. Bryan cordially. "That is, just as
+with the Camp Fire Girls, if their mothers are willing."
+
+"Oh, then I can go, if we take Frances," said Adelaide relievedly.
+"Father and Lonny can get along all right by themselves, but Frances
+couldn't. Oh, I'm so glad!" Which was quite a good deal for reserved
+Adelaide to say.
+
+"So are we glad," said Helen heartily.
+
+"I wonder whether we couldn't go to that place up on the Wampoag River.
+Have you thought of any place, Mrs. Bryan?"
+
+"None but there or thereabouts," she said. "It's the best camping-place
+for a long distance, and only about twelve miles off."
+
+"But won't the boys want to camp there, too?" asked Helen.
+
+"There's plenty of room for everybody," said her step-mother. "I've been
+talking it over with Mr. Gedney, the Scoutmaster, and he says their camp
+will be about two and a half miles from the place I'd thought of our
+going. Wampoag River is very long, you know, and there must be five
+miles of woodland along both sides. So we needn't interfere with each
+other at all."
+
+"Then that's all right," said everybody.
+
+"And oh, let's hike there!" cried Louise. "We can do it in two days as
+easily as anything. Please, dear, nice, kind Guardian, let us hike
+there!"
+
+"I think it would be a very good thing to do," approved Mrs. Bryan. "But
+it isn't for me to settle. You'll have to have a business meeting to
+decide that, and to decide another thing that nobody's thought of."
+
+"Ways and means?" ventured Adelaide, perhaps because they had been in
+her mind, too.
+
+"Exactly," said Mrs. Bryan. "We haven't enough in the treasury to pay
+expenses, even if we only stay a little while. It's for you all to
+decide whether you want to get the money from your parents for the
+provisions, or whether you will earn it."
+
+"Earn it?" asked Winona, "How could we, in such a little while?"
+
+"You'll have to work that out yourselves," replied Mrs. Bryan, as she
+usually did.
+
+"Well, I can't ask dad for _much_ money," Louise frankly confessed.
+"Times are hard, and me poor father needs his gold for the lit-tul ones
+at home!"
+
+"Well, of course it's premature," hesitated Helen, looking up, "because
+the rest aren't here."
+
+"Go on, anyway," said the others eagerly.
+
+"Well, I don't see why we shouldn't have a bread and cake and preserve
+sale," she went on. "I'm treasurer, you know, and I'm sure we have
+enough money on hand for materials. People will buy things to eat when
+they won't buy anything else. I'm sure, too, that we could get Black's
+drug-store to sell in."
+
+"We'd need more than one cake-sale, wouldn't we?" asked Winona.
+
+"We could have two--or even four!" asserted Louise boldly. "We needn't
+go for two weeks yet, anyway. It will only be the last of July then. We
+could have sales Wednesdays and Saturdays."
+
+"And get orders beforehand, and make what people want!" said Louise,
+"Oh, I'd love to do that!"
+
+"Will it cost much?" asked Adelaide.
+
+"The sale?" said Louise.
+
+"No, the trip."
+
+"Not a good deal," said Mrs. Bryan. "We have the land free, of course.
+We shall have to buy tents--let me see, there are twelve in the Camp
+Fire, aren't there? And there will be six or eight Blue Birds. We'll
+need ten tents, and then there'll be the provisions. What they cost will
+depend on how long you decide to stay. If you hike there and back there
+won't be any railroad fare. As for clothes, you'll need blouses and dark
+skirts or bloomers, and tennis shoes--but all that can wait till the
+business meeting. Marie is secretary--she and Edith and Dorothy and Anna
+Morris are going to be here getting luncheon to-morrow. There had better
+be a meeting here to-morrow afternoon. I'll telephone Marie after
+supper."
+
+Eight very happy girls of assorted sizes cleared away the supper and
+washed the dishes and made the kitchen shine. Even Puppums, bulging with
+contraband chops, was more amiable than usual, and slept placidly in all
+the places where he was most in the way.
+
+"I'm going to take my banjo," planned Louise.
+
+"I shall take pounds and pounds of modelling clay," said Helen
+enthusiastically.
+
+"Edith has a mandolin," volunteered Lucy Hillis.
+
+"Everybody that has a musical instrument had better bring it," said Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+"We'll contribute a very fine dog with a stunning howl!" said Winona
+mischievously.
+
+"That dog isn't a musical instrument, he's a famine-breeder!" said
+Louise; then paused, for Mrs. Bryan went into the dining-room to
+telephone Marie Hunter. Edith Hillis was at Marie's, and both girls were
+as excited over the cake-sale idea as the rest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next afternoon the whole Camp Fire had a business meeting at Mrs.
+Bryan's. Besides the girls who had originally belonged, five others had
+joined. It was a very pleasant meeting, helped out with afternoon cocoa
+and sandwiches that the lunch-getters had prepared. They discussed ways
+and means till they could scarcely hear themselves think. Never was
+there such an unanimous meeting. For everybody wanted to go camping, and
+to go camping money is needed. So three committees were appointed, one
+to buy materials, another to borrow an eligible drug-store for Saturday,
+and a third to attend to advertising. The girls were to meet Friday, and
+each take home what materials she needed. Saturday morning the materials
+were to be returned to the drug-store in the shape of salable things to
+eat. It even occurred to one genius to allot to each girl a certain
+thing to make.
+
+"It's a good thing to do," she said modestly--it was Dorothy. "Once our
+Sunday-school class gave a sale, and every single girl brought chocolate
+cake."
+
+"I remember that," said Marie. "But it turned out all right."
+
+"Oh, yes," said Dorothy laughing. "We hung a sign in the window,
+'Chocolate cake sale!' and it all went. But it mightn't have!"
+
+So Marie made out a careful list of what each girl was to make.
+
+"I don't see how we'll ever sell all those!" she said, looking worried.
+
+But they did. People always will buy bread and cake and muffins. At the
+end of the first sale, on Saturday, Edith Hillis, who was on duty, put
+seventeen dollars in her hand-bag to take up to Helen.
+
+"There are orders, too," she reported. "We have eight dozen parkerhouse
+rolls and two dozen and a half biscuits promised for different lunches
+and suppers next week, beside jam orders. Here's the list."
+
+"That ought to be five dollars more," counted Helen.
+
+Edith forgot for once to smooth her dress and pat her curls in the
+excitement of success.
+
+"Three more as good and we'll have all the money we need!" she declared.
+
+And, as a matter of fact, the three following sales were better than the
+first. Adelaide developed a real talent for jelly-making, and the orders
+for that alone helped a good deal. At the crowning sale, the next one to
+the last, they made twenty-one dollars, and eighteen and nineteen at the
+other two.
+
+Mrs. Bryan went off to the city to buy tents, and was understood to have
+come back with ten that were marvellous bargains. The Camp Fire darned
+all its stockings, and tidied itself, and was collectively very good at
+home, so as to leave a pleasant last impression.
+
+Mrs. Merriam lamented that she was going to be very, very lonely, for
+Tom was going out camping with the Scouts only a day or so later than
+Winona and Florence were to go with Camp Karonya. As for Puppums, there
+were many arguments about him, for Tom thought he would make a fine
+mascot, and so did Winona and Florence. It was finally settled by the
+fact that another of the Scouts owned a collie and was going to take
+him; and Puppums, while he was a friendly dog in the main, and indeed
+had quite a social circle of his own, bit collies whenever he saw them.
+So there were bound to be fights if Puppums went with Tom, and it was
+decided that the girls should have him.
+
+Nobody thought there were going to be any more members added to the
+Camp. But one afternoon, while Winona was out in her back garden with
+Louise and Helen and a medicine ball, Nataly Lee from next door came
+calling. The three girls were dusty and tousled; Helen's braid was
+half-undone, the ribbon was off Winona's curls, and Louise, who had just
+fallen full-length across the nasturtiums in a vain effort to get the
+ball, had a streak of mould and grass-stain from her shoulder to the hem
+of her skirt. Altogether, they were as badly mussed a trio as you could
+wish to see, when Tom came out the back door toward them.
+
+He said nothing whatever, but he bore high in his hand the very largest
+tray the house afforded, and in its black and banged centre reposed a
+small calling-card which said "Miss Nataly Lee. The Cedars." He made a
+low bow, and held the tray toward his sister.
+
+Winona took off the card, and the three girls looked at it together.
+
+"Where do you suppose she keeps the cedars?" asked Louise in a stage
+whisper. "There aren't any next door."
+
+"Sh-h. That must be her ancestral estate," surmised Helen respectfully.
+"Oh, dear, Winnie, I can't go in this way, to a call that has a card and
+all that!"
+
+"Of course you can," said Winona cheerfully. "I did worse than that when
+I went calling on _her_. I didn't take any card at all. To be frank with
+you, I haven't any. Anyway, she received me with her wrapper on, and
+that's no better than grass-stains."
+
+"Come on--be sports!" urged Tom, waving his tray. "I think she's come to
+say that she's willing to be welcomed in your midst."
+
+"How do you know?" asked all three girls at once.
+
+"I don't know--I only think so, because Billy told me," said Tom.
+
+"We certainly look dreadful!" mourned Helen, but they all brushed each
+other off and straightened each other, and trotted into the house.
+
+Nataly did not look as if she had ever seen a negligee. She had on white
+gloves and a veil, and carried a card-case, and altogether, except that
+her hair was down and her skirt short, she might very well have been
+grown up.
+
+"It's a charming day," she began when she had been introduced to Helen
+and Louise.
+
+"It certainly is," agreed Louise, "and a lot too nice to stay in the
+house. Don't you want to come on out in the back yard with us and play
+ball?"
+
+But Nataly declined. She said she didn't think it would be good for her
+gloves.
+
+Then there was a pause, because nobody could think of anything to say.
+Finally Winona began:
+
+"Tom says you think you might like to join our Camp Fire, after all. Do
+you think you would?"
+
+Nataly looked as if she was about to take a dreadful plunge, but she
+said, "Yes, I believe I would like to. The doctor says I ought to be out
+in the open air, and you are, aren't you?"
+
+"We certainly are!" said Louise. "That's where we were when you came to
+call. Want to come?"
+
+Louise was visibly fretting at having to stay indoors, and finally
+Winona had to lead the way out to the back garden again. And, naturally,
+the first thing to meet their eyes was the big black tray, with Nataly's
+own card fatally conspicuous in the very middle of it. Winona tried to
+steer her around it, but it was no use. Your own name is one thing you
+are sure to see or hear before anything else. Winona, talking sixteen to
+the dozen about everything she could think of, picked up the card
+furtively and put it in her pocket. Unfortunately it wasn't possible to
+pocket the tray.
+
+However, they arranged with Nataly that she go camping with them. She
+could not join till the next monthly ceremonial meeting, but there was
+to be one soon after camp was pitched. So it was settled.
+
+"I wonder who she'll be friends with specially?" said Helen after she
+had gone. "She doesn't seem to fit into us, somehow."
+
+"We'll have to make her fit," said Winona gayly. "To tell you the truth
+Helen, she reminds me of a kitten I knew once. It belonged to three old
+maiden ladies. It didn't know how to be a kitten at all--the poor little
+thing thought it was a cat!"
+
+"Well, perhaps Nataly'll turn out a kitten, but I doubt it, even with
+you helping," said Louise. "Come on, let's finish our game."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TEN
+
+
+As the clock struck eight-thirty Monday morning, on the last week in
+July, one Guardian, one dog, thirteen big girls and seven small ones
+lined up for their long-anticipated hike to Camp Karonya. They planned
+to walk half the distance that day, sleep at a farmhouse about half-way
+to the woods, and finish the next day at their destination. They were
+all in middies, with dark skirts, and the most comfortable slippers
+money could buy--it hurts to hike in tight shoes. They had hats, of
+course, but Edith Hillis, in addition, carried a parasol. Each girl
+carried her own night-things and drinking-cup and luncheon. The
+provisions, and the rest of the baggage, had gone over to the
+camping-place in Mr. Bryan's automobile and Louise Lane's father's
+delivery-wagon.
+
+Early as it was, quite a lot of people were out to see the girls off,
+and even Puppums curvetted proudly as he noticed the attention he was
+getting, for he was a very vain dog. He might well be vain, because
+Louise had attached a large label to his collar which said "Camp Fire
+Dog," and he was not allowed to chew it off.
+
+They walked slowly, and it felt very much like going to a picnic
+guaranteed to last forever. Presently someone started a marching song,
+and everyone joined in. They walked easily on, having a very good time
+as they went; and before they knew it noon had come, and it was time to
+have lunch.
+
+They were near a meadow by this time, a big green meadow with trees at
+its edge, and they all sat down under the trees and unpacked their
+sandwiches and ate. Some of the girls had thermos bottles with them,
+with hot cocoa, but most of them preferred the concentrated lemonade
+Mrs. Bryan had brought along, mixed with water from a nice little brook
+which had been kind enough to flow quite near them.
+
+"If it's all going to be like this, won't it be lovely?" said Winona,
+her eyes shining, as she took a large bite of sandwich, and then fed a
+generous share of the rest to Puppums, who lay quiveringly near her.
+
+"It is nice," said Helen more quietly. "I hope we'll have weather like
+this the whole time ... gracious, what's that?"
+
+"That" was a distant squeal. Winona looked hastily around her to see
+what the Blue Birds were doing. But there were no Blue Birds there. The
+seven little girls were out of sight, but not out of hearing, for it was
+evidently one of them who had made the noise.
+
+Winona and Adelaide jumped up and ran, but Louise and Edith sat placidly
+on.
+
+"They _will_ howl," said Louise. "There's no use always chasing after
+them."
+
+But when Winona and Adelaide arrived at the place the squeals had come
+from they were very glad they had done the "chasing."
+
+Florence, with little Lucy Hillis holding her, was sitting on the ground
+screaming steadily. The other girls were huddled together in a
+frightened group a little way off.
+
+"What is it? What is it, Lucy?" cried Winona, frightened. Florence was
+making such a noise that it was no use asking her. Lucy Hillis, who was
+one of those quiet, old-fashioned little girls who always keep their
+heads, looked up, still holding Florence's wrist.
+
+"Florence's cut herself," she said. "I'm afraid it's a bad cut. I don't
+dare let go of it."
+
+Winona flung herself down by Florence and put her hands above Lucy's
+shaking little ones, which then, and not till then, let go.
+
+"Get me a stick, Lucy, quick--a strong one!" she said.
+
+Lucy was back with the stick before Winona was through speaking. Winona
+pulled off her tie, that useful silk scarf of hers which had helped
+Edith out of the water, and bound it above Florence's cut, twisting it
+tight with the stick. Then she asked Adelaide to tie Florence's wrist
+again, below the cut. She did not want to take any chances, and she did
+not know yet whether it was a vein or an artery that Florence had hurt.
+
+Then she sent Lucy flying for Mrs. Bryan, while she and Adelaide made
+Florence keep still.
+
+"That Lucy child keeps her head," said Adelaide approvingly.
+
+"It wasn't _her_ wrist that got cut!" said Florence indignantly,
+stopping her sobs.
+
+"How did it happen, Florence?" asked her sister. "Tell us--but don't
+stir. Nobody knows what will happen if your wrist starts bleeding
+again."
+
+"Well, we were being Indian chiefs," began Florence, "an'--an' I was out
+on the warpath, going to scalp Molly Green. And I ran, and Molly ran,
+an' I fell over a tree-root and the knife cut my wrist."
+
+"The knife!" said Winona, for nobody had mentioned a knife before.
+"Where did you get a knife?"
+
+Florence hung her head.
+
+"I--I borrowed your penknife out of your knapsack when you laid it on
+the grass to get lunch out of it."
+
+"The knife? I didn't."
+
+"No; the knapsack," said Florence meekly. "An'--an' oh, _dear_ sister,
+I'm so sorry!"
+
+Winona could scarcely help laughing, worried as she was. When Florence
+had been naughty she always became suddenly very affectionate. At other
+times she wasn't, especially.
+
+"I'm sorry, too," she said gravely. "I don't know what Mrs. Bryan will
+say to you, nor mother, when she hears about it."
+
+"Let me see," said Mrs. Bryan behind them. She had hurried over at
+Lucy's summons.
+
+"Oh, is it--is it an artery?" breathed Winona, as Mrs. Bryan bent over
+the wounded arm.
+
+Mrs. Bryan laughed. "Nothing of the sort, you foolish child," she said.
+"It's only a deep cut. It didn't even strike a large vein."
+
+"Oh, I'm _so_ glad!" said Winona, drawing a long breath.
+
+She ran off to get her First Aid kit out of her knapsack, and, coming
+back, presently had Florence bandaged up scientifically, and much
+impressed with the importance of what she had done.
+
+"Will I have to be carried on a stretcher?" the little girl wanted to
+know.
+
+"Not a bit of it," said Mrs. Bryan briskly. "You will have to walk on
+your own two feet, like any other naughty little girl."
+
+"Oh, was I naughty?" said Florence cheerfully. "I forgot that!"
+
+"Yes," answered Mrs. Bryan, "you were very naughty. I think we shall
+have to confine you to camp for two days, when we get there."
+
+"All right," said Florence complacently, "but now please can't I be
+carried on a stretcher? I should think I might!"
+
+"All right, let's," said Louise, who had come up along with the rest of
+the girls, in Mrs. Bryan's wake. "Only remember, Florence Merriam, once
+you get up on that stretcher you have to stay there."
+
+"Of course!" said Florence indignantly.
+
+By this time all the girls were clustered about the interesting invalid,
+and the stretcher idea struck them all as a very fine one. It would help
+them to put the Wood Craft they had been learning into practice. Winona
+picked up her gory penknife, and began to wash it in the brook before
+she started to cut wood with it.
+
+"Oh," said Florence plaintively, "I thought you'd always keep it that
+way, to remember me by!"
+
+"I'll have chance enough to remember you without that," replied Winona
+feelingly, and went off to look for poles with the others. Edith Hillis
+pulled her embroidery out of her knapsack and mounted guard over the
+Blue Birds, who were, however, a rather subdued flock by now.
+
+Meanwhile the rest of the girls picked out four saplings which grew at
+the edge of the wood beyond the meadow, and nicked them at the bottom
+patiently till they fell. The next thing was to tie them together. But
+nobody had anything to do it with, till Mrs. Bryan remembered a bunch of
+leather thongs she carried.
+
+"I always have at least two along for extra shoe-laces, when I'm
+camping," she explained, "and they always come in use for something else
+before the time is over. An old guide up in the Adirondacks told me to
+do that, and it's always a good thing for campers to do."
+
+The thongs bound the saplings into a frame, and Louise secured them to a
+knot that was newly learned, and the pride of her life.
+
+"That can't come out," she said, surveying it with pleasure, for
+learning to do it had earned her a much-valued bead.
+
+For the covering of the stretcher Adelaide produced an old gray shawl
+from her knapsack.
+
+"Father made me bring it," she explained rather shamefacedly.
+
+"Just the thing!" said Mrs. Bryan heartily.
+
+They wrapped it round the frame, and it went around three times, being
+large, so that a couple of pins held it fast. Then they lifted the
+gratified Florence on to it and started off down the road again. They
+had cleared up the fragments of their luncheon first, and buried neatly
+all the scraps and debris, so that there were no excursiony-looking
+boxes and crusts littering their resting-place.
+
+The girls took turns carrying the stretcher, and as there were fourteen
+of them, counting Mrs. Bryan, many hands made light work. As Louise had
+prophesied would happen, after a little while Florence became restless.
+The other Blue Birds were having lovely times frolicking all over the
+road, chasing butterflies and picking flowers and playing with the dog.
+Florence found it rather stupid to sit in solitary grandeur on a
+stretcher, and listen to what Winona and Adelaide, before her, and Marie
+and Edith, behind her, were saying about their own affairs. So at the
+first stop to change bearers she wanted to get down. But Mrs. Bryan was
+firm.
+
+"No, indeed," she said, "the first thing Blue Birds must learn is to
+obey orders and keep promises. You promised to stay up there till
+evening, Florence, and you must do it."
+
+Florence pouted, but she stayed. She really had lost quite a little
+blood in her adventure with her sister's penknife, and, though Mrs.
+Bryan did not tell her so, the walk might have been too much for her.
+She wriggled and yawned, and once sat up straight, till her bearers
+requested her to lie still. But presently she had a companion in misery.
+
+It was nearly the end of the journey, and the farmhouse where the girls
+planned to stay the night was in sight. Winona, strolling on ahead, saw
+a small gray kitten prowling along the side of the road. It was a most
+unhappy kitten; it looked as if it hadn't had a square meal since it
+could remember, and there was an ugly-looking place on its side as if
+something had worried it. It limped a little, too, poor little cat, and
+altogether a more forlorn animal would have been hard to find. But
+Winona pounced on it.
+
+"Oh, you poor little cat!" she cried. "Look, Helen, some horrid dog has
+hurt it."
+
+"Oh, don't pick it up!" said Marie. "It may have something awful."
+
+"Smallpox, maybe?" inquired Winona sarcastically. "Nonsense, Marie, the
+poor little thing's been worried by a dog, and it hasn't had enough to
+eat, that's all. I'm going to adopt it."
+
+And in spite of Marie's protests she picked it up and wrapped it in her
+handkerchief, and carried it back to Florence, who was wriggling on her
+stretcher, and wishing that she hadn't demanded that evidence of
+invalidism.
+
+"Here, Florence," said Winona, "hold this kitty till we get to the
+farmhouse."
+
+"Oh, a kitty! Poor little thing!" cried Florence, adopting the cat on
+the spot, and letting it cuddle down by her, which it was willing enough
+to do, for it seemed to be as tired as it was hungry.
+
+"Are you sure----" began Marie again.
+
+Marie's father was a professor in the high-school, and as a result she
+knew about more kinds of germs than the rest had ever heard of.
+
+"Mother lets us bring in hurt animals, always, and look after them,"
+said Winona. "Germs can't get you if you're careful. We can wash our
+hands in disinfectant as soon as we get to the farmhouse. I have some in
+my first-aid kit."
+
+"And what are you going to do with the cat?" asked Louise, coming up to
+the other side of the stretcher and surveying the much-discussed animal
+without great affection.
+
+"Keep it, if Mrs. Bryan doesn't mind, as it doesn't belong to anyone,"
+said Winona coolly. "It ought to make a good camp mascot."
+
+Louise eyed the kitten again--they were nearly at the farmhouse by this
+time.
+
+"It isn't exactly my idea of a mascot," she said candidly. "What about
+Puppums? I thought he was elected to the position."
+
+"Well, then, the kitty can be the under-mascot," said Winona
+undauntedly. "Anyway, when I get through nursing her she'll be a
+perfectly good cat--see if she isn't!"
+
+"I doubt it!" said Louise and Marie together, as if they had been
+practising a duet.
+
+"Wait!" said Winona as they mounted the steps.
+
+There were plenty of rooms, for the farm people took boarders all
+August; but even so, there were not enough for nearly twenty people.
+However, Mrs. Norris, the farmer's wife, had been prepared beforehand
+for the descent, and she had extra cots made up and ready in all the
+rooms, and unlimited hot water for baths.
+
+Winona did not come in when the others did. She sat down on the porch
+floor, pulled out her first-aid kit for the second time that day, sent
+Florence in for a basin of warm water, and set about doctoring the
+kitten. She sponged off the torn place in its side, and the little hurt
+in one of its hind legs that had made it limp. This last was only a
+scratch, but it had stiffened. She rubbed salve in the hurt places. Then
+she bandaged the cat's leg very successfully. But when it came to tying
+up the side--for the cat would certainly have licked the salve off if
+she could--it wasn't so simple. There wasn't anything to fasten the
+bandage to. Finally she wound it round and round the meek little animal,
+and sewed it up on top. The cat looked as if it had on a large and
+fashionable sash, but it did not object. Then Winona gave it some
+evaporated cream out of a can in her knapsack, watched it while it ate,
+which it did till the belt tightened dangerously, and took it into the
+house with her. Florence took the basin back to the place she had gotten
+it from.
+
+"Does this kitten belong to you?" Winona asked the landlady, who was
+hurrying about a long table in the dining-room, putting dishes full of
+steaming things on the table.
+
+"Bless my soul, no!" she answered, stopping with a pan of baked beans
+poised in mid-air. "Why, I do believe that's the kitten that belonged to
+Medarys, down the road, and they moved away last week. Well, poor little
+thing, the dogs must have got after it. It's a mercy it got away at
+all."
+
+"People who abandon cats that way ought to be left out in a wilderness
+themselves, without anything to eat," said Mrs. Bryan warmly, as she
+came up behind them.
+
+"Ain't it so?" said the landlady. "I'll get somebody to drown the poor
+little thing to-morrow."
+
+"Oh, no! I'll keep it if it's nobody's," Winona said eagerly. "You don't
+mind, do you, Mrs. Bryan?"
+
+"If it hasn't mange," said Mrs. Bryan prudently.
+
+"It hasn't," Winona and Florence assured her together. "It's only hurt."
+
+"Very well," said the Guardian; and the Merriams ran off to wash their
+hands in disinfectant and straighten themselves generally for supper.
+They left the cat in their room.
+
+That certainly was a supper. When you have walked all day in the open
+you feel as if you could eat a house, if nothing tenderer offers itself.
+Even Nataly Lee, who was genuinely tired to death, was hungry. The girls
+stood behind their chairs for a moment, saying one of the Camp Fire
+graces softly in unison. Then they sat down, and ate as if lunch had
+been only a dream.
+
+After supper the hostess showed them her long parlor and invited them to
+make themselves at home. But they were all too sleepy to frolic. Louise,
+who was untirable, did indeed unsling her banjo from across her shoulder
+and try to sing, but she interrupted herself in the middle of "Nellie
+Gray" with a gigantic yawn. The Blue Birds were all asleep in their
+chairs, and had to be marched off to bed half conscious. It was only
+eight, but the elder sisters and cousins who took them up liked the
+looks of the white cots very much, and--well, it seemed so useless to go
+downstairs again, some way. So Winona and Adelaide and Louise and
+Elizabeth, and Marie, who was looking after such Blue Birds as had not
+sisters along, simply went to bed, too, when they had attended to their
+charges. The other girls sat sleepily downstairs for awhile, waiting for
+their friends to come back. And then they, too, came upstairs and went
+to bed--and by eight-thirty there was nothing to be heard of seven Blue
+Birds, thirteen Camp Fire Girls, a dog and a cat, but twenty even
+breathings from as many cots, an occasional snore from the back porch
+where Puppums was tied, and a loud, ecstatic purr from the corner of
+Winona's cot, where the Medary's late kitten was privately spending the
+night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ELEVEN
+
+
+Next morning by eight Camp Karonya was up and eating a large breakfast.
+The girls sang a cheer to Mrs. Norris when they were done, and formed
+for their march again. Most of them had brought enough food for two
+lunches, but Mrs. Norris could not be brought to think so, and insisted
+on piling up provisions enough for a regiment. They compromised, on
+several slices of roast lamb apiece, and enough bread and butter to go
+around and leave some over.
+
+Winona slipped into the little general store near the farmhouse, and
+bargained for some more cans of evaporated milk for her under-mascot,
+the kitten. It was travelling in Florence's knapsack to-day, and
+Florence's things were distributed between Winona and two of the other
+girls. It proved to be a very frisky kitten by nature, now that its
+fears of being hungry and homeless were gone. Winona had to sew its
+bandage on again at noon.
+
+"I don't know how it is," she said perplexedly. "It's certainly a fatter
+kitten, and yet its bandage is too big!"
+
+"Poor thing! Take it off altogether!" advised Helen. "Pussy will get
+well just as soon without it."
+
+So they ripped off the bandage, and the kitten seemed very grateful. Its
+hurt looked like scarcely more than a scratch now.
+
+"If she's going to be a camp mascot she ought to have a name," suggested
+Florence.
+
+Winona laughed. "I'm going to call her Hike," she said. "She was hiking
+when we met her, poor pussy, and so were we."
+
+So Hike the Camp Cat she became. And--to anticipate--when she had been
+living on evaporated cream and other luxuries a few days, she turned
+into a plump and handsome Maltese kitten with charming manners.
+
+The girls arrived at their camping-place at about five that day. The big
+limousine that belonged to Helen's father, and the big electric delivery
+wagon which Louise's father had contributed, stood waiting for them on
+the road nearest the clearing in the woods, where they were to make
+their camp.
+
+"Do you mean to say we're going to eat all that?" asked Edith Hillis
+helplessly, as she caught sight of the piled provisions in the delivery
+wagon.
+
+"Well, we shan't have to eat the tents and cots in the limousine," said
+Winona. "At least, I hope not. But I think we will manage the rest. I
+was on the committee that figured out how much we would want for three
+weeks of camping, and I'm sure there's no more here than we ordered."
+
+"I have the list," said Helen.
+
+"Then check the things off, dear, as the men lift them out," said Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+So Helen read from her list as the barrels and boxes were carried away,
+and the girls listened in awe, for this is what she read:
+
+ One and a half barrels of flour.
+ Fifteen pounds shortening.
+
+("It's a special kind," explained Helen. "You can use it for cakes, as
+well as frying and other things.")
+
+ Fifteen pounds rice.
+ Fifteen pounds beans.
+ Five pounds baking-powder.
+ Three sides of bacon.
+ Sixty-five pounds of sugar.
+ Ten pounds of cocoa.
+ Case and a half of evaporated milk.
+
+("And the extra cans Winnie bought to support the cat on," interrupted
+Louise. "We can steal those if the worst comes to the worst.")
+
+ Two barrels of potatoes.
+ Six jugs of molasses.
+ One dozen cans each peas and corn.
+ Eight pounds of salt pork.
+
+"All present and accounted for," said Mrs. Bryan, as the men who had
+been loaned with the wagon rolled the barrels and carried the boxes off
+to a little tarred shack near the spring. "We'll have to buy butter and
+eggs and fresh fruit and vegetables as we go along. They'll keep in the
+spring, for it seems to be ice-cold."
+
+"And did just things to eat for us cost all that beautiful eighty
+dollars we made at all the cake-sales?" asked Florence indignantly. She
+had helped make fudge for those sales, and she felt as if they had been
+her personal venture.
+
+"It came to about fifty-five dollars, wholesale," said Helen, looking
+down at the itemized list she held. "We figured out that the other
+thirty dollars would just about keep us in the green things and dairy
+things we had to have. The corn and peas are in case we're weatherbound
+and can't get fresh vegetables."
+
+"And how long did you say we could live on that perfect mountain of
+food?" inquired Nataly Lee's mournful voice from where she was lying on
+the grass with her knapsack under her head.
+
+"Three weeks, no more," said Helen briskly. "If we want to stay we shall
+have to earn more money."
+
+"I think we could," mused Winona thoughtfully.
+
+"But what about the tents?" asked Elizabeth curiously. She was a quiet,
+competent little thing. "I don't see where the money for them comes in."
+
+"That's the most splendid thing of all," smiled Mrs. Bryan, as the men
+began to slide ten dusty-looking tents out of the wagon. "Mr. Gedney,
+the Scoutmaster, called up Mr. Bryan just before I was going shopping
+for tents, and told me about these in case we wanted them. They belonged
+to the National Guard, and the State had condemned them, because they
+were shabbier than some politician or other liked them to be. So the
+Scouts were offered them at a ridiculously low price, if they would only
+take enough. Rather than let such a bargain go by the Scouts took them
+all, though there were more than they needed. And Mr. Gedney says we may
+use these, and needn't pay for them till next winter."
+
+The girls agreed that it certainly was luck, and followed on down to see
+the tents put up--ten little brown tents in a row, with two cots and a
+box-dressing-table in each.
+
+"You'll have to stow your clothes underneath the cots," explained Mrs.
+Bryan. "And I expect each of you to learn how to put up and take down
+her own tent."
+
+"Beads!" exploded Louise.
+
+"Exactly," said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"We only have extra under-things," said Marie, "and one dress-up frock
+apiece, besides our camp clothes and ceremonial dresses. We don't need
+much room."
+
+By the time the tents had been assigned and the cots made up, supper was
+ready, and Mrs. Bryan summoned them to it by blowing a clear little
+whistle she wore. The girls had expected to turn to and get their own
+supper. So they were very much surprised to find Mrs. Bryan's black maid
+Grace, and Mrs. Hunter's Jenny smiling behind the long trestles in the
+mess-tent, setting steaming dishes up and down the table.
+
+"This is a special treat," explained Mrs. Bryan. "We're all tired
+to-night, and we hadn't time to do any cooking ourselves anyway, so I
+let Grace and Jenny do it. But to-morrow morning camp life begins. We'll
+draw lots for assignment to duties, after supper."
+
+The girls stood up behind their seats for a moment and said grace, then
+sat down, and ate as if they had never seen food before. It was a very
+civilized meal, soup, roasts and dessert, all sent over by the mothers
+in the tonneau of the Bryan car, as the cooks and the provisions had
+been. It tasted good, but everyone looked forward with joy to real camp
+cooking.
+
+"Wait till you see how I can broil venison steak," threatened Louise, as
+she ate a very large helping of despised roast beef from a mere
+unromantic cow.
+
+"Where'll you get the venison? Pick it?" called back Winona from the
+other side of the table.
+
+"No, she's going to grow it!" said Elizabeth.
+
+"Nothing of the kind!" said Louise cheerfully. "All you do is to go out
+with a gun, and stalk till you find a magnificent moose feeding
+peacefully among the underbrush."
+
+"Suppose there isn't any underbrush?" inquired Edith's languid voice
+from the table's other end.
+
+"Then you carry some out with you and scatter it around for the deer to
+eat out of," said Louise undisturbed. "Don't interrupt the lesson on
+natural history, please. You stand, moved by the beauty of the sight,
+for a long time. Then, recalled to yourself by the thought of the seven
+starving little Blue Birds at home, you draw your revolver to your
+shoulder and are about to fire."
+
+"Sure it's a revolver?" asked Winona skeptically.
+
+"Well, your pistol, then--they're all the same thing. Just then the
+moose lifts his head and looks at you mournfully out of his large,
+deer-like eyes. You almost relent. But you nerve yourself and fire--one
+crashing shot between the eyes. Then you throw the moose across your
+shoulders and carry it home--and there's your venison steak."
+
+"It sounds more like a venison mis-steak to me," said Winona. "I suppose
+you're going hunting to-morrow morning, Louise?"
+
+But Louise had just arrived at her dessert.
+
+"I scorn to reply," was all she said as she retired into her ice-cream.
+
+After supper the girls lay about on the grass, while Winona and Marie
+and Mrs. Bryan put slips of paper in a double boiler. The girls drew
+lots to decide which should be camp cooks and camp orderlies for the
+first week: four for the cooking, four for buying provisions and
+policing the camp, and four for the dish-washing and preparing
+vegetables.
+
+"That leaves one girl over," spoke up Adelaide, sitting up under a tree.
+
+Mrs. Bryan shook her head. "No," she said, "it doesn't, because somebody
+has to look after the Blue Birds every week. I'm going to appoint Marie
+Hunter, because she hasn't any small sisters, and it won't be such an
+old story to her to look after little girls. So there are just enough
+people to go around. Rise up and draw lots out of the boiler, girls!"
+
+"I'd rather wash every dish in camp than chaperon the infants!" said
+Louise aside; and drew a slip marked "Dish-Washing" on the spot. "If I
+got all my wishes as quickly as that, how nice it would be!" she sighed,
+and lay down with her arm around little Bessie. Louise had not a passion
+for washing dishes.
+
+Then Adelaide drew a cooking slip. So did Winona and Elizabeth and
+Lilian Brown, one of the girls who had joined later. Anna Morris,
+Dorothy Gray and Edith Hillis drew the other dish-washing slips and
+Helen Bryan, Nataly Lee, Gladys Williams and the other Brown sister,
+Gertrude, were assigned the police and provision duty. At the end of the
+week everybody was to shift to something else.
+
+"It seems to me the camp orderlies have the best of it," said Helen,
+yawning. "What do we do, Nannie?"
+
+"You see that everyone remembers to make up her bed in the morning, you
+sweep out the camp, carry water from the spring. You have to see, too,
+that the camp is kept in fruit and vegetables--in other words, walk to a
+farmhouse about a mile away every other day to buy provisions. We
+mustn't break into our canned goods except in an emergency. You are
+really the people who are responsible for the camp's running smoothly."
+
+"Carry water!" said Nataly with a gasp. "Won't we get our clothes wet?"
+
+"Wear a waterproof, love," said Louise. "I'm going to ask to have Nataly
+assigned to bring me all my water for dishes," she whispered to Winona,
+beside her. "I'm sure it will have an elevating effect on her
+character."
+
+"Oh, don't, Louise!" whispered Winona back. "Suppose you'd spent your
+young life on a sofa, reading 'Beautiful Coralie's Doom,' you wouldn't
+feel able to carry water either!"
+
+"Then I wouldn't go Camp Firing," said Louise conclusively.
+
+Next morning the camp cooks were up at six. Breakfast was to be at
+seven-thirty, but the girls were so afraid of being too late that they
+devised an elaborate system of strings, whereby the earliest awake was
+to jerk her strings, and wake all the others. Winona, Lilian Brown and
+Elizabeth were on the ground by a quarter past six, but, although they
+had all jerked their strings faithfully, no Adelaide appeared. Finally
+they descended in a body on the tent which held Adelaide and her little
+sister Frances.
+
+"Well, would you look at that!" said Winona in an indignant whisper.
+
+The other girls cautiously lifted the tent-flap and stuck in their
+heads.
+
+Frances slept placidly on one cot, her little freckled face half buried
+in the pillow. On the other, quite as fast asleep, lay Adelaide--and
+there was not a string tied to her anywhere!
+
+"Well, if that isn't the _limit_!" said Elizabeth and Lilian in one
+breath, and Elizabeth reached down to the pail of water which the
+orderlies had faithfully set outside each tent door before they went to
+bed. She tilted the cold water on her handkerchief, and dropped it wetly
+on Adelaide's face. It wasn't a wet sponge, but it did nearly as well,
+as an awakener.
+
+"What--where--nonsense, Lonny, _don't_!" said Adelaide, waving her arms,
+and finally sitting up.
+
+"It isn't Lonny; it's us," said Winona coldly, "and why on earth did you
+untie the strings, when all the rest of us had them to get up by?"
+
+Adelaide looked ashamed.
+
+"I couldn't sleep all tied up that way," she confessed. "I felt like a
+spider or a fly or something. So I tied them on the cot. But I thought
+when you pulled them the cot would jar, and wake me!"
+
+"It might have," said Winona, "if you'd tied them on your own cot!"
+
+Adelaide, looking in the direction of Winona's pointing finger, found
+out why she had not wakened. In her sleepiness the night before, she had
+fastened her strings to a large twig that grew out of the ground beside
+her bed!
+
+"I ought to be drowned!" said Adelaide ashamedly. "But if you girls will
+wait till I get bathed and dressed, I'll wash all the dishes to pay for
+this!"
+
+"You won't do any such thing," said the others.
+
+So they sat sociably outside Adelaide's tent till she was dressed and
+joined them. Then they started out valiantly for the cooking-place.
+
+When they reached it a very cheering surprise awaited them, for there
+was Mrs. Bryan seated on a pile of kindling, with a box of matches on
+her lap and a pleasant smile on her face.
+
+"I thought you mightn't know just where to begin," she said, "so I
+thought I'd come help, this first morning. The first thing is the fire.
+Do any of you know how to make a cooking-fire in the open?"
+
+Adelaide didn't, neither did Elizabeth. Winona thought she knew, but
+wasn't sure, and Lilian had once seen it done, but had forgotten how.
+
+"I'd better show you all, then," said their Guardian briskly. "The first
+thing you do is to get together two big green logs that won't burn. Roll
+them together so they form a big V."
+
+"Logs that _won't_ burn! What a queer beginning!" said Winona, whose
+idea of building a fire was heaping a bonfire up with sticks till it
+flamed high.
+
+But they tugged and pushed till they had a couple of newly-felled trees
+at angles to each other, in a hollow place protected from the wind.
+
+"Now, you build your fire inside that V," explained Mrs. Bryan, "and,
+you see, you can put the cocoa-pan up at the beginning of the crotch,
+and the portable oven and the frying-pan down where the division is
+wider."
+
+"Simple as anything," said Winona, "once you know how."
+
+And they scattered to find wood. The sticks lay about in plenty--later
+they were hard to find without going into the woods which encircled the
+camping-place--and Mrs. Bryan showed them how to commence a fire by
+laying small pieces of brushwood criss-cross at the bottom, and piling
+on heavier wood till all was aflame. Presently they had a solid, roaring
+fire. They sat back and let it burn down to coals. By then they had the
+flour-barrel opened, the bacon sliced, and the water ready to put on the
+cocoa. Winona made biscuits, it seemed to her, in mountains, while
+Elizabeth got out the butter and knives and forks, and set the table.
+
+"You can't cut out biscuits enough for twenty people with a cutter,
+child!" advised Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Just take the butcher-knife, and cut the whole mass of dough into
+squares, after you've laid it on the floured floors of the oven!"
+
+But the bacon had to be sliced, and this took longer; and Adelaide's
+job, looking after the cocoa, proved nerve-racking, because cocoa will
+burn at the slightest chance. But everything came right, and by the time
+the other girls were astir their breakfast was awaiting them, piping
+hot; crispy bacon, hot biscuits and butter, with jam they had made
+themselves, and cocoa.
+
+"Jam's an extra," Mrs. Bryan warned them. "It happened to be left over
+from the sales, so I brought it. You'll have to go to work and make some
+more out of berries you pick."
+
+After breakfast, Marie, the keeper of the Blue Birds' Nest, said that
+she was going to put two Blue Birds to work at each of the camp shifts,
+and leave the odd one to be Mrs. Bryan's personal Bird and attendant.
+Mrs. Bryan was to choose her attendant, who was to run her errands for
+her and help her generally. But she refused to do it.
+
+"I like them all so much," she said, "that I can't pick out a special
+one."
+
+So they counted out for the honor, and the choice for the first week
+fell on little Lucy Hillis. The others, as far as it could be done,
+worked with their own sisters.
+
+After breakfast, while the dish-washing brigade wrestled with the cups,
+plates and spoons that twenty people leave behind them, the cooks held a
+council. They decided that it would be easier if two girls got each meal
+in turn: Winona and Adelaide the dinner, Elizabeth and Lilian the
+supper, and so on. The camp police divided off the same way, and so,
+eventually, did the dish-washers. Helen, who had the Camp funds in her
+charge, talked with the girls who were going to market that day. There
+was twenty-five dollars for three weeks of camp, she explained, and she
+thought that the safest way would be to allow so much a day, which gave
+them about a dollar twenty a day to spend. They thought so, too, and
+presently Nataly and Helen went off in search of the farmhouse which had
+promised to keep them supplied with perishable provisions.
+
+Winona and Adelaide, freed of any further duties till supper-time, went
+off exploring. It was a perfect day, bright and breezy and not too hot.
+Winona half-danced along, singing under her breath. The sun glinted on
+her pretty hair and lighted up her blue eyes. Adelaide looked at her
+wistfully.
+
+"I do wish I were you!" she said abruptly.
+
+Winona looked at her in surprise. "Wish you were me? Why, on earth?" she
+asked. "Isn't it just as nice to be you?"
+
+Adelaide shook her head. "I don't like it much!" she said rebelliously.
+
+"Why not?" asked Winona.
+
+Adelaide shrugged her shoulders.
+
+Winona slipped her arm about her, and pulled her down on a comfortable
+looking log.
+
+"Let's sit down and talk about it," said she cheerfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWELVE
+
+
+Adelaide turned and faced Winona.
+
+"Well, go ahead and talk," she said. "It won't make things any less so."
+Then suddenly she burst out, "You don't know what it's like. You don't
+know how it feels never to have anything extra. If I go to a party I'm
+likely to be the worst-dressed girl there. If I go to school and the
+girls treat I have to say I don't want any because I can't pay back. I
+can't invite anybody to meals, because I can't give them extra nice
+things to eat. And, anyway, the flat's horrid--even the furniture and
+the carpets are shabby. Lonny and Frances are good, and help, but
+everything drags. And I just hate _everything_."
+
+"Hate everything!" said Winona soothingly. "Why, of course you
+don't--you just think you do!"
+
+"It's all right for you to talk," murmured Adelaide miserably.
+"Everybody's crazy over you--of course they would be. I am myself, and I
+don't like people generally. You have something about you that would
+make people like you even if you weren't sweet to them. Everything turns
+out right for you. I don't see what you wanted to join the Camp Fire
+for--its rules stuck out all over you before you ever joined."
+
+"Oh, _don't_!" said Winona, blushing. "What rules do you mean? I never
+kept any rules."
+
+"You know the Law of the Camp Fire: 'Seek beauty; give service; pursue
+knowledge; be trustworthy; hold on to health; glorify work; be happy.'"
+
+"I don't do all those things," said Winona. "Wish I did! But anybody
+seeks beauty, and as long as you have to work the only way to get fun
+out of it is to glorify it. As for the rest, I think they're only rules
+for getting all there is out of living. I'll tell you,
+Adelaide,"--Winona sat upright, as if a new thought had struck her--"why
+don't you see how many of the rules would apply to getting fun out of
+the things that worry you? When things go wrong at our house mother
+always says to Florence and Tommy and me, 'Can't you turn it into a
+game?'"
+
+"Turn shabby furniture and stews and no money into a game?" said
+Adelaide, as if she thought Winona was crazy.
+
+"Yes!" said Winona undauntedly. "To begin with the stews--well,
+Adelaide, you don't know one single thing about cooking. There's any
+amount of things beside stew that you can make out of stewing meat. And
+don't you remember the cold things we got out of Mrs. Bryan's
+refrigerator? That was a good supper, wasn't it? If you know how,
+cooking's fun, or nearly anything."
+
+"If we have more cooking-classes I suppose I could learn how to do more
+things with the meats and vegetables, or maybe market better," said
+Adelaide. "But that would only help that one thing."
+
+"You can figure out keeping house just like anything else," said Winona.
+"All you have to do's to _think_!"
+
+Adelaide laughed. "Do you suppose I could think the furniture new?" she
+asked. "You ought to see it--horrid old brown rep, and a carpet that's
+worn into white spots!"
+
+But though she laughed, she looked to Winona for the answer with real
+eagerness.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you what I'd do," suggested Winona thoughtfully--"I
+don't suppose you would, you're such a haughty Lady Imogene--I'd make a
+furnishing bee of it, and have a party, and invite all the girls to help
+you do the flat over. Your father and Lonny would help, wouldn't they?"
+
+"Oh, I guess so," she said.
+
+"Well, then, the girls would help you cover the furniture and stain the
+floor, and even paper, maybe. And if your father or Lonny could paint
+the wood-work--or would the landlord?"
+
+"No," said Adelaide, "he won't make repairs. It's not in the lease. And
+where would I get money for the paint and paper and stain and covers?"
+
+"Earn it!" said Winona. "There are lots of ways. That jam you made for
+the sales--you could get heaps of orders for that, I know. Oh, I should
+think it would be lovely to do. I tell you, Adelaide, you may think I'm
+crazy--but everything's fun, if you'll only remember that it _is_ fun!"
+
+"I wonder!" said Adelaide. "But I believe I could make money with jams
+and preserves if I worked hard at it."
+
+"We've all got to earn some more money soon if we want to stay in the
+camp longer than three weeks," said Winona, "unless Louise can feed us
+all on the venison steaks she was talking about last night. If you can
+make money for the camp you can for yourself!"
+
+Adelaide turned impulsively--they had risen and were going on through
+the wood--and threw her arms around Winona.
+
+"You certainly are the most comforting girl!" she said. "I don't wonder
+everybody does what you want them to."
+
+Winona didn't know what to say. It's pleasant to have people say such
+things to you, but it is embarrassing, too.
+
+"People like you just as much as they do me," said she. "Come on, let's
+go see if we can find the river we've heard so much about."
+
+They caught hands and ran on through the trees.
+
+The river was not hard to find. Above them it was a broad stream, but
+just here it wasn't very wide, just a pretty, clear, clean-looking
+stream, with green banks and some sort of a dock to be seen a little way
+beyond them. On the dock, when they reached it, was seen to be an
+elderly native with a pipe, and beside him was moored a rowboat which
+looked as if it could be rowed. He looked up from his fishing as the
+girls appeared.
+
+"Morning," he said sociably, "you little girls going down to the
+village?"
+
+"Good-morning," said Winona. "No, we hadn't thought of it. We might,
+though. Is there anything we could get for you if we went?"
+
+"Well," said the old man, jerking in his line with a good-sized fish on
+it, "ye-es, there is. I want an ad put in the paper. I guess I could
+trust you with a quarter to do it with."
+
+"I guess you could," said Winona, smiling. "Will this afternoon do? I
+don't believe we'd have time now to get there and back before
+dinner-time." She looked at her wrist-watch. "No, we won't," she said.
+"It's eleven now."
+
+"Well, this afternoon would do," he said.
+
+So, while the girls looked at the rowboat wishfully, and wondered if
+they couldn't get enough fish for supper if they had some tackle, the
+old man adjusted his spectacles, pulled an old envelope out of his
+pocket, and wrote on it laboriously.
+
+"Do you mind if I read it?" asked Winona, when he was done and had
+handed it to her.
+
+"Seein's that's what it's for, I dunno's I do," he grunted, grinning
+pleasantly. Winona and Adelaide took each a corner, and read as follows:
+
+ For sale, one rowboat in good condition, with oars. No reasonable
+ offer refused. Apply to John Sloane, R. F. D. 3, village.
+
+They looked at each other, then at the boat. Then both girls exclaimed
+with one impulse, "Is it this boat?"
+
+"This very rowboat," said Mr. Sloane, eying it with affection. "I don't
+use it no more. I've got a motor-boat, and them Boy Scouts up the river
+has got a fine young flock of canoes, so they ain't likely to want to
+hire it. Anyway, she ain't so young as she was. Good boat, though!"
+
+"And what would you call a reasonable offer?" inquired Winona. "The
+reason I want to know is that I have just six dollars, and if I could
+buy a rowboat that way I would."
+
+"Six dollars, hey?" said Mr. Sloane slowly. "That ain't much for a good
+boat."
+
+"It's all I have to spend on rowboats," said Winona placidly.
+
+"We-el," decided Mr. Sloane, "guess I might's well let you have it!"
+
+And he proceeded to make out a receipt on the spot, on the other half of
+the envelope he had used for the advertisement.
+
+"It certainly pays to advertise!" he remarked, as he turned his
+attention again to his fishing-line.
+
+Adelaide and Winona jumped into their boat with delight, and rowed
+downstream for half a mile. There they were stopped by the beautiful
+sight of a lot of huckleberry bushes, full of fruit, along the edge of
+the stream. They both filled their hats, and when these would hold no
+more they pinned up Winona's skirt in front and filled that--Winona
+sitting very still thereafter in order not to smash any berries. Then
+Adelaide rowed back and tied their newly-acquired property to the dock,
+the use of which was thrown in, and went back to camp with berries
+enough for dinner. Just before they came within hearing of the others,
+Adelaide whispered:
+
+"Winona, I'm going to try to--to feel that way about things."
+
+Winona squeezed her hand, but there was no time to say anything more,
+for a horde of small pirates descended on them and carried away the
+berries.
+
+After dinner the girls lay on the grass and made plans, more or less
+wild, for getting money to prolong their vacation.
+
+"We can't have a cake-sale," said Marie practically, "because the
+farmers' wives in the village make all their own baked stuff, and the
+people at the summer-resort are mostly boarders."
+
+"Oh, please don't let's have any more cake-sales, whether they're
+profitable or not," said Louise pathetically. "I sold eats for those
+sales till I used to go to sleep at night and dream I was a wedding-cake
+myself."
+
+"All right, then," soothed Helen, "you shan't ever have such dreadful
+dreams again, you poor little thing!"
+
+"Well, what shall we do, then?" asked Edith Hillis pulling her yellow
+curls over her shoulder and examining them as if she had never seen them
+before.
+
+"When you want money," remarked Mrs. Bryan, "you have to sell something,
+either your services, or your manufactures, or your talents."
+
+"In other words," said Winona, "work for people, or make things to sell
+them, or have an entertainment."
+
+"Precisely," said the Guardian.
+
+"Then let's start at the beginning," offered Winona, "and everybody try
+to think what she can do best in the way of work, and whether anybody'd
+want them to!"
+
+"One thing," reminded Marie, "we can't live by taking in each other's
+washing, so to speak. We'll have to scheme to get some of their
+hard-earned butter-and-egg money away from the farmers' wives, or else
+prey on the summer-resorters."
+
+"We expect to give it right back to them for butter and eggs," said
+Adelaide. "Whatever we do we might as well take it out in trade!"
+
+After that nobody seemed to have any more ideas. Everyone sat silently
+and thought very hard; till Louise jumped up with a yelp of impatience
+that woke Puppums from his after-dinner nap, and made even Hike the Camp
+Cat open one green eye.
+
+"Don't let's waste this gorgeous day thinking!" she said. "My head isn't
+used to it, and it hurts. Come on, anybody that wants to--I'm going to
+walk down to the village to buy something, I don't care what. Who'll
+come?"
+
+Winona, Helen and Nataly dropped into step beside Louise, and the four
+marched off singing "In the Land of the Sky-Blue Water," which they were
+trying to learn.
+
+"That song really sounds better to Opeechee's ceremonial drum than
+anything else," remarked Louise.
+
+"Real Indian music always sounds better if you pound something while you
+sing it, even if it's only a dish-pan," said Winona.
+
+"Please don't mention dish-pans," begged Louise, "they're a tender
+point. I just parted from mine half an hour ago."
+
+"All right," said Winona good-humoredly, "I have something else
+interesting to tell you. I bought a rowboat to-day."
+
+"Oh, good!" cried Helen. "Marie's canoe and mine will be up in a day or
+so, but a canoe wiggles so when you try to fish from it. Now we can all
+go fishing. Elizabeth brought tackle, but we thought we couldn't do much
+good, fishing from the bank."
+
+"And the Blue Birds can go out in it till they learn more about canoes,
+too," said Winona. "I'm going exploring myself in it as soon as I can.
+What are you really going to the village for, Louise--or don't you
+know?"
+
+"Benzine for my burnt-wood outfit," said Louise. "I had some thinks, and
+that was one. Little Louise is going to make some nice burnt-leather
+things for the neighborhood. Pillows and table-covers, and heaps of
+things for the farmers' wives to buy. Lessons in the art if they want
+them. I brought my outfit, and some skins, and colors."
+
+"I thought I'd model some vases and pots and bowls, and fire them," said
+Helen. "They might sell, too. Have you thought of anything, Winona?"
+
+"Not a blessed thing, for myself," said Winona. "You know, I'm not
+particularly clever about doing things like that, except making baskets,
+and Florence does those better than I do. But I have thought of one
+thing--how to sell our wares after they are made."
+
+"That's quite a useful thing to know," said Louise. "About the most
+useful thing there is, in fact. Well, how?"
+
+"We'll have to peddle them," said Winona calmly. "The farmers' wives
+won't come out here to buy unless we advertise a lot, and we can't
+afford that. The thing for us to do is to get some sort of a thing to
+carry the goods in, and make it look awfully arts-an-craftsy, and pull
+it round and sell things at the houses."
+
+"A soap-box on wheels is what I _think_ you're hinting at," said Louise,
+"but I hope not."
+
+"Are you really in earnest?" asked Nataly, who had taken no share in the
+talk so far.
+
+"Why not?" asked Winona. "It's no worse than taking a horse and cart
+down through the Italian quarter and selling rummage things to the women
+there; and that's what the Ladies' Aid at our church did last winter."
+
+"It's different," insisted Nataly, and nothing could shake her in her
+ideas. So Louise poked Winona, as a hint not to argue any more. But when
+Nataly went into the little general store to buy some picture post-cards
+Louise whispered to the other girls, "I have a glorious improvement on
+your soap-box plan, Winnie. If you girls will help me put it through
+I'll tell you all about it."
+
+"I'd like to hear about it first," said Helen doubtfully; for Louise's
+plans were always original, but not always safe and sane. Before Louise
+could answer Nataly was back again, and Louise began to tell her the
+story of the reduced English gentlewoman who had to sell shrimps for a
+living, by calling them up and down the streets. "And she was such a
+perfect lady," finished Louise, "that whenever she called out 'Shrimps
+for sale!' she'd add under her breath, 'I hope to goodness nobody hears
+me!'"
+
+"And did they?" Nataly asked innocently, while Winona tried to keep her
+face straight.
+
+"No, they didn't," said Louise sadly, "so she never sold any shrimps at
+all. And so she died of starvation."
+
+But Nataly, instead of grasping the moral, said only, "Well, why didn't
+she eat the shrimps, then?"
+
+At which Louise grunted disgustedly and went in to buy herself the
+benzine.
+
+After that day there was always a feeling in the village near Camp
+Sunrise that every Camp Fire Girl's first object in life was cat-rescue.
+And it was Winona who was responsible. To begin with, the day the girls
+arrived at camp she had been seen by all the interested villagers,
+walking near the head of the dusty procession, leading a small,
+sash-bandaged gray kitten by a string. Hike had meowed for air and
+exercise just as the village had been neared, and Winona had taken that
+means of giving it to him, without risking his running off. The
+villagers might have let that, by itself, pass. But when it was coupled
+with Winona's performance of this afternoon--well, you can judge for
+yourself.
+
+It was after the girls had bought everything they came for, and were on
+their way to camp. Out of a gate, across their road, bounded two small
+boys, each of whom held a wriggling black kitten.
+
+"Won't you hurt the kitty if you hold it by just one leg?" inquired
+Winona of the nearest boy.
+
+"It don't matter if we do hurt 'em--they ain't any good anyhow," he
+explained. "We're going to drown 'em in a minute."
+
+"Oh, _no_!" protested Winona.
+
+"Well, will you take 'em?" asked the other boy. "Mother says she can't
+keep any more cats."
+
+Winona took the victims on the spot, and put them into the continuous
+pocket all around the bottom of her Balkan blouse. The small boys went
+back into their yard, where they were heard announcing, "Mother! A girl
+took the kitties!" And Winona stood still with a kitten at each hip.
+
+"You'd better give them back," said Nataly, who was afraid of cats.
+
+"Oh, I couldn't!" said Winona. "It's so nice to be alive, even if you're
+a cat--and there isn't really any Cat-Heaven, you know."
+
+"Well, advertise them for sale, then," said Louise impatiently. "Good
+home and kind treatment wanted for two black kittens--salary no object."
+
+She wasn't in earnest, but Winona was.
+
+"I will!" she said. "Not for sale, but to give away. Will one of you
+take this notice to the paper, while I take the kittens to camp for the
+night?"
+
+"I'll take the kittens home!" volunteered Helen, Louise and Nataly with
+a touching oneness of feeling.
+
+Winona grinned. "Why, you very obliging people!" she said. "Please put
+them in a box with netting, then, so they can't get away. I'll go and
+advertise. I'm perfectly sure such good kittens as these will have lots
+of applications!"
+
+Louise and Helen, each with a kitten, accompanied by Nataly, kittenless,
+went slowly campward in eloquent silence, while Winona sped back to the
+office of the village paper. So the next day an advertisement appeared
+in the _Press:_
+
+ Wanted, to find homes for two black kittens, nice purrers, good
+ mousers. Can be separated. Apply Box 2, _Press_ office, or at Camp
+ Karonya, in person.
+
+"I don't care if they do laugh," said Winona when she got back, to find
+Camp Karonya howling at her in rows. "If they laugh they're more apt to
+remember, and come get the kittens. I'll put them out of the way, poor
+little things, if nobody answers in a day or two."
+
+But--whether it was that cats who were "nice purrers" were a novelty,
+whether it is true that there's a place for everything in this world if
+we could only get in touch with it--the very next day there were five
+applicants for those two black kittens. Indeed, Winona had great
+difficulty in holding onto Hike the Camp Cat, who had grown by now into
+a very presentable, if fat, Maltese kitten. People seemed to think that
+it was Winona's duty to distribute cats as long as cats held out.
+
+The only drawback was that for the rest of the time it was there the
+village with one accord used Camp Karonya as a clearing-house for its
+cats!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THIRTEEN
+
+
+A couple of days later Winona took Florence and Puppums, and went
+exploring in the rowboat. Louise and Helen were very busy making a
+tree-house, but they promised to see that Hike the Camp Cat was looked
+after and no belated advertisement answerer got him.
+
+The Merriams rowed about a mile along the river, in the direction away
+from the village, without finding anything more interesting than a
+muskrat, who disappeared when Puppums barked at him. But just a while
+after this thrilling incident they rounded a bend, and there in a red
+canoe, placidly catching fish, sat Tom!
+
+His back and that of the boy with him were turned to them, but there was
+no mistaking him, nor Billy Lee. Neither of them saw the rowboat till it
+was quite close, and Florence and Puppums howled together in greeting.
+
+"Hello, kid! H'lo, Winnie--you've frightened the fish!" was his
+brotherly greeting: while Billy, not being a relation, took off his hat
+and said politely that he was glad to see them, and how was the camp?
+
+"Oh, never mind the fish!" said Winona, when she had answered Billy with
+equal politeness. "You can fish any day, but you haven't seen your
+family since last week. How do you come to be up here so soon?"
+
+"Captain Gedney worked it somehow--I don't know how," said Tom. "Anyhow,
+we're here. Good fishing, too. See?" He held up a string of fair-sized
+fish in proof.
+
+"Where's your camp?" asked Florence, while Puppums almost had hysterics
+and had to be handed into the canoe so that he could love Tom properly.
+"Can I come see it?"
+
+"Sure you can," said Tom. "No charge for the view. It's those tents
+right over there."
+
+"You know I don't mean that," said Florence, pouting. "I mean I want to
+get out and go over."
+
+"Oh, wait a day or so, can't you, Floss?" implored Tom, who plainly
+didn't want to be detached from his fishing. "Wait and come over with
+the rest of the bunch, and we'll give you a grand welcome, fifes and
+drums and things. I tell you, though, girls, why can't you all come use
+our swimming pool? We've just finished damming off a little branch
+stream into a dandy pond--paved it and all. Started it last year. But
+you'd have to give us warning, so we wouldn't be in it."
+
+"Why, how lovely!" exclaimed Winona. "I know Mrs. Bryan will let us, and
+all of us brought our bathing-suits."
+
+"Good enough!" said Tom.
+
+"How was mother--was everything all right at home when you left?" asked
+his sister.
+
+"Oh, fine and dandy. But what do you think, Winnie, that Children's Aid
+child has come. Mother says she's glad it happened while we were out of
+the way, so she'd have a better opportunity to get him running smoothly
+without our help."
+
+"Him!" said Winona. "Do you mean they sent a boy, not a girl?"
+
+Tom laughed. "They certainly did--a darky about twelve, as black as your
+hat, and a regular Topsy."
+
+"Good gracious!" said Winona, laughing.
+
+Mrs. Merriam had written to the Children's Aid Society a little while
+before for a girl of about fourteen--black preferred--who could help
+with the dishes out of school hours. She had heard nothing about it, and
+the family had completely forgotten it till now.
+
+"When did he get there?" asked Winona.
+
+"The day before I came away," said Tom. "It was wash-day, and that
+colored washerwoman mother has opened the door. First we knew she came
+back and said: 'There's a white woman and a young colored gemman to see
+Mrs. Merriam.' So mother went out, and came back in a minute with the
+agent, an awfully nice sort of a girl, and the smallest, solemnest,
+black boy you ever saw. Mother didn't want him at first, but the
+agent-girl swore he had all the virtues, and needed a good home and
+moral training. Then she walked off and left him sitting on a chair,
+staring straight ahead. I tell you, it got sort of embarrassing after
+awhile. So I asked him his name."
+
+"What is it?" asked Winona.
+
+"He said, 'Ah was christen' Thomas!'" returned Tom, grinning. "So mother
+told him that I'd been christened Thomas, too, and asked him for his
+last name. And he said, 'Ma las' name's Clay--but hit ain' ma callin'
+name. Ma callin' name's Thomas. But yo'-all kin call me Mistah Clay if
+yo' want to!'"
+
+"Did mother want to?" asked Winona.
+
+"She nearly exploded," said Tom, "but I think they came to some sort of
+a compromise. I don't think he'll leave her time to miss us, for a week
+or so anyway!"
+
+"Well, I'm glad of that," said Winona. "Tommy, did you ever know of
+anything I could do?"
+
+"What on earth do you mean?" asked Tom, while Billy Lee, who had been
+silently fishing all this time, looked interested.
+
+"I mean something I could do that would earn money," she explained. "We
+want to stay in camp longer than we have money for, so we must earn it."
+
+"The thing you always were best at was darning my stockings," said Tom
+cheerfully, and grinned.
+
+"Oh, dear, I just knew you'd say that!" said Winona. "I can't go round
+selling darns!"
+
+Billy Lee lifted up his head from a tangle in his fishing-line as he
+answered, "I don't see why you couldn't. I mean--why couldn't you do
+mending for the Scouts? If you'd be willing to, I know we'd be glad.
+There's an awful lot of holes in my clothes."
+
+"And nobody to do them?" asked Winona, delighted.
+
+"Not a soul," answered both boys at once.
+
+"Oh, how perfectly splendid!" said Winona. "Mr. Gedney will know how
+much I ought to charge for them, won't he?"
+
+"Yes, or Mrs. Bryan had better tell you," said Tom.
+
+"Oh, can I have them now?" asked Winona.
+
+"Oh, bother!" said Tom. "Won't to-morrow do?"
+
+"I'll get 'em," said Billy Lee, and made a flying leap out of the canoe
+to shore.
+
+He was gone a few minutes, and came back with a clothes-basket full of
+garments of various kinds: also with the Scoutmaster, Captain Gedney.
+
+"Good-morning, girls!" said the Scoutmaster. "This is fine! Billy tells
+me we're going to get our mending done!"
+
+"Oh, is it really all right?" quivered Winona.
+
+"Yes, indeed, it's more than all right," answered Mr. Gedney
+enthusiastically. "I was thinking of taking a trip to the village to see
+if we could find somebody we could put at it, but this is better. Now
+you get your Guardian to put a price on the work, either by the piece or
+by the hour. I can promise you spot-cash, and a great deal of gratitude
+into the bargain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So the end of it was that Florence and Winona rowed happily back down
+the river with what looked extremely like two weeks' wash in their boat;
+also with the joyful certainty that Winona, at least, was going to be
+able to earn her share of the expenses for the extra weeks of camping.
+
+The boys promised to paddle down in a couple of days and get the mended
+clothes, and--most important--the bill for them. Billy Lee wanted to see
+his sister, anyway, he said.
+
+When Florence and Winona got back nearly every girl in camp was seated
+out in the open air, in a big circle, and nearly all of them were
+talking at once, planning the ceremonial meeting for that night. There
+was to be a ceremonial fire, a very high and beautiful one with a
+central pole--this last an innovation which Louise was introducing. And
+Winona and Marie Hunter were going to be made Fire Makers, Louise and
+several of the others were going to be Wood-gatherers, and Nataly Lee
+was going to join.
+
+When Winona joined the circle she found that a good deal of the
+excitement was being caused by the Book of the Count. Marie and Helen,
+with paints and pen and brushes, were making the record of the days they
+had spent in camp a very lively affair.
+
+Winona sat down and looked on at what Marie was doing, and read on the
+page they had open:
+
+ On the second day, Winona,
+ Ray-of-Light, the Cat-Collector
+ Made her way unto the village,
+ To buy post-cards at the village.
+ With her went the cheerful Comet,
+ Ishkoodah with flaming tresses;
+ With her went the Star of Evening,
+ Helen, gentle Star of Evening,
+ And Nokoma, flower-giver--
+ Nataly the flower-giver.
+ Seeking post-cards, thus they wandered,
+ But alas, the Cat-Collector
+ Much preferred to bring home kittens,
+ And to advertise those kittens.
+ All next day the ad-replyers
+ Tracked our camp with questing footsteps,
+ Asked of us--"Where are those kittens?
+ Give us several dozen kittens!"
+ For, alas, those cats had vanished,
+ Gone with the first two replyers
+ To the ad Winona paid for.
+
+ Still about our Camp come wailing
+ Folk who seek the cats they heard of,
+ Seeking several dozen kittens;
+ Still the Ray-of-Light, Winona,
+ Cannot give them any kittens,
+ Cannot stop their wronged insistence
+ On those kittens, on those kittens--
+
+"Oh, good gracious!" asked Winona, beginning to laugh before she read
+any further. "Who _did_ make all that up?"
+
+"I did," said Marie proudly, "but we all helped."
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that any more people have come catting to-day?"
+demanded Winona.
+
+"Only seven," said Helen. "Winnie, you'll never hear the last of this."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Bryan, I've found some work to do that will earn money,"
+said Winona, hastily changing the subject. "Florence and I went up to
+the Scouts' camp, and Mr. Gedney gave us the boys' mending to do. He
+said you were to put a price on it for us."
+
+"Twenty to twenty-five cents an hour," supplied Mrs. Bryan promptly.
+"You'd better have some of the other girls help you, too, dear, for
+there's enough work there to take up a good deal of your time for three
+or four days, and you don't come camping to turn yourself into a
+sewing-girl, even for the good of the camp."
+
+"Very well," said Winona. "Who hasn't picked out any special work to do
+yet?"
+
+"Nataly Lee," said someone.
+
+"Neither have I," said Elizabeth. "I'll help, too."
+
+A half-dozen of them went off to a sunny spot, produced a large
+alarm-clock to time themselves by, and put in two hours of work
+immediately. That is, all but Nataly. She got tired at the end of one
+hour, and went off, she said, to lie down. The others got the mending
+almost done, for many hands make light work. Then they piled up the
+basket again, and went back to camp. It was Winona's turn to get supper
+that night.
+
+"There ought to be about four dollars' worth of work in that basket,"
+said Helen thoughtfully when they all met at supper.
+
+"It's probably more than we'll have next time," said Winona. "But
+anyway, it's a steady income. Let's hope they'll be kind, and wear big,
+awful holes in everything they have."
+
+"They will, unless they've had a change of heart since last week," said
+Louise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After supper was cleared away the girls set about collecting wood in the
+open space on the top of the little hill, for their ceremonial-fire. It
+was the most happy and successful meeting they had had, and also, as
+Louise expressed it, the most beadful. It ended in a ghost-dance around
+the fire. After it was through the girls lay still and told stories,
+which gradually became more ghostly than the dance. It was very pleasant
+till bedtime came. Then even the bravest of them made dashes for their
+tents; and Mrs. Bryan, making her rounds after the camp was asleep,
+found five lighted candles keeping ghosts out of five tents in a row!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOURTEEN
+
+
+There were bathing and boating and tree-climbing in the days that
+followed and there were hikes and folk-dances and various
+entertainments, by themselves, and occasionally with the Scouts for
+audience. The girls canoed all up and down the river, and borrowed the
+Scout swimming-pool with rapture, and learned all sorts of swimming and
+diving stunts. And everybody got brown and husky and cheerful. But in
+between the good times the girls worked on steadily, each at her
+appointed task, and in about ten days there was a promising collection
+of material to be sold, for the virtuous purpose of giving Camp Karonya
+some more weeks of life in the Wampoag woods.
+
+Helen gave up modelling her beloved statuettes, and went soberly to work
+at bowls and vases, and other such things that people would be likely to
+find useful. She decorated them with motives she drew herself, and took
+them up to Wampoag, the summer-resort, where there was a kiln, and had
+them fired. Louise made burnt-leather pillows, which filled her hair
+with such a fearful smell that for awhile she washed it every day, till
+it occurred to her to wear a bathing-cap to work in. She also burned
+mats and table-covers and napkin-rings to the limit of her purchasing
+power; and when that failed she took to carving things out of wood she
+picked up. The Blue Birds wove raffia baskets and table-mats, and Marie
+and Edith crocheted bags and collars. Adelaide devoted herself to
+canning. The rest helped her sometimes, but more of the time she took
+pride in putting up the fruit all by herself.
+
+There were embroidered tea-cloths and runners, and there was hammered
+brass-work. The honor-counts rolled up like snowballs, for the girls
+made nearly everything a girl is capable of making or decorating. There
+was almost enough made to stop.
+
+But still Camp Karonya held nightly discussions, having made these
+various things, as to how to sell them. The plan most of them wanted to
+adopt was that of going from house to house with them. Having a fair
+meant hiring a room or store, or running the risk of having nobody come
+to buy--for the camp was two miles from the nearest point of
+civilization. The only alternative seemed putting them into some of the
+resort shops to be sold on commission, and there was a large risk there
+that the shops might not do properly by them. There was another
+alternative, sending them home to be sold, but that seemed inglorious,
+somehow.
+
+One night, after everything had been argued over until everybody had
+finished from sheer inability to think of anything more to say, and
+begun to discuss constellations instead, Winona, lying on her back, felt
+a pull at her sleeve. She rolled over, to see Louise stealthily working
+herself down the hill, out of the moonlight. Winona rolled as stealthily
+after her.
+
+"What is it?" she asked, when they were at the bottom of the hill, where
+they couldn't be seen.
+
+"Come hither, Little One, and I will tell you!" responded Louise, like
+Kipling's Crocodile. She led the way to the dock, where they sat down in
+the moored rowboat, and Louise began to hold forth.
+
+"We've got more than enough things to sell, and none of those plans are
+a bit of good. What we want to do is to take all that stuff up to
+Wampoag, in this old boat of yours, and peddle them at the big hotels."
+
+"I think so, too," agreed Winona, "but the girls haven't gotten
+unanimous yet. You know Nataly Lee's going to fight to the last ditch
+against selling things that way. I don't know whether she thinks it's
+too hard work or too undignified, but you can see she isn't going to
+stand for it one little bit."
+
+"Oh, that girl makes me tired!" said Louise. "I'm not going to wait for
+their old unanimity. I tell you, Win, I have a plan!"
+
+"Well, go ahead!" Winona encouraged.
+
+"To-morrow morning," said Louise. "You and I will slide off early, like
+the Third Little Pig, and pack the boat with all the junk we have ready.
+It's all in the boxes in the store-place. Then we'll row to Wampoag, and
+just sell things all day!"
+
+"How'll we get them away without anybody seeing us?" objected Winona,
+who liked the plan very much. "It would be gorgeous if we could manage
+it."
+
+"We'll have to go now and sneak the stuff into the boat before bedtime,"
+said Louise. "We can pile them on that amateur stretcher we used to
+carry Florence. I think nobody ever took it apart."
+
+"Hurrah! Come on, then!" said Winona, and the two girls slid off into
+the shadows.
+
+It was not such very hard work. They filled their two suitcases, and put
+what wouldn't go in the suitcases on the stretcher; and had everything
+in the boat and covered up with a waterproof blanket before their
+absence had been noticed. Then they stole back into the circle as
+innocently as kittens, in time to sing "Mammy Moon" at the tops of their
+voices with the rest.
+
+They were both on the policing shift that week, so it was easy for them
+to arrange to get their share of camp-work over early. By half-past
+eight in the morning they were rowing gayly down the river in the
+direction of Wampoag. Florence wanted to come, but they had to repress
+her. She might have been in their way.
+
+When they were around the bend, safely out of sight of the camp, Winnie
+stopped rowing.
+
+"I had an idea, too!" she said. "Reach under the seat, Louise."
+
+Louise pulled out, first, the luncheon she herself had poked under a
+little while before; next, a good-sized bundle that appeared to be
+clothes.
+
+"What's this for?" she asked.
+
+"For us," said Winona.
+
+Louise opened it, and eyed its contents puzzledly. There were a
+dressing-sack made of bandanna handkerchiefs, partly ripped up, two old
+skirts, an old shawl and a checked gingham apron.
+
+"They're to dress up in," explained Winona. "We'll be poor little
+emigrant girls that want to sella da nice-a goods, lady! The women who
+go around selling things out of suitcases always have a foreign look. So
+I fished these out of the box of stuff we had for theatricals. I knew
+just where it was, because we got some things out of it for 'Everygirl'
+last week."
+
+"Oh, gorgeous!" cried Louise, finishing the ripping-up of the
+dressing-sack into its original red handkerchiefs. She dug through the
+pile again and picked out the shortest skirt, for she hadn't her full
+growth yet. "Who gets the little checked shawl?" she asked.
+
+"You do, if you want it," answered Winona. "I'll take the apron."
+
+They both turned in the collars of their middy blouses, and rolled the
+cuffs under. Skirts over them, a bandanna apiece round their necks, and
+the checked shawl over Louise's head and a handkerchief on Winona's--and
+they were very convincing emigrants.
+
+"Our shoes are rather too good," said Winona discontentedly, "but you
+mustn't ask too much in this world. Pin your hair up, Louise. It's too
+red for an Italian, or even a Syrian."
+
+She managed to secure her own on top under her 'kerchief as she spoke.
+They were both so brown that they looked like natives of somewhere else,
+and the dresses were very natural. The long skirts and fastened-up hair
+made them both look eighteen or twenty--for Winona was as tall as she
+would ever be, five feet six, and Louise, though shorter, was plump.
+
+"We can buy long earrings at the ten-cent store on our way up," said
+Louise. "I always did want to."
+
+"All right," said Winona.
+
+"And, for goodness sake, Win, see if you can't get up some sort of an
+accent. Italian would be the easiest, I guess."
+
+"Yes, kinda lady! Sella da fina things--real handa-made!" responded
+Winona, her white teeth flashing.
+
+Then they came to the Boy Scouts' camp, and they had to row very softly,
+and keep as far away from the bank as they could. But luck was still
+with them, and none of the Scouts happened to be fishing that morning.
+
+"If we'd remembered we might have brought back the mending," said
+Louise, with a half-concealed desire to go tell the Scouts about her
+prospective lark.
+
+"Better not go in there!" said Winona. She had a brother in the camp,
+and she didn't care to risk being stopped in mid-career of what promised
+to be a very fine time. So they rowed down the river till they reached
+Wampoag, and tied their boat to the dock.
+
+They took out the stretcher, put a suitcase on either end of it and
+piled the things that were too big for the suitcases in the middle. Then
+they each took an end and started bravely forth.
+
+"Where da gooda hotel for sella da goods?" asked Louise, with a broad
+and friendly grin, of the interested dock-keeper.
+
+"Any at all," he answered. "Just go straight down this road till you see
+a hotel. They're all together."
+
+"Thank you, mister," Louise answered, and they trotted on.
+
+The sight of two young Italian girls carrying a stretcher full of goods
+proved to be a little more of a sensation than the girls had bargained
+for. They felt as if they had never been so much stared at in their
+lives, and they were both grateful when they reached the shelter of the
+first hotel porch.
+
+It was a big hotel that they had come upon, and its wide porches were
+full of women, young and old, rocking, and talking and embroidering, and
+willing enough to look at the things the girls had. The arrangement was
+that Winona should take care of the smaller things, the painted and
+embroidered linens and so forth in the suitcases, while Louise attended
+to the pottery and larger art-craft things, and a row of Adelaide's
+jellies. She didn't expect to sell the jelly to people who already had
+three meals a day, but she was agreeably surprised. Evidently they liked
+to have things to eat in their rooms.
+
+The stretcher and suitcases were set on the porch and Louise, with an
+ingratiating grin under her shawl, went from woman to woman, holding up
+her wares.
+
+"Look at da fine pot--native wares--very cheapa?" she asked. "You not
+have to buy. We lika show. Buy da fine pot cheapa? You nice lady--you
+take real Indian pillow--real pine pillow!"
+
+"I believe I will," said an energetic-looking old lady with white hair
+and a black silk dress. "How much is that pillow, my dear? And aren't
+you pretty young to be out selling things this way? You don't look more
+than seventeen."
+
+Louise swelled with pride at being taken for as old as that, but she
+managed to answer, "One dollar for pillow--very cheap--real hand work!"
+and to the last question, "I lika sella da goods--four little poor ones
+younger as me home. I _very_ old!"
+
+At which the elderly lady bought the pillow on the spot. Louise put the
+dollar in the pocket of her skirt, and went back to the stretcher after
+a big vase of Helen's, which was the pride of her heart, and for which
+she meant to ask at least one-fifty.
+
+"Real pottery pot, lady!" she explained to the nearest woman to her.
+"Real hand-made--see? Real hand-painted--only two dollar!"
+
+Louise had spent a summer at a hotel herself, the year before, and she
+knew all the tricks and manners of the porch-peddlers. She let the woman
+who wanted the vase beat her down to one-sixty, and pocketed the extra
+dime that she hadn't thought she'd get with a sense of duty well done.
+She frisked up and down the porch having a glorious time, while Winona,
+with her open suitcase, sat still by the top step. She did not need to
+move, for the women were as interested in her wares as they always are
+in table-linens. She sold a stencilled crash luncheon set of Marie's,
+five pieces, for five dollars, while Louise was haggling over the price
+for Helen's vase. Several of the bead bags and necklaces woven on the
+little looms went, too. The girls left that porch with nearly twelve
+dollars worth of goods sold.
+
+The next hotel did not do so well by them, for the people there only
+bought a few handkerchiefs and bead chains. Still it was better than
+nothing. They had covered six hotels by one o'clock and made twenty-five
+dollars. The needle-work, much to the girls' surprise, went more quickly
+than anything else.
+
+"It must be the wistful sweetness of your expression, or else they think
+I look too well-fed to be sorry for, Win," said Louise as they munched
+their sandwiches on the dock. The dock-keeper had given them permission.
+"You just sit still and look pleasant, and the sales get made. I have to
+chase all over creation, and tease and joke and cheapen, to get them to
+buy mine."
+
+"I'm afraid to talk much, for fear my accent will break through,"
+explained Winona. "It's the goods, I think. They all seem crazy over
+those stencilled things. I could sell a lot more if I had them."
+
+"Haven't you any more?" asked Louise between bites.
+
+"Only one, and I promised that to your kinda lady that you sold the pine
+pillow to, and told you were the oldest of five. But I'm taking orders,"
+finished Winona with a grin.
+
+"Do you suppose Marie will stand for going on with it?"
+
+"For what--this bandanna party? She needn't--I'll deliver them myself,"
+stated Winona calmly.
+
+"What about the carved frames Elizabeth made?" asked Louise, as they
+rose and took up the burden of life in the shape of their much lightened
+stretcher.
+
+"Pretty well, but nothing like the way Florence's and Frances's little
+sweet-grass baskets went."
+
+"If we sell enough to run the camp another two weeks, I don't see why
+the girls shouldn't keep any money over that they earn," said Winona
+thoughtfully. "The proprietor of that little boarding-house we went to
+last but one says she wants more jelly. _That's_ all gone, thank
+goodness--oo, but it was heavy!"
+
+"The little baskets at a quarter apiece are going off fast, too," said
+Louise. "Hotel Abercrombie-by-the-Water. Don't forget your dialect,
+angel-child."
+
+"E pluribus unum! Panama mañana! Nux vomica!" answered Winona
+enthusiastically as they ascended the steps. "Buya da beada necklace,
+lady?"
+
+"Good!" said Louise under her breath, and herself tackled dialect again.
+"Buya da pot for poor woman, lady? Got thirteen children to keep--no
+money!"
+
+"Thirteen children--really?" asked the woman in horror.
+
+"Thirteen--all girls!" answered Louise mournfully, while Winona bent
+very low over her suitcase, and tried not to laugh. "Unlucky number,
+huh?"
+
+"Very, for her!" said the woman. "Well, I really must buy something to
+help her."
+
+Winona was going to stop her, for she thought it wasn't fair; although
+Louise evidently took it as a lovely joke. But as the woman did not feel
+that her duty to the thirteen went beyond buying one fifteen-cent
+sweet-grass napkin-ring--and she only wanted to give ten cents for
+it--Winona did not intervene. She only whispered, "Don't, Louise!" next
+time she passed her. And Louise, though she laughed, said no more about
+the thirteen poor little Camp Fire Girls starving at home. Then towards
+evening it was Winona who got into trouble.
+
+They had sold about forty-five dollars' worth of stuff in the course of
+the day, and were back at the first hotel, the one they had started
+from, to deliver the stencilled set Winona had promised to Louise's
+white-haired lady. Winona, who felt very tired after her long day of
+tramping and selling, was sitting on the top of the hotel porch in the
+shade of a pillar, her hands crossed on her lap. Her pretty face was
+pale with the long, tiring day, and her eyelids drooped. She was
+figuring out that, what with the Scouts' mending and this day's work,
+and the orders they had taken, the camp could go on three weeks more.
+And she felt a touch on her shoulder.
+
+"My dear," said the brisk voice of the lady who had bought the
+stencilled set, "you seem tired."
+
+"Why, not so very," said Winona, coming out of her thinking-fit hastily,
+and forgetting her accent on the way.
+
+"And don't you find this a hard life for so young a girl?" went on the
+lady. "Wouldn't you rather do something else?"
+
+Winona smiled and shook her head. "I like it," she said.
+
+The old lady sat down by her and took her hand. Louise, meanwhile, out
+of hearing, was trying to sell a very lopsided basket to an elderly
+gentleman.
+
+"My child," she said, "I can't help feeling that you're too intelligent
+and too refined-looking for a life like this. I am sure you are not an
+Italian. Is there nothing I could do to help you?"
+
+Winona felt very uncomfortable. She hadn't bargained for having people
+take a personal interest in her.
+
+"Really there isn't anything," she answered truthfully. "I have a very
+good time. I can't tell you all about it, but indeed, I have a very
+pleasant life."
+
+But the old lady was not to be daunted.
+
+"My dear child, there is something very attractive about you," she said.
+"I believe with the proper education you would become an unusually
+charming young girl. You are young enough still to be trained. Is that
+girl with you your sister?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Winona, wondering what next.
+
+"I thought as much," said the old lady. "You don't look like sisters.
+You're naturally of a better class than she is. Now, supposing that
+someone who could do a good deal for you took you and had you educated,
+do you think you would be a good girl and do them credit?"
+
+Winona did not know in the least what to say. It looked as if the old
+lady intended to adopt her before she could escape.
+
+"It would be awfully nice," she said, uncomfortably, "and very kind.
+But--indeed, I couldn't!"
+
+The old lady had begun to speak again, when a clatter of hasty feet on
+the steps behind them made her and Winona both turn around and look.
+
+[Illustration: "WILLIAM!" SAID HIS AUNT, "DO YOU KNOW THIS--THIS YOUNG
+PERSON?"]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIFTEEN
+
+
+It was only a tall boy in the uniform of the Boy Scouts who was tearing
+up the steps. But both the old lady and Winona uttered a faint squeal,
+the old lady because he kissed her, and Winona because she recognized
+the newcomer. It was Billy Lee, and he was evidently a relative of
+Winona's would-be benefactress.
+
+"How are you, auntie, and how's everything?" he was inquiring genially,
+with an arm still about her. Winona gazed wildly around, meanwhile, for
+a hole to crawl into, but there was none. "You see, I've come to
+dinner," went on Billy cheerfully.
+
+By this time he had swung around, and seen Winona. He took in her whole
+get-up, earrings, 'kerchief, sagging skirt, checked apron; and, further
+off, Louise making change energetically in the same regalia. He began to
+laugh.
+
+"Good for you, Winona!" he said. "Been selling Camp Fire stuff?"
+
+"William!" said his aunt before Winona could answer, "Do you know
+this--this young person?"
+
+Billy looked embarrassed.
+
+"Oh, say, Winnie, I'm afraid I've put my foot in it," said he. But he
+went on telling the truth--Billy was unfortunately incapable of doing
+anything else. At least, it seemed unfortunate to Winona right then.
+"Why, yes, Aunt Lydia. This is Winona Merriam, who lives next door to
+us. She's camping about a mile and a half down the river from us
+Scouts."
+
+The old lady turned sharply on Winona.
+
+"Then what makes you masquerade as an Italian peddler?" she asked
+sharply.
+
+Winona took courage, for though the old lady was cross, she did not seem
+unforgivingly angry.
+
+"We thought if we dressed up perhaps people would buy things quicker,"
+she explained. "But we do really need the money very badly, don't we,
+Billy?"
+
+"They're trying to make enough to stay in the woods all August, auntie,"
+explained Billy. "They've all been working like beavers, making things,
+to do it."
+
+"I don't see yet why the bandanna handkerchiefs," said the old lady
+tartly. "And you, miss"--to Louise, who had come up--"what did you mean
+by telling me that you were the eldest of five, and hadn't slept under a
+roof for ten days?"
+
+"Because it's true," said Louise. "I haven't--we're camping. And I _am_
+the eldest of five, worse luck! I have to spend my whole time at home
+setting an example. That's why I go away to be naughty!"
+
+It was impossible to be angry long with Louise Lane, and the old lady
+did not seem to want to be angry with Winona. So things straightened
+themselves out, and actually ended in an invitation to stay to dinner!
+
+"But we've nothing but our middy blouses, under these awful things,"
+protested Winona, "and Mrs. Bryan will be worried if we don't get home
+till late."
+
+"That's all right," said Billy's aunt Lydia, whose name was Lawrence.
+She was Mrs. Lee's sister. "I'll have them send a man down from the dock
+to tell your Guardian where you are."
+
+"Oh, then thank you!" said Winona radiantly. But Louise still hesitated.
+
+"Well, what is it?" asked the old lady.
+
+Louise hung her shawl-draped head for a moment, then she flung it back
+and answered frankly.
+
+"I may want to come peddling again, and if they see us in our camp
+uniform they'll know who we are!"
+
+"Great Scott!" cried Billy, beginning to laugh, "You _are_ a queer girl!
+I say, Aunt Lydia, let her disguise herself some more, if that's what
+she wants. Give her some of your clothes, or the chambermaid's, or
+somebody's. Would that be all right, Louise?"
+
+"Why, yes indeed!" said Louise, grinning joyously. "Lead on, Desperate
+Desmond."
+
+"I never saw such girls!" said Miss Lawrence. "However, you may as well
+have your play out. William, get a bellboy to put these goods somewhere.
+I'll take these objects of charity to get ready for dinner. Your room's
+next suite twelve, the one I have."
+
+She shepherded the two girls upstairs by the staircase, instead of the
+elevator, as if she wanted them to be conspicuous.
+
+"Now, remember," explained she, "you're two young foreign peddlers that
+I'm giving a dinner to out of the kindness of my heart. I'm loaning you
+clothes out of the same thing. So you can go right on peddling if you
+want to, you with the business instinct--Louise you said your name was?
+Very well, Louise, you can go on selling your potteries and bead bags
+after dinner--if you want to. But I want to talk to Winona myself. I
+don't know but I still want to adopt her!"
+
+Miss Lawrence left the girls alone when she had shown them to a room,
+and went to prepare for dinner herself. There was a bathroom next to
+them, and they made for it--one after another, of course--with gurgles
+of joy. Winona went first, while Louise was doing her hair, which was so
+thick and long it took a great deal of time to arrange.
+
+"Isn't hot water heavenly when you haven't seen it in a tub for a week
+and a half?" said Winona, emerging in a borrowed kimono, which she
+presently passed on to Louise.
+
+"I'll tell you when I've tried," said Louise, disappearing in her turn
+into the bathroom. She turned around and poked out her head to say,
+"Now, remember, we've both got to keep on looking as old as we can. We
+have characters to keep up!"
+
+Winona began to investigate the clothes Miss Lawrence had laid out for
+them. She did not expect to find anything more exciting than a black
+silk with a fichu, or something else elderly of that sort. Instead,
+there lay on the bed two pretty frocks which had certainly been made for
+girls of their age.
+
+She held them both up against her. They were a little shorter than she
+usually wore her skirts, both of them, and a little loose. Evidently
+their owner was of a build somewhere between Winona and Louise. But
+Louise, when she emerged, was quite pleased at that, for what was short
+for Winona was long for her, naturally, and carried out the idea of age
+that she wished to convey. She chose the more elaborate of the two, a
+green silk, because the other dress was pink, which doesn't match red
+hair. But it did match Winona's brown hair and blue eyes beautifully,
+and the wide satin sash was very becoming to her. The girls gave their
+tennis shoes a liberal dose of whitening, and decided that they would
+have to do. There were stockings to go with the dresses.
+
+When they were done dressing they gazed at each other in admiration.
+
+"I never had as pretty a dress in my life!" said Winona delightedly,
+surveying the folds of rose-colored organdy that ruffled about her. She
+reached up as she spoke to fasten back her curls with the shell barrette
+that usually held them at the back of her neck.
+
+"Glad you like them!" said Miss Lawrence, appearing on the threshold of
+the next room. "They belong to my niece Nataly--I suppose you know
+Nataly if you live next door to her--but she hasn't had them yet. I
+brought them to her from my trip abroad. Here, Winona, you haven't any
+hair-ribbon."
+
+"I haven't been wearing any in camp," said Winona, standing still,
+however, while Miss Lawrence unclasped the barrette and supplied its
+place with a rose-colored satin ribbon tied about her head,
+fillet-fashion.
+
+"That's the English fashion," said Miss Lawrence, "wear your hair loose
+till you're sixteen or seventeen, then do it all up at once, instead of
+pulling it up by degrees, as we do here. It's very becoming, my dear."
+
+Winona privately felt that it was a little youthful, but she said
+nothing, and indeed the effect of the shower of curls falling loose from
+under the ribbon was exceedingly becoming.
+
+Louise, over by the mirror, continued to put pins into her hair, and
+Miss Lawrence did not try to super-intend _her_ toilet at all, though
+Louise was getting herself up to look as near twenty as she could.
+
+A knock at the door of the sitting-room, where they went when they were
+dressed, made them all turn.
+
+"Come in," said Miss Lawrence.
+
+"It's me, Billy," said his voice ungrammatically inside. "I say! What
+stunning clothes!" he added frankly as he took in the splendor of the
+girls' attire.
+
+Winona looked at him rather shyly. The small bag he had carried must
+have been well packed, for Billy had blossomed out in a tuxedo and long
+trousers.
+
+"Why," she said, "I didn't know you for a minute--you look so grown up!"
+
+"I've had long trousers for a year now," explained Billy, "only I've
+always had on my uniform when you've seen me before."
+
+"Of course, that's it," admitted Winona. But she continued to stare, for
+this tall young gentleman looked about eighteen in his correctly cut
+clothes, and she felt like such a little girl, looking as Miss Lawrence
+had made her look. What she did not know was that she was looking her
+very prettiest, like a girl in a play or a picture, with her flushed
+cheeks and falling curls and rosy draperies. Miss Lawrence, who seemed
+to have taken a fancy to her, slipped her arm through Winona's, leaving
+Louise to follow with Billy.
+
+Louise was not impressed in the least by Billy's grandeur. It took a
+good deal to impress Louise Lane, and one suit of evening clothes and a
+large hotel weren't likely to do it.
+
+Winona did not look to the right or left as they entered the big
+dining-room, but she knew Louise had seen something, for she heard a
+little squeal of delight close behind her. They were scarcely seated
+when Louise burst out:
+
+"What do you suppose they've done, Winnie? I don't know whether it was
+you or Billy, Miss Lawrence, but thank you both, anyway. Winona, our
+things are all set out in that little sun-parlor sort of place where
+everybody can see them, and there's a bellboy looking after them. I saw
+him selling a bead belt!"
+
+"It wasn't any trouble," said Billy, looking embarrassed. "The
+management lets people use that room for displays, don't they, Aunt
+Lydia?"
+
+He did not explain that he had tipped the head bellboy liberally to have
+the things looked after, and it never occurred to either of the girls
+till long after.
+
+Winona secretly decided that Nataly couldn't be as trying as the girls
+thought her, if this was the kind of a brother she had. So she smiled
+brilliantly at Miss Lawrence and Billy, and felt very happy indeed over
+the bright lights and the elaborate dinner and the orchestra and pink
+dress.
+
+And then something occurred to her. This was Nataly's dress, a brand-new
+present-dress, and so was the one Louise had on. And they were getting
+all the first wear out of them, would Nataly like it?
+
+She looked up, directly, and said what she thought.
+
+"Miss Lawrence, will Nataly mind our wearing her clothes?"
+
+Louise answered before Miss Lawrence had a chance. "You know perfectly
+well she will, Win. Why, she nearly had a fit when I climbed into a
+clean middy of hers day before yesterday. And these are uncommonly glad
+and happy rags we have on."
+
+"If she doesn't like it," explained Miss Lawrence with perfect
+clearness, "she knows just what she can do. My niece Nataly is a spoiled
+young person if ever there was one. But don't worry, my dear"--for
+Winona was looking distressed at the idea of Nataly's objection--"I'll
+see that she's perfectly satisfied."
+
+So Winona did not worry. She talked instead, and told Miss Lawrence
+everything she wanted to know about Camp Karonya and what they did
+there.
+
+"It's a miniature community," said Miss Lawrence approvingly. "I wish
+they'd had them when I was a girl. I suppose you'll have a float at the
+lake carnival, since you're such enterprising young persons!"
+
+"Oh, is there going to be a lake carnival?" asked both girls in a
+breath. Miss Lawrence nodded.
+
+"Why, didn't you know?" asked Billy. "The people here in Wampoag have
+them every year. They give prizes for the best decorated float and
+canoe. I don't know whether it's a cash prize this year or a cup."
+
+"I do hope it's a cash prize!" breathed Louise fervently, while Winona's
+mind began to work at the ways and means for making and decorating a
+Camp Fire float, and the best way to get it up the lake.
+
+"It would be lovely if we could do it," she said. "When is it to be?"
+
+Billy pulled a little calendar out of the one small and concealed pocket
+that his clothes allowed him, and studied it.
+
+"A week from to-morrow," he said. "You have lots of time."
+
+"Then I'm sure we can do it," said Winona. "Marie has a canoe she'll
+probably want to enter, and besides that surely we can get up a float
+among us."
+
+And then something which Louise--so she said afterwards--had been
+expecting, happened. One of the women who had bought pottery from them
+that morning came up, and began to talk to Miss Lawrence, quite as if
+the girls were out of hearing.
+
+"Good-morning," she began, taking everything in as she talked. "Aren't
+these the little Italian vendors that were around this morning? Why, how
+transformed they look! Really, the younger one looks quite refined. And
+what are you doing with them, dear Miss Lawrence?"
+
+Her tone added quite plainly, "And won't they pocket the spoons?"
+
+Louise, the irrepressible, grinned above her salad. "Kinda lady loana da
+cloes," she said glibly; and the waiter, who had heard her discoursing
+in rapid and fluent English of an unmistakably home-grown kind the
+moment before, got behind a palm. If he hadn't he would have disgraced
+himself in a way no well-trained waiter should. Billy, too, dived into
+his napkin and seemed to have swallowed something down his Sunday
+throat. But Miss Lawrence remained quite calm.
+
+"I have taken quite a fancy to them," she said. "They seem like good,
+industrious girls. I am glad to see you are so interested, too, Mrs.
+Gardner. The best way to help them--you were going to ask me that, were
+you not--is to buy their goods. You'll find them on sale in the little
+rose-room."
+
+"Oh--ah, yes indeed!" said Mrs. Gardner, and fled, while the young
+people regarded Miss Lawrence with admiration.
+
+When the meal was over Miss Lawrence would not hear of their going back
+to the camp, or going on with their selling. The bellboy or a maid could
+go on looking after their things, she said, and sent Billy over to see
+about it. Then they went into one of the little dancing-rooms and showed
+each other steps for a long time; that is, Billy and Winona did, for
+Louise said she was tired, and sat thankfully still, listening to the
+orchestra that played in the dining-room. After that Miss Lawrence
+carried them all off to a band concert.
+
+It was ten-thirty by the time they had finished, and all had something
+more to eat--real, grown-up things to eat in a most gorgeous café. Miss
+Lawrence wanted them to stay all night, and Winona was willing, but
+Louise insisted on going back.
+
+"If we're here to-morrow morning," she explained, "every blessed woman
+that we sold things to will want to know all about us and our past
+lives, and then the secret will come out. No, thank you, Miss Lawrence,
+
+ "I see by the moonlight,
+ 'Tis past midnight,
+ Time pig and I were home
+ An hour and a half ago!"
+
+"I being the pig, I suppose!" added Winona.
+
+"Well, I won't keep you against your will," said Miss Lawrence, getting
+up from the café table. "So you'd better go back to the hotel. They can
+be packing up what's left of your things for you, while you change. But
+what about rowing across the lake and down the river in the dark? Can
+you look after them, William?"
+
+"I should think I could!" said Billy. "Besides--I forgot to tell you,
+girls, or we might have had a grand reunion--Lonny Hughes and Tom are to
+meet me at the dock at about eleven, with one of the camp canoes. Tom's
+Winona's brother," he explained to his aunt. "So we'll take one of the
+girls in the canoe, and one of us will go in the boat, and get them home
+safe as anything. For the matter of that, you can't get hurt on this
+lake unless the fish should jump up and bite you," he added as they
+reached the hotel, and parted to dress.
+
+The girls hurried off their finery, and got hastily into their serge
+skirts and white blouses.
+
+"I feel like Cinderella!" said Winona as they went down in the elevator
+again, only to find that, quick as they had been Billy had been quicker,
+and stood, familiar-looking in his khaki, to take them away. The pottery
+and linen that was left would all go into one suitcase now, so well had
+they and the bellboy prospered. Billy gave them, too, the money that had
+been taken in during the evening. They hurried off, after they had said
+good-bye to Miss Lawrence, and made her promise to come see them at Camp
+Karonya and stay a whole day.
+
+At the last moment she pushed a bundle into Winona's hands.
+
+"Here are your dresses, child," she said. "You looked so sweet it would
+be a shame for you and Louise not to keep them. I'll make it up to
+Nataly."
+
+Winona threw her arms around Miss Lawrence's neck, and kissed her.
+
+"Thank you, dear fairy godmother!" she said.
+
+A more astonished pair of boys than Lonny and Tom it would have been
+hard to find. It did not take long to explain matters. In a few moments
+they had Winona in the canoe between Tom and Billy, while Lonny rowed
+Louise in the boat. The girls held the boat and the canoe together. As
+they went Louise and Winona told the tale of their day's work.
+
+When they were done Louise pulled out the money they had made, and began
+to count it.
+
+"You have some, too, Win," she said.
+
+"I know," said Winona, "I have what Billy gave me, that the bellboy
+made. But I don't believe it's a lot."
+
+"Better count it," counselled Tom, and Winona did. When she was through
+she looked up with an awed expression.
+
+"Nearly ten dollars more!" she announced. "Oh, Louise, there must be
+some mistake! Why, if we both really have made all that, there's enough
+for another three weeks' camping!"
+
+"And orders ahead!" said Louise serenely. "It will take Marie and
+Adelaide more of their time than they'll want to spare from fancy diving
+and telling the birds from the wild-flowers, to make jelly and runners.
+I tell you, folks, I'm going to be an Italian porch-worker from now on.
+It pays. Sella da fina crock--getta da bigga price--blowa it in!"
+
+The boys shouted. "Good for you, Louise!" they cried, and a startled
+bullfrog gave a deep emotional croak at the noise, and jumped into the
+water.
+
+It was moonlight, so the trip home was pleasanter than any they had had.
+They sang till they came close to Camp Karonya, where they quieted down
+for fear of disturbing the sleeping girls. But they need not have
+worried. Camp Karonya was improving the moonlight night by sitting
+around a watch-fire, singing and telling stories. They could hear
+Helen's voice lifted up in "Old Uncle Ned," with a mandolin accompanying
+her that probably belonged to Edith. The boys tied the boat and the
+canoe, and carried the suitcases and stretcher, so pleasingly empty,
+ashore. All five walked over to where the fire gleamed, and were in the
+midst of the girls before anyone had seen them come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIXTEEN
+
+
+The girls jumped up and surrounded them.
+
+"Where on earth have you been? What on earth have you been doing? Where
+in the name of common sense did you get that haughty black person who
+brought us news of you about six?" everybody wanted to know, while
+Adelaide and Nataly held brief reunions with their brothers, and six
+girls at once pressed refreshments on Lonny and Tom and Billy.
+
+"We've sold most of your arts-and-crafts things," announced Winona.
+
+"And every stitch of embroidery," added Louise.
+
+"And we've been to a band concert and met a fairy godmother!" chanted
+Winona in her turn.
+
+"And we have heaps and _heaps_ of money!" finished Louise jubilantly.
+
+Then all the girls cried out, "Oh, tell us about it! Tell us about it!"
+
+So Louise sat down at a discreet distance from the camp-fire, and
+assisted by Winona's quieter voice, told the story. When she got to the
+part where they pretended to be Italian girls Nataly interrupted.
+
+"Oh, that was dreadful!" she said. "Surely you didn't do that?"
+
+"Didn't we, though?" grinned Louise cheerfully; "And your very own Aunt
+Lydia aided and abetted us, and gave us dinner and kind words besides!"
+
+"Aunt Lydia!" exclaimed Nataly.
+
+"She's over at one of the Wampoag hotels, Nataly," explained her
+brother. "You knew she was going to be there, didn't you?"
+
+"How could I when I haven't heard from her?" asked Nataly.
+
+"Oh, that's so!" said Billy penitently. "I ought to have brought you
+down her last letter, but it was addressed to me, and I forgot to pass
+it on."
+
+The fact was, as Winona learned later, Miss Lawrence had very strong
+likes and dislikes, and much preferred her nephew to her niece.
+
+Louise turned round to Nataly.
+
+"You made some things to sell, didn't you?" she asked, "And yet you
+think it was shocking of us to sell them! I don't think that's fair."
+
+"Well, I don't care. I don't think it's nice or lady-like to peddle
+things from door to door," said Nataly stubbornly.
+
+"Maybe it wasn't," said Louise cheerfully, "but it was certainly heaps
+of fun!"
+
+"Oh, we _did_ have fun!" said Winona. "And we have orders for more of
+Marie's stencilled runners, and Adelaide's jelly."
+
+"Did nobody love my pots?" asked Helen sadly.
+
+"Oh, yes, indeed," consoled Winona, "only you were so industrious, and
+made so many, that we have some left. The Blue Birds' baskets went off
+very well, too."
+
+"How much did you make?" asked Mrs. Bryan. "I'm wild to know."
+
+Louise pulled her bandanna handkerchief out of her deepest pocket, and
+Winona produced hers from the bottom of her blouse. They handed them
+over to the Guardian.
+
+"Mine's only what the bellboy took in while we were at dinner and out in
+the evening," Winona explained. "Louise took care of all the rest."
+
+Mrs. Bryan counted it silently, while the girls waited breathlessly for
+the result.
+
+"Fifty-three dollars and forty-six cents!" announced Mrs. Bryan at last.
+"You blessed angels, with what we'll get for the mending, that means
+over three weeks more of camp!"
+
+"By the way," suggested Tom here, "can't you give us what's done of the
+mending, please, Mrs. Bryan? It's time we got back to camp."
+
+She sent Florence and another Blue Bird to get it, and they ran off,
+swinging their lanterns.
+
+"We'll send down the bill by some of your sisters, with the rest of the
+work, by day after to-morrow at the furthest," she promised, as the
+girls stood up to bid the three Scouts good-bye.
+
+They watched the canoe paddle off into the darkness, then settled down
+to hear the rest of the adventure.
+
+"But there's something else we haven't told you!" said Winona, when the
+whole story had been told and talked over for a long while. "There's
+going to be a lake carnival."
+
+"Oh, what fun! Let's go!" said Adelaide, speaking more brightly than
+Winona had ever known her to. "We could hike as far as this side of the
+lake by land, couldn't we, Opeechee?"
+
+"Certainly we could--if we had to," said Mrs. Bryan, who was watching
+Winona. "Wait till Winona finishes. She looks as if she had a plan."
+
+"I was thinking," said Winona, "that it would be very nice if we could
+decorate a float. The boys said they were sure the Scouts would loan us
+enough rowboats to build the float over, if we needed it. And we could
+have tents----"
+
+"Of course we could!" said everybody enthusiastically, and all began to
+plan at once.
+
+Finally Mrs. Bryan rose, and suggested that it was twelve o'clock, and
+that all but the breakfast-getters had better sleep till eight next
+morning. So they put out the fire, and went to bed.
+
+About two o'clock a slim figure in a red kimono stole down the avenue of
+tents with a lantern. About two-thirds of the way there met her another,
+plumper figure, in a blue kimono, also with a lantern.
+
+"Winona!" said the blue kimono.
+
+"Why, Louise!" said the red one.
+
+Then they both began to giggle in a subdued way.
+
+"What on earth are you prowling round for, at this time of night?" asked
+Winona.
+
+"What are you?" returned Louise.
+
+Winona beckoned her friend over to a seat on a fallen log.
+
+"I--well, I've been worrying over our dressing up that way, and fooling
+people, to sell things," she confessed. "I suppose you'll think I'm a
+horrid little prig, but--Louise, I think we ought to go back and tell
+those hotellers that we were just plain Camp Fire Girls, not Italian or
+Dalmatian or anything like that."
+
+"I thought a Dalmatian was a dog," suggested Louise.
+
+"Maybe it is," said Winona sadly.
+
+Louise sat closer to Winona.
+
+"Winnie," she said, "that's just what I climbed out of bed about myself.
+I was coming to look for you when I met you. I've been worrying about
+it, too. It was a lark, but I think it's up to us to gambol over there,
+clothed and in our right minds--and own up."
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad!" said Winona. "We'll tell Mrs. Bryan in the morning."
+
+"All right," said Louise, and she began to giggle.
+
+"And then, while they're thinking how noble it is of us to confess,
+we'll sell 'em more things--real Camp Fire Girls' hand-crafts!"
+
+"Louise," said Winona with admiring conviction, "you certainly _are_ the
+limit."
+
+They both laughed, and felt better. Then they went back to bed and went
+to sleep.
+
+Next morning they rowed duly up the lake, and made a conscientious round
+of the hotels and cottages where they had sold their things the day
+before. But the way of the transgressor refused to be hard. They could
+wake very little excitement on the subject of their transformation in
+the minds of their patrons--who, it is to be feared, either regarded it
+all as a good joke, or did not worry about it at all. Indeed, most of
+the people Louise could find to explain to were more wronged because she
+had no goods with her, than by anything else. So she took a number of
+orders.
+
+"It's no use, Lou," said Winona, as they met at noon by the hotel where
+Miss Lawrence stayed, "I can't get a soul to care whether I'm a Canadian
+or a Hottentot. The only thing they'll say is, 'We'd like some more of
+the baskets,' or 'those runners,' or whatever they didn't get
+yesterday."
+
+"Same here," said Louise. "But I landed some fine fat orders, and if
+you're as clever as I think you are, you did, too."
+
+"Yes, I did," said Winona. "And, anyway," she added, brightening, "when
+we've done this hotel our consciences will be clear."
+
+"I only hope we don't meet that horrid Mrs. Gardner," said Louise.
+
+So they marched up the steps, and tried to pick out the women they had
+sold to the day before, to explain to them. But Winona had scarcely
+begun, "You see, we really weren't Italians at all," when the people she
+was talking to began to laugh. Winona, bewildered and a little cross,
+looked around to see what they were laughing at. She saw Miss Lawrence
+behind her, laughing, too.
+
+"It's no use explaining, my dear," said that lady. "I did it myself.
+Everybody knows that you and Louise Lane disposed of your goods under
+false pretenses by tying up your heads in red handkerchiefs and letting
+your customers draw their own conclusions. I don't know but some of us
+want our money back! Never mind, children, it was very clever of you!"
+she added, seeing that Winona was not sure whether she was in earnest.
+
+And the girls found themselves being questioned and laughed at and made
+much of by a group of women, who wanted to know all about the Camp Fire,
+and the things the girls made, and the ways they earned money, and what
+they did with it, till Winona and Louise were fairly tired with
+answering questions.
+
+They invited everybody to come out to the camp, and set a day. They took
+some more orders, and then they carried Miss Lawrence off across the
+lake and down the river, to see Camp Karonya. When she arrived they
+handed her over to Nataly, as was polite, and she and Mrs. Bryan showed
+her over the camp.
+
+She investigated everything with the same brisk, fairy godmother
+expression that she had had when she took Winona and Louise under her
+wing, stayed to luncheon, and then expressed a desire to be taken down
+to the Scouts' camp, to see Billy. So two of the Blue Birds rowed her
+there.
+
+After they had seen Miss Lawrence off, the girls became busy a little
+way down the river. Winona got there a little late and found that much
+had happened while she and Louise had gone off that morning. At first
+the idea of making the float had been to found it on the rowboats the
+Boy Scouts were willing to lend. But when a deputation, headed by Mr.
+Gedney, paddled down, bringing the boats in question, it became
+painfully clear that four canoes would not support enough planks to hold
+twenty life-size girls. Neither would rowboats. At least, Mrs. Bryan and
+Mr. Gedney agreed that they wouldn't--most of the girls and all the boys
+were willing to take a chance.
+
+When this turn of affairs arrived everyone felt very sad, and for a
+while it had looked as if Camp Karonya wasn't going to have a float in
+the lake carnival.
+
+But just then along came that resourceful old gentleman, Mr. Sloane,
+with fishing-rod and a can of bait.
+
+"Well, what's all the trouble?" he inquired genially of everyone in
+general. So they told him. Mr. Sloane did not hesitate a moment.
+
+"I got a friend that owns some good, water-tight scows," said he most
+unexpectedly. "They ain't doin' nobody any good, and I guess he'd loan
+'em to you, or, if wust come to wust, he'd let you have the use of 'em
+for maybe seventy-five cents apiece. Two scows are all you'd need to put
+the plankin' across."
+
+He gave them directions as to where to go after the scows' owner, and
+ambled on in search of a quieter fishing-place. An embassy was sent
+after the scows immediately, and returned with them in triumph. They
+proved perfectly seaworthy, and quite equal to supporting all they would
+have to. So when Winona arrived on the scene after luncheon the girls
+had reached the stage of nailing the planks across.
+
+They had bargained for the scows at seventy-five cents each, as Mr.
+Sloane had said they would be able to, and promised to give them a coat
+of paint before they returned them. The boards, bought of the village
+carpenter, were more expensive. However, the girls thought they could
+venture to pay for them out of the treasury, on the strength of the
+orders ahead that they had taken. Marie and Edith were supervising
+things.
+
+"Is there anything I can do to help?" Winona asked Marie, who was
+frowning thoughtfully over a hastily-drawn plan.
+
+"Not unless you can help us with this design," Marie answered. "See
+here. The idea is to make a miniature Indian village. How would you
+group the tents so as to take up the least room and show best?"
+
+"Why do you try to draw it?" asked Winona. "Why not do as generals do,
+make little paper tents and move them around till you get a tableau of
+the effect you want?"
+
+The idea was new to Marie, but she liked it, and the three girls fell to
+constructing little paper cones, and arranging them on a square space
+that represented the float.
+
+Presently one of the girls who was nailing dropped out with a pounded
+thumb, and Winona took up her hammer and went to work. She discovered
+that the driving of a nail straight, and making boards lie side by side
+evenly, is more of an art than people know.
+
+They worked on the float most of that afternoon, except for a few of the
+girls who were told off to do the Scout mending, and they sat down near
+the carpenters and sewed sociably to the sound of the pounding. They
+worked till six, and went to bed unusually early.
+
+By the second day the platform was done, and proved to balance very well
+on the water, even with all the girls on it. Next Marie and her helpers
+went to making tents, for their own soldier tents were too
+unromantically shaped to be any good on a float. They wanted real Indian
+wigwams, or as near to them as they could get.
+
+Marie bought unbleached muslin, and they dyed it the correct dark brown.
+They made three wigwams of this, the story-book-picture kind, with the
+crossed poles tied at the top, for a foundation. In each tent a squaw
+was to sit--or rather, at its door, for the tepees, in order to fit on
+the limited space of the float, had to be made rather small, and would
+have been a tight fit for even the smallest squaw. Some of the girls
+were to dress as chiefs, and were working hard on war-bonnets and
+leggings. Even Puppums was to grace the occasion, guarding a
+pappoose--little Lilian Maynard, the smallest Blue Bird. There was some
+idea of including Hike the Camp Cat, now a cheerful and opulent-looking
+kitten, but it was thought better of, because he yowled so when they
+rehearsed him.
+
+When the tents and costumes were done, the brushwood heaps stacked, the
+floor covered with twigs and moss, the girls tried grouping themselves
+as they were to appear on the final night. And it proved that there was
+not room on the platform for three tents and nineteen girls, even if
+seven _were_ small.
+
+Marie stepped off and looked it over.
+
+"There are just two girls too many," she said. "Three, if I were on
+board. I'll eliminate Marie Hunter to begin with. I'm going to decorate
+my own canoe. You'd better draw lots for the other two to stay out."
+
+Everyone on the float looked at everyone else. Nobody wanted to drop
+out, but nobody felt like being selfish.
+
+"I'll drop out!" said the whole of Camp Karonya in chorus, after a
+minute's dead silence.
+
+"I'll go in your canoe, Marie--have you forgotten?" asked Edith. "The
+plans you made included me."
+
+"So they did," said Marie in a relieved voice. "Well, perhaps the rest
+could crowd a little closer."
+
+"I'm afraid not, and be sure that nobody'd tip into the water," vetoed
+Mrs. Bryan. "I'm the one to stay ashore, girls. I'll gaze at you with
+fond proprietorship while you get first prize."
+
+But there rose up a storm of objections to that. "No you won't, either!
+There won't any of us be in it if you aren't, Opeechee!" till she had to
+give up giving up.
+
+Winona braced herself a little, and "I'm out, too," she said gayly.
+"There's no use asking me to stay--I don't like your old float!"
+
+She sprang ashore, and went over and stood by Marie.
+
+The girls protested, and several more volunteered to drop out, but
+nobody meant it quite as hard as Winona did. So the Indian village went
+on being erected, and the girls went on practising an Indian dance which
+should take up the least possible room. Meanwhile Winona rounded up the
+finished mending and rowed up the river to deliver the latest basket of
+mended socks and shirts. She had made her sacrifice in all good faith
+and earnestness, but she felt as if she didn't want to see them going
+gayly on without her--at least, not right _now_.
+
+She wasn't conscious of behaving any way but as she generally did, but
+she must have, for both Tom and Billy watched her uneasily, as she sat
+in the boat and talked to them after they had taken the mending, while
+she waited for the orderly to come with her money.
+
+"What's the matter, Win?" asked Tom bluntly in a minute. "You're down
+and out--I can see that. Who's been doing anything to you?"
+
+Winona shook her head. "Nobody."
+
+"Then what have _you_ been doing?" asked Billy. They stood over her,
+both looking so worried that Winona felt like hugging them, or crying,
+or both.
+
+"It isn't anything," she said. "Except--well, I did it myself. Somebody
+had to stay off the float, because there wasn't room for everyone, so I
+elected myself. And--and--oh, I _did_ want to be in that carnival!
+But"--she straightened bravely, and smiled up into the two indignant
+faces--"I guess it's all right, after all. If I could decorate my
+rowboat it would be all right, but I can't, because they're going to
+need it to carry properties in."
+
+"It's a confounded shame," said Billy Lee, "and after you planned it,
+and all! You ought to have a float of your own. I'll tell you, Winona,
+why don't you decorate a canoe?"
+
+"Only reason is, I haven't a canoe," laughed Winona--they were all three
+sitting in a row in the grass by this time.
+
+"I have," said Billy, "and you're more than welcome to it, and to all
+the help I can give you on it."
+
+"And I've got some change you're welcome to for decorations," added Tom.
+
+"Oh, how perfectly lovely!" said Winona, jumping up with her face aglow.
+"Indeed I will decorate it, and thank you both, ever and ever so much. I
+have ever so many lovely ideas for decorations. Billy!"
+
+She stopped short.
+
+"Well?" said Billy.
+
+"Would you mind being in the canoe with me?"
+
+"Sure, I'd love to," said Billy heartily, whether he really meant it or
+not.
+
+"Oh, thank you _so_ much!" cried Winona again.
+
+"That's the way to take it!" said Tom. "We'll get you up a canoe,
+between us, that'll make your old Camp Fire float look like a bad
+quarter and a plugged nickel--see if we don't!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
+
+
+Winona and Florence paddled back to Camp Karonya with the latest bundle
+of mending, very, very happy. When they came ashore, they were met by a
+committee consisting of Adelaide, Louise, Helen and Marie.
+
+"We've got a plan for your being in the picture," said they very nearly
+in unison. "We can decorate the boat with the apparatus in it----"
+
+But Winona waved a lordly hand.
+
+"Boat me no boats," said she. "I'm going to have Billy Lee's canoe to
+decorate. We're going out this afternoon, or maybe to-morrow afternoon,
+up to Wampoag where the shops are, and we're going to buy out the shops
+with decorations. Going to get honorable mention, anyway!"
+
+"Oh, then you'd really rather!" said Helen. "I'm _so_ glad. But it won't
+seem natural not to have you on the float, Winnie!"
+
+"Just as natural as not having Marie," said Winona.
+
+"No," said Marie quietly, "not exactly. You're like the spirit of the
+whole thing, Win, and I think they ought to have you."
+
+"You can't," said Winona, sitting down on the grass and drawing her
+knees up to her chin.
+
+"We could if we canned Nataly," said Louise the rebel, half under her
+breath.
+
+"Well, you can't do that," said the other girls in a breath.
+
+The truth was, Nataly Lee was the one dark spot--the one cinder, as you
+might say--in the Camp Fire. She did not particularly like doing her
+share of the work, she could not be made to take an interested part in
+the work for honor beads, and she acted generally as if she was a caller
+who was much older and more languid than the others. It was, in short,
+very much as Louise had said when she offered to join--she was like a
+kitten who refused to be anything but a cat.
+
+"I don't know what Nataly's doing here, anyway," Louise went on. "And
+we'd be a lot happier without her. I wish she'd go home and look after
+her complexion. She can't do it properly here--anybody can see that!"
+
+"Can't do what?" said a languid voice. It isn't a good thing to discuss
+your friends too freely if they're anywhere at all around, because they
+are exceedingly likely to overhear or partly hear. And this is just what
+happened now. Nataly herself walked out of the strip of woods that
+separated the camp from the river, and sat down by them.
+
+"I thought I heard you talking about me," she said.
+
+"We were," said Louise, quite unruffled. "At least I was. I was saying
+that you couldn't look after your complexion properly here in the woods,
+and that I thought you'd be happier away from our rude young society!"
+
+Nataly did not see in the least that Louise was laughing at her, but
+Helen did, and gave Louise a severe pinch. "Guying" was something that
+the camp spirit allowed only if the victim knew what was being done to
+her. But where Nataly was concerned it was hard to make Louise behave.
+
+"Well, you know," said Nataly, "I am thinking of going home. It makes me
+nervous, the idea of Aunt Lydia being near enough to pounce down on me
+every minute. She is _so_ energetic. And my nerves are nearly all right
+now."
+
+"Then you really think you will go back?" said Winona.
+
+"I really do, as soon as the carnival is over," said Nataly.
+
+"Well, as I said," said Winona hastily, for Louise looked as if she were
+going to suggest an earlier departure, "I'm going up to Wampoag this
+afternoon to buy things with the boys."
+
+"I have a 'gagement to make baskets with Frances," said Florence, "so I
+can't go with you."
+
+"I will if you want me," offered Louise. "I have various things I want
+to say to you alone."
+
+"That sounds dark and dreadful!" said Helen good-naturedly. "I think
+we'd better not volunteer to go along, Marie!"
+
+"We couldn't, anyway," Marie reminded her. "There's a lot to do on those
+war-bonnets yet."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So that afternoon Louise, Winona, Billy and Tom paddled up to the summer
+resort in quest of decorations.
+
+"Have you any idea how you're going to trim the canoe?" asked Louise.
+
+"I've thought it all out," said Winona. "I found the idea in an old book
+of ballads Marie brought along. It was called 'The Ship o' the Fiend.'"
+
+"Pretty name!" said Louise. "Who's going to be the fiend? Please don't
+all speak at once!"
+
+"I'll be the goat," said Billy. "Winnie told me a little about it. The
+ballad was about a girl who went off with an old fiance, and he turned
+out to be a real live demon."
+
+"Yes," said Winona, "the tall topmast no taller was than he," it says.
+
+"Well, I draw the line at stilts," said Billy sleepily. He was curled
+down in the bottom of the boat basking in the sunshine, for Louise had
+insisted on taking a paddle. "What do I have to do?"
+
+"The first thing," said Winona, "is to wake up enough to sit up and be
+consulted. How much copper wire ..."
+
+The rest was inaudible, for Billy moved closer to Winona, who talked to
+him mysteriously under her breath. The others could hear scraps like
+"Japanese auctioneer ..." "fifty yards ..." "red paper muslin," and such
+illuminating fragments.
+
+"How much money have you got for me to spend, Tommy?" Winona broke off
+to inquire.
+
+"Four whole dollars," he said, "earned by splitting wood for a farmer."
+
+"I certainly am obliged," she said, "and I'll pay it back."
+
+"You'll do no such thing!" he said. "I should hope I could give my own
+sister a lone four dollars once in awhile!"
+
+"All right, you can," said Winona soothingly. She pulled out the paper
+the boys had secured and given her, and began to read it aloud.
+
+"Cash prizes in the canoe class, first, twenty-five dollars, second, ten
+dollars, three third prizes, five dollars each. Now you see, if I get a
+third prize I'll be a dollar in, and all the glory reflected on Camp
+Karonya besides!"
+
+They took a street-car when they got to Wampoag, because the shopping
+district was a long ways off, and it was a hot day anyway. Tom and
+Louise watched the other two with curiosity, as they went from store to
+store, buying things that it seemed impossible could fit into each
+other; copper wire, red tinsel by the box, paper muslin in what seemed
+unlimited quantities, though it was really only a little over a dollar's
+worth. Then Winona went into one Japanese store alone, and came out with
+a bagful of paper lanterns and a knobby bundle which she refused to undo
+or show. They hunted all over three streets for Greek fire, before it
+occurred to Billy to go back to the hardware store where they had bought
+their copper wire. He came out with three boxes of it, labelled "Blue,"
+"Green" and "White," and seemed rather sad because they had no lavender
+or gray fire in stock.
+
+"'They bought a pig and some ring-bo-ree, and no end of Stilton
+cheese!'" chanted Louise softly. "How on earth are you going to connect
+all that crazy stuff?"
+
+"You'll know, all in good time, my dear," said Winona sedately. "We can
+go home now. The worst is over."
+
+"We deserve a soda, at least, for all this," said Billy.
+
+"Marble-dust," said Tom solemnly. "Some day, Bill, if you keep on
+drinking sodas, you'll turn into a statue, and your sorrowing relatives
+will have to put you up in the hall for an ornament."
+
+"Glad I'm as lovely as all that comes to!" said Billy with a grin. "They
+couldn't do it to you, old fellow--you aren't pretty enough!"
+
+"He is pretty, too," said Louise stoutly. "Somebody told me only
+yesterday that they thought Tom was so poetic-looking, and had a
+striking head."
+
+Billy laughed out loud, and Tom wriggled.
+
+"I take it all back, Louise," he said. "He _is_ beautiful."
+
+Tom gave a sort of mournful growl.
+
+"Oh, cut it out, Billy!" he said. "If you really want that soda, here's
+a drug-store."
+
+"A striking head," mused his sister, cocking her own head on one side,
+to look at Tom from this new point of view. "I really think you have."
+
+"If ever I meet the fellow who said that, he'll find out I have a
+striking fist," muttered Thomas darkly, walking into the drug-store
+ahead of the rest, and sitting down at a table in the back. "Four walnut
+sundaes, please. No, I don't want 'em all myself. The others are coming
+in the door now."
+
+For the next few days Winona, at a point half-way between her camp and
+the Scout's camp, worked steadily over the paper lanterns she had
+bought. She covered them all with white paper, and cut out holes in the
+paper after the fashion of eyes, nose and mouth, until, if you were not
+too critical, they looked like big oval skulls. If you _were_ critical,
+they might remind you, it is true, of jack-o'-lanterns, but nobody was
+unkind enough to say so but Tom. There were forty of them altogether,
+and when they were all covered, and brought down to camp out of the
+danger of being rained on, and festooned about Winona's tent, the effect
+was truly awful. Tom, who had been watching his sister's performance
+with interest, came over one day with five little paper-mache lanterns
+which he presented to her, two in the shape of black cats, and three
+like owls.
+
+"I don't know yet what you're going to do," he said, "but if Bill's
+going to wear horns and hoofs, and those things over the cot are meant
+for skulls, I should think these would come in handy."
+
+"They're just exactly what I wanted!" said Winona with rapture, hanging
+them with the rest. "Now I've nothing to do but my dress."
+
+She showed him several yards of black paper muslin and a sheet of gilt
+paper. "It doesn't look promising, I know," she said, "but it will be
+quite nice, I think, when it's done."
+
+And it really was. Helen helped her to fit it, and they made it with the
+dull side out, close-fitting, and covered with the stars and crescents
+of the traditional witch-dress. She was done with it, even to the
+pointed hat and black half-mask, in very good time.
+
+"Now," she said to the boys, standing over Billy's canoe where it had
+been pulled up in the grass, "now comes the tug of war. Tom, you said
+you would help me."
+
+"I did," said he. "What shall I do?"
+
+"Then please nail these poles to the end of the canoe. They're about six
+feet high, aren't they?"
+
+"Yes. Do you want them sticking straight up into the air?"
+
+"Straight up, please," she said.
+
+"Billy's flying around in the town like a hen with its head cut off,"
+said Tom as he proceeded to do what his sister asked, "trying to buy
+something he won't tell about. And I found Louise and Helen up at Camp
+Karonya, winding tinsel into balls like fury. Strikes me you ought to
+share that five you won't get with the whole crowd of us."
+
+"So I will when I get it," said Winona serenely. "Now will you please
+brace those end-poles thoroughly, and nail cross-pieces on them about a
+foot from the top?"
+
+"It's easy to tell people how to do things," said Tom; but he was clever
+at carpentering, and had it done in a very short time.
+
+Then Winona took the copper wire she had bought, and strung it from end
+to end of the cross-pieces, till the effect was something like that of a
+half-done cat's cradle. Then she stood off and looked at her work,
+walking round and round it, as a kitten looks at a mirror.
+
+"That wire ought to bear about twenty pounds, don't you think?" she
+asked.
+
+"I don't see why not," said Tom, sitting down on the grass to watch her.
+
+"Now I'll begin, then," she said. "Thank you for making the foundation."
+
+She took up the copper wire again, and strung more lines of it from end
+to end of the canoe, and one around the gunwale. She laced still more up
+and down in irregular points, up and down the side-wires, till the
+effect was that of an irregularly pointed fence, or crown, as high as
+the end pieces in some parts, and low enough, at the ends, to show the
+people seated in it.
+
+"Looks like a cross-section of Alps," said Tom critically. "Are you
+going to be the Blue Alsatian Mountains?"
+
+"There are two classes of people who should never see a thing
+half-done," answered his sister, standing off again to get the effect.
+
+"Thank you," said Tom.
+
+"Doesn't it look like anything else at all?" she asked, abandoning her
+superior attitude, and throwing herself on his mercy.
+
+"Well, something like a fever-chart," said he.
+
+Winona said no more--there didn't seem to be any use. She picked up her
+ball of red tinsel, and began to wind it around and within, and across,
+every point of the "fever-chart," till there was a solid network. It was
+not a bad imitation of a springing fire.
+
+"Now do you see?" she said. "That's a big, red blaze coming out of the
+canoe, and when we've lighted the Greek fire inside it ought to look
+real enough to burn you."
+
+"Not bad," admitted Tom. "But I don't see its connection with a black
+bonnet and forty jack-o'-lanterns."
+
+"You will by-and-bye," said his sister, going on with her work. It went
+very smoothly after that, except that Puppums _would_ jump inside, and
+then looked at her in a wronged way because the canoe did not float off.
+After the tinsel was on nothing remained to do but to wrap the
+end-pieces with black muslin, so they would not show at night, and to
+cover the canoe with the same material. The lanterns did not need to be
+hung till the last moment.
+
+The night of the carnival Camp Karonya, very much excited, sailed down
+the river in all the glory of its fleet, about six. The Indian village
+was a great success as far as looks went. Whether it would be as
+handsome a float as the ones it would have to compete with nobody could
+tell yet. As a canoe takes less time to engineer than a float, and also
+as the boys hadn't come yet, Winona stayed behind a little while. At
+about seven Tom and Billy came up the river in another of the Scouts'
+canoes. Winona, in her witch costume, with her lanterns, was waiting for
+them by the decorated canoe.
+
+Billy was most gorgeous. He had hired a red Mephisto costume, evidently
+from a real costumer--horns, hoofs and all. His full grandeur didn't
+show till he sprang out on the grass, because he had modestly shrouded
+himself in a raincoat, and his mask was in its pocket. But he snapped
+the mask on, tossed the coat off, and struck an attitude, before he
+helped Tom to lay the canoe in the water.
+
+"You certainly are grand and gorgeous, Billy," said Winona. "All you
+need is a spotlight running round after you to look just like the man in
+the opera."
+
+"I feel like a freak," admitted Billy. "Got everything, Winona? We'd
+better be starting."
+
+Winona veiled her own splendors with an evening wrap of Mrs. Bryan's
+which had, fortunately, been brought along, and stepped in. Tom trailed
+behind.
+
+"I believe I'm frightened," said Winona. "What about you, Billy?"
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of," he said. "We can't very well upset,
+tied to a string of other craft, and maybe we'll get a fourth prize--if
+they only have four entries in the canoe class."
+
+"We'll get one anyway!" declared Winona proudly, throwing her head back
+and forgetting to be nervous.
+
+They were early at the dock. The Camp float was moored quite a little
+way from the place where they had to be, but they could see each other,
+and called across. After that Winona did not feel so lonely. The boys
+helped her to light and tie on the lanterns, all so realistically like
+skulls, and when she saw how very ghostly they looked she felt that she
+hadn't lived in vain.
+
+"Have you the skeleton, Billy?" she demanded anxiously of Mephisto, who
+was wrestling with a bundle in the back canoe.
+
+"Here it is," he said, finally producing it. "I had rather a time
+getting old Hiraoka to rent it, but an auctioneer will do anything for
+enough yen."
+
+As he spoke he unwrapped a neat, papier-mache skeleton of nearly
+life-size, which was of Japanese origin, and which, as he said, he had
+rented from the Japanese store of Mr. Tashima Hiraoka for this night
+only.
+
+"Billy!" said Winona remorsefully, "how much did you pay for Mr. Bones?"
+
+"No time to worry about that now," said Billy. "Where do you want him
+put?"
+
+Winona saw that he was right, and put off insisting on paying for the
+skeleton till time should be less precious than now. They swung it above
+the tinsel flames, on wire loops prepared for it, so that it turned
+gently, as if roasting. Tom looked on in respectful admiration.
+
+"Here's the last thing," said Billy, producing the mysterious bundle
+that had excited Louise so the day they were shopping for decorations.
+
+"Those are Billy's idea," said Winona, pulling the objects out as she
+spoke. "They just put the finishing touch on, don't they, Tom?"
+
+"I should say they did!" said Tom appreciatively. They were twenty small
+red demons rather like Billy, and the same number of tiny skeletons, all
+with waggle-some hands and feet.
+
+"Blessed forever be Japanese stores!" said Winona. "Just hang them
+around carelessly, boys, as if they were hovering over the fire, you
+know. Billy, do you think you can make the demons look pleased and the
+skeletons unhappy?"
+
+"You never know what you can do till you try," said Billy with his usual
+poise. He pulled some wire out of the back canoe, which, like the
+Mother's Bag in the Swiss Family Robinson, seemed to have everything in
+the world in it. The boys set to work with such a will that the last
+demon was wriggling naturally as life, and there was ten minutes yet to
+spare, when they were done.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
+
+
+Billy helped Winona in, felt for the matches, and got in himself. Tom
+pushed them off from shore. It was all done with the solemnity of a
+funeral procession. Winona looked at the boys' excited faces, and
+laughed.
+
+"We're not being rowed off to execution," she explained, though she felt
+a little excited herself. "I'm perfectly calm--O-oh! Gracious! What's
+that?"
+
+"That" was a long, unearthly wail which seemed to come from the inside
+of the canoe itself. It increased and quavered and howled and died down
+again.
+
+"Oh, that's us," said Billy placidly. "Tom and I borrowed Boots Morris's
+father's Gabriel horn and fastened it into the canoe this afternoon.
+Forgot to tell you. Don't you like it?"
+
+"Lovely!" gasped Winona. "Only--only it was a little sudden, the first
+time. I thought Mr. Bones was expressing his feelings."
+
+"It adds to the effect all right," said Billy proudly.
+
+"It certainly does!" said Winona. "Yes, we have a tow-rope, marshal. Tie
+us on, please."
+
+"Well, you do look like you came from somewhere else!" said the
+marshal--he was the dock owner by day--as he fastened the "Ship o' the
+Fiend" into line. "I don't want anything more like D. T.'s than you be!"
+
+"That's what I call a delicate compliment," said Billy, lifting his mask
+so he could grin with freedom.
+
+"M' yes, I suppose so," said Winona doubtfully. "Are we going to start
+soon, marshal?"
+
+"In about ten minutes," said the marshal, seeming to be still entranced
+with the canoe and its decorations. "They burnt one o' my
+great-grandmothers, a couple o' hundred years ago, for doin' not much
+worse'n you be," he added.
+
+"We ought to get something, then," said Winona, thinking more of a
+possible prize than of the marshal's family history.
+
+"You sure ought!" he said darkly, handing them a number and passing on
+to the next boat.
+
+The ten minutes seemed very long and tedious, but between eating some
+sandwiches which Winona had thoughtfully provided, exchanging
+compliments with the neighboring boats, and getting their Greek fire
+ready to set off, they passed somehow. The whistle blew, and the long
+trail of boats, canoes, and floats started on its slow and winding way.
+The float was tied far off, at the beginning of the procession, where
+they could not see it. Marie's canoe was just in sight, but not near
+enough to talk to--a big silver cobweb spotted with lantern-flies, and
+Marie and Edith dressed as the Spider and the Fly, at either end of it.
+
+Finally the whistle blew. Billy tucked a final piece of sandwich beneath
+his mask, and resigned himself to tending the Greek fire for the rest of
+the evening. As for Winona, finding nothing particular to do, she pulled
+a book out from under a cushion and began to read.
+
+"Winona, would you kindly lay away that piece of literatuah and wo'k the
+Gabriel ho'n?" asked Billy in the softest and Kentuckiest of voices.
+Winona had observed that when Billy's Southern accent reasserted itself
+he was generally in deadly earnest. She meekly put the book away and
+began to press the bulb of the horn at regular intervals.
+
+"Oh, I do wish we could see us, and be us, too!" she said in one of the
+intervals.
+
+"M'm! Don't I?" said Billy. "I don't know, though. Maybe we'd be
+disappointed."
+
+"I know we wouldn't," said Winona confidently, and pressed the horn
+again, which put a stop to conversation.
+
+Meanwhile Tom, on the grandstand, was seeing them, and being very proud
+of his relationship to the "Ship o' the Fiend." The black-covered canoe,
+with its belt of shivering fire and its weird occupants, showed up
+gloriously. The irregularly hung lanterns looked more like skulls than
+Winona had dared to hope in her wildest moments. All the little demons
+and skeletons danced realistically on their invisible wires in the air,
+and, crown of all, the nearly-life-size skeleton swung above, with the
+witch and the demon watching him from either end, as he roasted above
+the Greek fire. An occasional shriek from the Gabriel horn gave the
+final touch. The whole thing was like a vision out of a Poe story, or
+some German goblin-legend. The people took to clapping as they went by.
+
+"I believe they're clapping for us!" said Winona awedly, as a burst of
+it came to their ears over the water.
+
+"Sure they are," said Billy. "Shows their good sense, too. It's a mighty
+good looking canoe we have."
+
+"Can we photograph you, please?" said a polite voice before Winona could
+answer--and lo, the reporter's boat!
+
+"This _is_ glory!" said Winona, snapping down her mask, and being
+frankly delighted. "Just think, Billy, we may be in the paper!"
+
+The reporter asked questions and fussed with his flashlight apparatus,
+and finally took two exposures. They kept very still while the
+flashlight was exploding, and answered the reporters in full.
+
+"The designer of your decorations certainly was very clever, and had a
+vivid imagination," ended the smallest reporter as the press-boat went
+on its way.
+
+Winona sat up straight, and looked very proud.
+
+"At last I'm appreciated!" she said. "Don't you wish you had a vivid
+imagination, too, Billy?"
+
+"If you straighten up much more," said Billy, leaning over to light
+fresh Greek fire, "you will certainly hit the decorations, and something
+will bust."
+
+"I don't care!" and Winona laughed excitedly. "It's my first chance at
+being famous, and you can't think how nice it is! Listen to that!"
+
+The applause along the banks was certainly continuous enough to make
+someone older and staider than Winona happy. The canoes were making the
+circuit of the upper part of the lake now. In the centre was the royal
+float, where the king and queen of the carnival sat.
+
+When the procession had gone down one side of the lake and up the other
+it would make a circle about this royal float, and the prizes would be
+awarded.
+
+They were almost through with this, only a little way from the royal
+float, when a small green canoe full of sightseers whirled against them,
+sent by some sudden twist of wind or water. And--neither Winona nor
+Billy could ever understand how it happened--the shock of the blow, or
+perhaps some mischievous person in the other boat, parted the ropes that
+held Winona's canoe lightly to the canoes before and behind it, and sent
+them far to one side of the lake, out of the radius of the lights. The
+wind, naturally, took this particular time to blow hard. The decorations
+made the canoe top-heavy and hard to guide, and they dared not paddle
+fast for fear of upsetting. They could see from their outer darkness the
+canoes they had been between being hastily tied together.
+
+Winona paddled frantically. "Do you think we can get back in time to be
+judged?" she panted.
+
+"We'll try," said Billy, working his paddle more slowly, but with
+greater effect than Winona's.
+
+"No--oh, Billy, Billy! There goes the signal--they've given the launch
+prize, and they are to give the float and rowboat prizes right
+afterwards, and then the canoes! There goes the gun again. Oh, _dear!_"
+
+Winona had really been working harder than she should have over her
+canoe decorations, and helping with the float besides, as well as doing
+her routine camp-work. She had been "all keyed up" by the evening's
+excitement, and her hopes of a prize, and this sudden downfall of her
+hopes was too much for her self-control. Billy saw two large tears roll
+down her cheeks from under her mask.
+
+"Poor Winnie! It certainly is a shame!" he said.
+
+"I suppose that horrid little gunboat canoe named 'Flossie' will get our
+prize," mourned Winona, casting fortitude to the wind--which must have
+carried it quite a way, for it was blowing more and more strongly. "I
+know we'd have had one of the fourth prizes, too!"
+
+"You have the glory, anyway," he said. "Everybody applauded us more than
+they did anything else except that big Queen Elizabeth float."
+
+"But I wanted the money, and I wanted to have the Camp Fire have a
+prize! There, Billy, I won't be a coward any more. I'm tired, I think,
+or I wouldn't have acted like this kind of an idiot," she said bravely,
+pushing up her mask to dry her eyes, and trying to smile.
+
+"You've worn yourself out over this decoration business, that's what the
+matter is," said Billy. "Do you mind telling me what you want the money
+for?"
+
+"No, certainly not. I wanted to get a pair of silk stockings apiece for
+Adelaide and me. I know she wants a pair dreadfully, because she never
+had them, and if I got a pair like them for myself she'd be more apt to
+take them--and--well, I wanted a pair, too!"
+
+Billy registered an inward vow that his Aunt Lydia should manage it just
+as soon as it was humanly possible. He knew that she would do more than
+that for Winona, for whom she had conceived a strong liking.
+
+"Poor kid, she's all worked up about it," he murmured, forgetting his
+own disappointment, for he, too, had hoped that his canoe would get a
+prize.
+
+But help was in sight. About five minutes later (though Winona and Billy
+always swore it was a full half hour) they felt a violent rocking, and
+heard the insistent wuff-wuff-wuff of a steam launch.
+
+"Here, catch a-hold and tie yourself on," said the welcome voice of the
+marshal out of the darkness, without the least waste of words or time.
+
+As soon as Billy's excited fingers could do it they were fastened to the
+end of the marshal's official launch, and bobbing off towards the royal
+float at a tremendous rate of speed.
+
+"How did you come to come hunt for us?" Winona called to the marshal as
+they went.
+
+"You were knocked out o' line an' got blowed away, didn't you?" answered
+the marshal.
+
+"Then we're going to be judged--we're going to be judged!" she rejoiced.
+"Oh, do you think we may get a prize yet?"
+
+"Shouldn't wonder but you got something," said the laconic marshal.
+"Here we be."
+
+He bent over and unfastened them.
+
+"You're late, you see," he said, "and you'll just have to paddle out an'
+get your sentence alone."
+
+Winona's heart beat frantically, but she straightened up in the canoe,
+and she and Billy, standing up at front and back (it was risky work with
+the top-heavy decorations, but they never thought of that till
+afterwards), paddled out into the open space before the royal float. All
+the other entries had been judged. Over in the place where the
+prize-winners were Winona had time to see that the Camp Fire float and
+Marie's canoe were herded with the others. So even if she got nothing
+the glory of Camp Karonya was safe. It was trying to wait there alone,
+with everyone staring, but it did not last long. The red-and-gold herald
+came forward very soon.
+
+"First prize, canoe class!" he said--and Winona almost lost her balance.
+"Awarded to Miss Winona Merriam of Camp Karonya, and Mr. William Lee, of
+Boy Scouts' Patrol Number Six, for their entry 'The Ship of the Fiend.'
+Twenty-five dollars."
+
+The clapping burst out again. When it was done Winona and Billy started
+to paddle back to the prize-winners' enclosure, but a gesture of the
+herald stopped them. They paused, a little puzzled.
+
+"Do they want us to say thank you?" wondered Winona.
+
+Before Billy could turn the canoe the left-hand red-and-gold herald
+walked forth.
+
+"Silver loving cup for greatest originality of conception also goes to
+Miss Merriam and Mr. Lee," read the herald.
+
+They were clapped again--they could see Tom, on the grandstand, standing
+up and waving his hat--and then at last the marshal beckoned them to
+cross to the sparkling ring of other craft in the background. The
+winning launches, floats, rowboats and canoes were to act as a guard of
+honor to escort the royal float back to the grandstand, where the court
+carriages for the king and queen of the carnival waited.
+
+They went to this place at last, and paused by their friends, the Camp
+Fire float and Marie's canoe.
+
+"We got a fourth prize!" called Marie gayly as Winona stopped by her.
+"Oh, Winona, you darling! You always were a mascot!"
+
+"Marie always was an angel," thought Winona to herself. Edith was not so
+selfless.
+
+"Congratulations, Win," she said bravely, holding out a tinsel-wrapped
+wrist across the canoes. "I'm glad you got it--but I wish we could have
+had something better. I think we deserved it."
+
+"You certainly did," said Winona warmly. "But it doesn't much matter,
+you know, Edith. The main thing people will notice is that Camp Karonya
+landed three prizes. And think of that loving-cup sitting up, with 'Won
+by Camp Karonya,' on it!"
+
+"Aren't you going to have your name put on it?" asked Edith.
+
+"Certainly not!" said Winona. "It's a Camp trophy. I shall put my name
+on the back of the check for twenty-five dollars. That is pleasure
+enough."
+
+"I think we've 'done noble,' all of us," said Marie. The canoes were
+paddling off by now, but the going was slow, and they could still talk.
+
+"What did the float get?" asked Winona. "You know we were blown off in
+the dark, and lost track of events till the marshal came after us."
+
+"Second," answered both girls together.
+
+"You were the belle of the ball," added Marie.
+
+"Well, I don't think we did so badly," declared Edith. "A first, second
+and a fourth prize all to one camp. I hope nobody thinks we got more
+than our share."
+
+"We didn't," said Winona. "Oh, I'm so happy!"
+
+"I'm rather pleased myself," said Billy's quiet voice from the other end
+of the canoe.
+
+But it was not until the royal float had been escorted home, and
+everything was broken up, and Tom and Billy were paddling Winona back to
+camp, that he said what he really thought.
+
+"I'm mighty glad you got that first prize," he said. "You deserved it if
+anybody ever did, for being such a little sport about dropping out of
+the float. I'd blow a lot of that money in right away if I were you, to
+congratulate myself."
+
+"After I've paid back what I owe certain people," said Winona, "I shall
+divide with the Camp treasury. Even then I'll have a lot more than I
+ever thought of getting."
+
+"Anyway, you were a real sport, and you deserved everything that was
+coming to you," repeated Billy, in which Tom agreed with him. And when
+your brother approves of you and says so you can generally be sure that
+you have done something remarkably right.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINETEEN
+
+
+Next day was the "cold gray dawn of the morning after." Not that it was
+particularly cold or gray, but there was all the unnailing of the float
+to do, and the dismantling of the two decorated canoes. The girls wound
+the tinsel off carefully for use on future Christmas trees, and packed
+away in a box what other decorations were not perishable, for you never
+know when you're going to need things. Otherwise they sat around and
+gloated softly over Camp Karonya's exceeding brilliancy in carrying off
+prizes in large quantities.
+
+Mrs. Bryan would not let Winona divide her money with the Camp, because
+they had enough already to see them through the rest of the time they
+were to spend there; and then, too, the second prize that the float had
+won was fifteen dollars.
+
+Nothing else memorable happened that day, except that Nataly Lee left
+for home. She was thinner and in better condition than she had been when
+she came, but she frankly didn't like the life. To her, carrying water,
+instead of being a lark, was a nuisance. She had no particular pride in
+working for beads, and it was thought she was hungry for paper novels.
+It worried her, too, that she was getting burned brown. So she went back
+to her mother. The girls saw her off, and sang her a cheer, and were as
+good as they could be. But it is not to be denied that Camp Karonya felt
+a little relief at her going.
+
+After that nothing happened but regular camp work for three days. And
+then Louise proceeded to distinguish herself. It was to be expected.
+
+Tom and Billy had taken Winona and Louise off for a day's fishing in the
+canoe. As usual, Winona and Louise provided the lunch, the boys the
+fishing-tackle and the canoe, and the fish were to be divided at the end
+of the day. They had fished most of the lazy, sunny morning, and it was
+noon. They climbed out of the canoe by a spring, washed their hands, and
+set out the lunch; the canoe was too fishy to be used as a dining-hall.
+
+"Do you think that four of us can possibly eat all that?" inquired
+Billy, eying the piles of sandwiches, the veal loaf, the whole cake and
+the can of pears which graced the paper napkins on the grass.
+
+"Well," explained Winona, "the truth is, Louise and I rather doubled up
+on this lunch. We were both afraid there wouldn't be enough, and each
+went separately and brought half a chocolate cake. You see it's cut down
+the middle. I merely joined the twin halves for the sake of looks. But
+do you think that's too many sandwiches for four people with real
+appetites?"
+
+"I don't," said Tom decidedly. "I'll attend to anything that's left
+over. A very nice amount of lunch--just right. Watch me!"
+
+But they did not watch him because they were otherwise engaged. None of
+them had small appetites, and they all did good work. Just the same when
+they were through there were a generous piece of cake, a fat slice of
+veal loaf, and seven sandwiches left.
+
+"I told you so," said Billy. "Here, Tommy, it is up to you. Have these
+seven nice sandwiches."
+
+"Can't be done," said Tom regretfully. "I've had that many. I had three
+pieces of cake, too."
+
+"Doesn't matter!" said Billy. "A gentleman's word of honor----"
+
+He prepared to jump on Tom and hold him, while Louise held a sandwich
+ready to insert.
+
+"Ow!" said Tom. "Help! This is cruelty to animals. Pry him off, Winnie!"
+
+"Oh, let up, please!" said Winona. "You know, he might explode, and
+mother'd feel badly."
+
+Billy took one knee off, and Tom wriggled more vigorously. Louise
+relented, and the two girls were trying to pull Billy off Tom. They had
+almost succeeded, when a little rustle behind them made Winona, whose
+senses were the most alert, let go and turn. The others followed her
+eyes. They sat up and looked, and Tom jumped to his feet and began to
+dust himself off.
+
+The newcomer, who was a most forlorn and bedraggled little girl, spoke
+very welcome words.
+
+"Me's very hundry!" she said pathetically.
+
+"You poor little thing!" said Louise. "Come here, dear; there's lots for
+you to eat." The little girl made straight for her. Louise got out a
+fresh paper napkin, and piled sandwiches, loaf, cake and all on it.
+
+"Wait a minute," said Billy. "Is all that good for so little a
+girl--hadn't you better give her one at a time?"
+
+Louise held the veal loaf poised in air on her fork. "Will your mother
+let you eat this?" she asked.
+
+[Illustration: THE CHILD BEGAN TO EAT EVERYTHING AT ONCE]
+
+The bedraggled small child sat down on the grass, as if the words were
+an invitation. She was a pretty, dirty child of perhaps five, dressed
+only in a soiled and ragged underwaist and petticoat, and with a mane of
+very long and heavy hair, all tangles and elf-locks. Her hair was yellow
+and her eyes big and blue, and she would have been pretty had she been
+cared-for looking.
+
+"Ain't got any mother," she said, "just Vicky. She lets me."
+
+"Poor little thing!" said Louise again, and handed her the veal loaf.
+The child began to eat everything at once, with an eagerness which made
+it certain she had told the truth, at least, about being hungry.
+
+"What's your name, kiddie? You'll tell me, won't you?" asked Billy, when
+she seemed to have taken the edge off her appetite. He bent down to her
+with a sympathetic expression which he possessed at times, and which--or
+something about him--won the hearts of most small children he had
+dealings with.
+
+"Sandy," she said through large mouthfuls.
+
+"Sandy what?" inquired Louise.
+
+"Sandy Mitchell. Gimme more cake?"
+
+As she had had two large slices, it was thought best not to give her any
+more.
+
+"Mercy, no!" said Winona, as Louise was cutting it, in spite of
+prudence. "Not another bit. We don't want her to die on our hands. You'd
+better come over here by the spring, dear, and let me wash your hands."
+
+Sandy got up immediately, with the placid remark, "It might-a given me a
+pain, anyway," and allowed her hands to be washed, and dried on a fresh
+paper napkin.
+
+"Poor little cowed thing!" exclaimed Louise at this instant obedience.
+"Sandy, dear, won't your people be worried about you?"
+
+"Nope," said Sandy.
+
+"And where do you live?"
+
+"Way, way off," she said. "We just comed. I'll show you to-morrow."
+
+"Poor little dear thing!" said Louise. "How pretty she is! Winnie, I've
+a good mind to adopt her."
+
+"Having only five at home," murmured Tom.
+
+"From the way she talks her people wouldn't care," said Louise. "Maybe
+Camp Karonya could take care of her. We will till we go back, anyway."
+
+"She must belong to one of those poor families along the west branch,"
+said Tom. "Three miles away, and we can't possibly get there by
+canoeing, because we'd have to paddle back seven miles before we could
+paddle over the three. Who's going to walk three miles and a half by the
+thermometer to take the lady home? Don't all speak at once."
+
+"Do you live up there?" Louise asked her. "And does your father drink?"
+
+"Yep," said Sandy. "Favver? Course he dwinks. Evvybody dwinks."
+
+"Think of being brought up to think things like that," said Louise.
+
+"Don't you think," suggested Winona, "that we'd better take her back to
+camp? I don't know the way to the place Tom talks about, and maybe it
+would be best for Mrs. Bryan to take her anyway, if they do drink."
+
+"Good idea," said everybody. Sandy herself seemed pleased, and attached
+herself to them as readily as a stray puppy would have done. They
+cleared up leisurely, then got back into the canoe, taking the child in,
+too. It was rather a close fit, though it was an eighteen-foot canoe,
+but they managed it. She was no more trouble than Puppums would have
+been--Puppums, fortunately, had been left with Florence. They had a good
+day with the fishing, and trailed into Camp Karonya at six with fish for
+breakfast; and Sandy.
+
+"Good luck!" were Tom's parting words. "We'll come to-morrow and help
+you take her back, if you like."
+
+"You needn't bother," said his sister. "We'll take the faithful
+rowboat."
+
+"We aren't going to take her back!" insisted Louise. "I'm going to adopt
+her. Sandy, wouldn't you like to live with me? _I'd_ dress you in nice
+clothes and give you a dolly."
+
+"An' five cents?" demanded Sandy, "An' things to eat?"
+
+"Oh, the poor baby!" said Louise. "She's had to think about money and
+food and grown-up things like the poor little children you read about in
+the pamphlets. Yes, indeed, you shall, Sandy."
+
+"She looks well-fed," said Tom. "Well, good luck. Don't get a reputation
+for collecting them--you mayn't be able to dispose of orphans as easily
+as you can kittens."
+
+They parted, and Louise carried Sandy into camp. They arrived as supper
+was about ready. The Blue Birds carried the fish off to the ice-box (it
+was literally a box, a very ingenious arrangement of sawdust and wood
+which had meant a bead for Elizabeth) and the rest clustered about
+Louise's treasure-trove.
+
+"Better find out if she really needs adopting," advised Marie as they
+sat around the long table, and Sandy exercised an appetite as large as
+her noon one.
+
+"With a drunken father, and no mother, and looking like that?" fired up
+Louise. "I'm going to wash her after supper."
+
+There seemed no connection between washing her and adopting her, but
+there evidently was to Louise.
+
+"Want me to help?" offered Winona. "It ought to be more fun than washing
+Puppums."
+
+"I hope she won't howl and try to climb over the side of the tub, the
+way he does," said Louise. "Yes, thank you, I'd love to be helped."
+
+A warm bath in a foot-tub, following directly on a large meal of corn
+fritters, baked potatoes and huckle-berries, ought nearly to have killed
+Sandy, but it didn't.
+
+"I never dreamed you meant to do more than wash her face and hands,"
+protested Marie, who, as the guardian of the Blue Birds, had ideas about
+such things. But it was too late. Anyway, there was no visible effect.
+Sandy awakened next morning, well, happy, and still hungry. They had
+given her Nataly's bunk with Mrs. Bryan. Helen bunked with Elizabeth,
+because Nataly said the girls tossed, and Mrs. Bryan didn't.
+
+While Sandy slept Louise and Winona were busy. Louise woke Winona at
+five, and they heated water, filled the charcoal-iron, and washed and
+ironed and mended Sandy's underclothes. While Louise darned Sandy's
+socks, Winona ironed the garments dry. Then they foraged about the
+store-shed, which was a warm place at that time of year even in the
+early morning, and found a white dress of Florence's which Winona
+thought she had remembered bringing.
+
+When found it proved much too large for Sandy, but Louise was still
+enthusiastic, and took it up with such good will that two of the tucks
+she put in had to be ripped out again when they came to dress Sandy in
+it. They polished the small strapped shoes the child had taken off,
+sewed the button of each on more firmly, and decided that they looked
+almost new.
+
+Then Winona went back to awaken her own little sister. When she returned
+to Louise's tent she found her friend had finished giving Sandy another
+bath. She was just dressing her.
+
+"I don't believe this poor little thing knows what a thorough bath is,"
+she greeted Winona over the child's head.
+
+"Yes, I do, too," said Sandy. "But I had one last night, an' you've been
+an' given me anuvver now!"
+
+"I think I'll box her hair, too," went on Louise. "It is getting rather
+common now, but she has so much, and it's so untidy, that it would
+really be the best thing even if I didn't keep her."
+
+"I wouldn't do her hair till you're sure we're going to keep her,"
+objected Winona. "Her people mightn't like it."
+
+"A dissipated father and a poor little overworked elder sister--Vicky is
+your sister, isn't she, Sandy?--and a home where they don't even wash or
+feed her? Poor people haven't time to take care of hair like this.
+Anyway, they haven't done it, for it was tangled awfully," she finished
+conclusively.
+
+"But it's so pretty!" protested Winona. "Just look at it, nearly to her
+waist, and thick and curly, and such a lovely gold color!"
+
+"So much the worse for her health," said Louise as promptly as
+Red-Riding-Hood's wolf. "Sandy, wouldn't you like your hair cut nice and
+short, so it wouldn't get tangled any more?"
+
+"An' twousers?" demanded Sandy hopefully. "Gee, zat's gweat!"
+
+"I'll have to stop her using slang," said Louise. "No, dear, not exactly
+twousers, but--I could get her some overalls, couldn't I, Win?"
+
+"I suppose so," said Winona.
+
+"Then I will," said Louise.
+
+"You're gweat, too," said Sandy, turning around where she sat on
+Louise's lap, and throwing both little bare arms around her neck and
+kissing her. Louise kissed her back warmly.
+
+"Isn't she a dear?" she said. "Winnie, will you please hand me the
+scissors?"
+
+"No," said Winona, "I won't. It's wicked to spoil pretty hair like
+that." And she walked out of the tent.
+
+"I'll det 'em," said Sandy, slipping down and bringing them to Louise
+from the table at the end of the tent.
+
+"Here's a piece of ribbon to tie it with, if you won't cut it off," said
+Winona, reappearing with a wide length of blue taffeta.
+
+"No, thank you," said Louise, cutting industriously and very neatly. "It
+would just be in her eyes all the time. I'm going to cut it straight
+across her eyebrows, like a little boy's."
+
+"I did it to all my dolls once," said Winona. She sat down, though, and
+watched Louise till she was done.
+
+Louise had washed the little girl's hair when she gave her the second
+bath, and when it was even and short enough to suit her she finished
+dressing the child in her white frock, and set her on the grass outside,
+to dry in the sunshine. She gave her a picture book to look at to keep
+her amused. The bobbed locks, thick and curly, fluffed out charmingly in
+a yellow bush around the sweet little face.
+
+"It's becoming," admitted Winona. "She looks like a cherub, or a
+choir-boy on a Christmas card. There is the signal for breakfast. You
+just got her dry in time."
+
+"Breakfast?" said Sandy, brightening.
+
+"Poor little darling!" said Louise, catching and kissing her. "I don't
+believe she ever had anything to eat before she came here!"
+
+They went to breakfast in state, and Sandy's golden aureole and clean
+white frock made quite a sensation at the table. They piled things up
+for her to sit on, and she was put where Mrs. Bryan could reach her, and
+argue with her easily if she misbehaved. But she acted very well indeed.
+Her table-manners were good, considering, she talked without the least
+shyness, and managed to eat a very large breakfast. Louise beamed with
+pride over the impression her protegee was making.
+
+When breakfast was over, and Sandy turned loose again to play with
+Puppums and Florence, to whom she had taken a violent fancy, Louise
+packed a market-basket with everything a starving family might need.
+Then she found her purse, summoned Winona, and they took the rowboat and
+went forth, Sandy and Puppums in the bottom of it.
+
+They rowed along the west branch, a narrow stream that doubled at right
+angles from the branch the camps were on. It was lined with pretty
+summer cottages for a part of the way, then after that, at the very end,
+came a part that was filled with poor people who had squatted there. But
+long before they came to the poorest part Sandy desired to land.
+
+"Here we is!" she said cheerfully, at a prosperous-looking dock about a
+third of the way up.
+
+"Not here, dearie," said Louise. "It's probably some place where the
+poor child's been fed," she added aside to Winona.
+
+"We may as well get out, though, mayn't we?" suggested Winona. "Maybe
+they can tell us where she comes from."
+
+They tied the boat and got out, and walked down a deep lane for a while.
+Presently they came to a large white house in the middle of a couple of
+acres of half-yard, half-lawn looking land.
+
+The doors and windows were all wide open, but there was no one to be
+seen. Sandy walked into the hall with an assured tread, took a long
+breath, and called at the top of her lungs, "Vicky! Vick-ee!"
+
+The girls stood at the door and waited, ready to apologize for their
+charge's rudeness whenever somebody might appear. In about five minutes,
+during which Sandy continued to shout, they heard a light, slow step
+along the upper hall. Presently a slim, dark, rather pretty little girl
+of about eleven scuffed down the stairs. She had on a kimono over her
+nightgown, though it was quite late in the morning.
+
+"That you, Sand?" she called as she came. "Goodness, you're up early!"
+
+"This is Vicky," Sandy explained to the girls over her shoulder. "Vicky!
+I've had two baths!"
+
+Louise stood, for once, speechless. She hung mechanically to the handle
+of the basketful of provisions, but she was too surprised to move. It
+was Winona who finally took courage to come forward and explain.
+
+"I'm Winona Merriam," she said, "and this is my friend, Louise Lane. We
+are over at Camp Karonya, the Camp Fire, you know. We found this little
+girl yesterday, and we came over to-day to bring her home. Does
+she--does she belong here?"
+
+"Why, of course she does," said Vicky. "Thank you for bringing her.
+She's always trailing off that way, aren't you, Sand? How long you been
+gone?"
+
+"Is she your sister?" asked Louise, who had her breath by this time.
+
+"M'hm," nodded Vicky. "Why--why, Alexandra Mitchell, where's your hair?"
+
+"It got boxed!" exclaimed Sandy gleefully. "Isn't it nice?"
+
+"I'm afraid we'll have to explain about that," said Winona bravely.
+"Your little sister strayed into a little fishing-trip four of us were
+having yesterday, very hungry and rather dirty, and without all her
+clothes on. And from the way she talked we thought she was--well, we
+washed her and dressed her, and--I'm sorry--shortened her hair, it was
+so tangled. I'm ever so sorry. I think it will grow----"
+
+Vicky stared a minute at Alexandra, very proud of herself, neat, clean,
+dressed and bobbed. Then instead of being angry she sat down on the
+floor, where she was, and burst into a fit of laughter.
+
+"You thought--you thought--oh, my _goodness!_"
+
+"Yes," said Winona. She sat down, too, and finally went off herself.
+"Yes--we _did!_"
+
+"And you brought food for the hungry family----" Vicky's eye fell on the
+large basket which Louise still held stiffly before her. "Oh, oh, oh!
+And Uncle Will's pride, Sandy's hair, that he made a picture of that
+sold for ever so much money--oh, my goodness _gracious!_"
+
+She and Winona both began to laugh again. Louise didn't. She stood
+against the wall like a wax statue.
+
+"It certainly is funny," said Vicky at last, mopping her eyes, "but I'm
+good and glad about Sandy's hair. It was an awful nuisance to take care
+of, and Uncle Will _would_ keep it that way so he could paint pictures
+of it. Won't you stay and have some breakfast? We have a cook."
+
+"No, thank you," said Louise hurriedly, "we've had our breakfast."
+
+"What an awful noise, children!" said a voice; and a rather rumpled man
+appeared. He had an absent look, and also gave an impression of not
+having been to bed all night. He had a paint-brush in his hand.
+
+Vicky and Sandy sprang for him, hanging to him.
+
+"Oh, Uncle Will, this is two Camp Fire girls," said Sandy. "They cutted
+my hair when I was lost. Ain't it cute?"
+
+"_Oh!_" said Uncle Will, and looked as aghast as Louise had. "How did
+this accident happen?"
+
+"It wasn't an accident," said Sandy. "Louise boxed my head, an' gived me
+two baths!"
+
+Uncle Will--so far as the girls learned that was all the name he
+had--uttered another faint exclamation. Then he dived back into his room
+as if he wanted to bear the shock alone.
+
+"I'm so sorry!" said Winona, who found she had all the talking to do.
+"I'm afraid your uncle doesn't like it!"
+
+"Oh, he's only got an artistic temp'rament," said Vicky, as if it were a
+disease uncles could not help. "I think Sandy's goin' to, too. Do stay
+to breakfast. We'll have things out o' your basket if you will."
+
+"No, thank you," said Winona. "I think Louise is in a hurry to go home.
+Come over and see us. It isn't far if you have a boat."
+
+"We'll get somebody to bring us," said Vicky. "I'd come now if I was
+dressed."
+
+"It wouldn't be a bad plan if you dressed a little earlier," said Winona
+frankly. "Are there just you two?"
+
+"Nope," said Vicky, "there's Lancy, too. He's eight. Uncle Will tries to
+bring us up, but he don't know how so very well."
+
+"Well, when you come down to camp we can tell you a lot of things if
+you'd like us to," said Winona.
+
+"Maybe," said Vicky indifferently. "But it's all right this way. You can
+try telling us, though."
+
+"Well, good-bye," said Louise--it was all she had contributed to the
+conversation, but she seemed to contribute it gladly.
+
+So they went, still carrying the basket.
+
+"Wait!" called Sandy's voice behind them when they had gone a little
+way. "I'm goin' back wiv you! You said you'd 'dopted me!"
+
+"But we didn't know your uncle wasn't poor then," said Louise. "We can't
+take you away from him."
+
+"You 'dopted me," said Sandy doggedly, "an' I'm goin' wiv you--so
+there!" And she thrust her wet little hand into Louise's and trotted
+along beside them. "Louise--wasn't there cake in the basket?"
+
+"You have cake at home, dear," said Louise. But she looked as if she
+felt a little better. After all, even if an orphan didn't need adopting,
+it was a pleasure to find that she liked it.
+
+"Like you best," insisted Sandy. "Goin' to stay wiv you. They don't
+care!"
+
+"Oh, let's let her, just for to-day, anyhow!" said Winona. "I don't
+believe anybody'll mind."
+
+"All right," said Louise rather as if she wanted to. They got into the
+boat again, and rowed to camp.
+
+"Sandy," asked Louise, "what did you mean by saying your father drank?
+You haven't any father."
+
+"Well, I did have," said Sandy. "And of sourse he did dwink when there
+was a him. Evvybody does. Little flowers do. My governess said so."
+
+"Your _governess!_" said Louise. "Is your uncle rich enough for you to
+have a governess--and you go trailing round in your underwaist and
+petticoat!"
+
+"When he draws pictures an' sells 'em he is. When he don't he don't.
+Gimme some cake?"
+
+Sandy was evidently quite calm about her way of living.
+
+"She mayn't need adopting, but she certainly needs reforming," said
+Louise vigorously.
+
+They were paddling past the Scouts' camp by now. Louise was quite
+willing to go past softly, but Sandy yelled, for she saw Billy.
+
+"Hello, girls!" he called. "Back already? Got all the papers signed?"
+
+"No, I haven't," said Louise. "And, Billy, if you ask me any more
+questions, I'll jump over and drown!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY
+
+
+The Camp Fire might all grin broadly whenever it spoke of Louise's
+adoption--even more broadly than it had at Winona's cat-collection: but
+the adoptee herself was quite serious about it. Adopted she was by the
+Camp Fire in general and Louise in particular, and adopted she meant to
+stay. She went home once in awhile--there was nobody to worry about her,
+it seemed, when she stayed away--but as a rule she considered herself a
+Camp Fire Girl. She was too young to be a Blue Bird, but that didn't
+make any difference. Finally she was given the official position of
+third sub-mascot, ranking after Puppums and Hike the Camp Cat.
+Unofficially, she got better training than she appeared to have had for
+some time, for she knew that to stay in Camp she had to obey rules.
+Vicky never did come over. Once in awhile they would return Sandy to her
+home, just for politeness, but it didn't seem to be specially required
+of them.
+
+"We ought to have a grand entertainment," declared Marie one day, "and
+invite all the summer people who bought our things."
+
+"Yes," Louise approved, "and then, perhaps, if we made them happy,
+they'd buy some more."
+
+"Well, I was thinking of charging for the entertainment," demurred
+Marie.
+
+"But wouldn't it be piling things up just a wee bit too much?" asked
+Louise.
+
+"Perhaps," admitted Marie.
+
+"What were you thinking of having?" asked Winona.
+
+It was at the end of a weekly Council Fire, and the girls were lying
+about, as usual, on the hill.
+
+"I was wondering"--from Marie a little doubtfully--"if we could have
+some tableaux from Maeterlinck, with readings. I could do the readings."
+
+"What's Maeterlinck?" asked Louise cheerfully. "Something good to eat?"
+
+"No, you goose!" instructed Marie. "He wrote the 'Blue Bird,' and--oh, a
+lot of plays."
+
+"Nice ones?" asked Louise. "Lots of people running around doing exciting
+things?"
+
+"No," admitted Marie. "Nothing much happens. But it's very elevating."
+
+"I don't feel as if I wanted to be elevated, somehow," said Louise
+firmly, "and I'm sure those summer people don't; they come here to relax
+and enjoy themselves, and when they want something really high-brow they
+go to the movies and see bears and lions eating each other. They can do
+that right in the place itself."
+
+"I don't believe they'd come to a Maeterlinck show, either, Marie," so
+said Mrs. Bryan. "We can take him up to read this winter, if the girls
+want to know more about him. But he isn't exactly the author for a
+summer entertainment--especially if we want to make money."
+
+"We do," said Marie who had a strictly practical side to her.
+
+"Does it have to be an author?" Helen wanted to know.
+
+"It seems to," said Louise.
+
+"I have an idea!" exclaimed Winona, sitting up.
+
+"Is it an author?" asked Louise.
+
+"Yes!" said Winona, "it is!"
+
+"Well?" from everybody.
+
+"Samantha Allen!" cried Winona eagerly. "My plan's this. Have somebody
+dress like Samantha--you know the pictures--and tell all about herself
+to begin with. Then we could make a big, wooden frame--we have those
+boards left from the float--and Samantha could turn over the leaves of
+the album, and describe the characters in her books one by one, as they
+were shown in the frame. We could call it 'Samantha's Picter-Album,' or
+something like that."
+
+"I saw an entertainment that was something of that sort once," said
+Adelaide. "But it was just a frame with old-fashioned pictures, like
+daguerrotypes. There wasn't any Samantha, or any talking. I should think
+this would be lots better. But would it last a whole evening, and make
+the Wampoag people think they'd had their money's worth?"
+
+"I think so," said Louise. "And anyway, if it wasn't so very long we
+could amuse the visitors by showing them over the camp, and telling them
+all about our customs and habits. Maybe we could do a folk-dance for
+them afterwards."
+
+"Oh, yes, of course we could!" said Edith, whose specialty it was. "We
+could give them an Indian dance as easy as anything, and that Russian
+one I learned before I came. I can teach it to eight of us."
+
+"I know how to dance the minuet," suggested Helen. "How many had it in
+that Washington's Birthday thing Miss Green's class had last year?"
+
+Five had, it seemed. As a minuet only needs ten performers it was very
+simple to polish that up. And all of them knew Indian dances already. So
+a committee was appointed to get up the costumes. The Indian dresses
+were there already. For the Russian dance Edith thought head-dresses of
+paper muslin would do and aprons of colored scrim, over white skirts and
+turned-under, slipped-under-the-skirt middy blouses. For the
+minuet--well, there was cheese-cloth in red and yellow that Marie had
+had on her canoe; everyone could powder her hair and contrive a
+'kerchief. The pannier draperies could be pinned into place, and broad
+bodices of Winona's black paper muslin from the canoe-trimming could be
+cut and pinned into place with very little trouble. Helen and Edith and
+Adelaide were told off to see about the costuming; Edith, as she had to
+train the others in dancing, had nothing but supervision to do. Helen
+and Adelaide did what little actual work was needed.
+
+"The main thing this entertainment needs seems to be pins," said Helen
+the third day after they had decided to have it. It was a Thursday, and
+they planned the affair for the next Monday night. "We're nearly out of
+them."
+
+So eight papers of pins were bought, not to speak of a good deal of
+white paper muslin. The girls were assigned their different characters
+in the Album, and each left to her own cleverness in getting up the
+costume. About midway in the preparations it suddenly dawned on the
+girls, who had gotten all the Samantha books from the Wampoag library,
+and had their families send them on the ones they owned, that boys were
+needed.
+
+So a committee consisting of all the sisters was sent up the lake to
+borrow Boy Scouts. It wasn't the easiest thing in the world, for boys
+seem to dislike "dressing up" as much as girls like it; but Mr. Gedney
+was Camp Karonya's friend, and they went back with all the boys they
+needed promised them--if they would look after the costumes and not
+expect the Scouts to rehearse.
+
+Louise was appointed a Committee of Tickets, with Elizabeth to help her.
+Louise was a born ticket-seller. She loved it. She and Elizabeth put in
+most of their waking hours exchanging bits of ecru cardboard with small
+red things on them (meant for Camp Fires) for thirty-five cents. And
+they did very well. They got permission of all the drug-stores and many
+other stores, to put up posters, which were camp-made, also, of course.
+So by the time the fateful night arrived quite a goodly crowd was
+ferried over to Camp Karonya by the Scouts' canoes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At eight precisely the audience, accommodated on long planks which
+reached from box to box, saw a curtain pulled away from between two
+trees. Nothing was to be seen in its place but a plump red album
+standing out against a background which represented every sheet in the
+camp. They had used Marie's red cheese-cloth after all, instead of
+Winona's black paper muslin. As for the framework, that was a work of
+art for which several of the girls were responsible. It had taken all
+the manual training they knew, and a little bit more--they had had to
+call Tom Merriam, whose hobby was carpentry, before they got it all
+right--but the general effect was gorgeous. The audience was given a
+fair amount of time to appreciate the beauty of the album, which was
+about eight feet high. Then Marie stepped out. She had been elected to
+the very responsible part of Samantha because her memory was good,
+rather than because she looked it. But she had done excellently with
+what means she had. Two small pillows for a foundation, a pink wrapper
+with large black spots, sent on from home, an elderly bonnet borrowed
+from a friendly farmer's wife, a substantial gingham apron, spectacles,
+a Paisley shawl, and a large palm-leaf fan, completed a get-up that
+would have disguised Marie Hunter effectually from her own best friend.
+
+When she thought she had waited long enough to give the audience a
+chance to appreciate her she curtsied, and reaching over, pulled at the
+album cover with the crock of a green-handled umbrella. The inside page
+of the album was imitated by a frame with white muslin tightly stretched
+over it, and an oval hole in the middle for the picture. In the hole
+just now was a meek, chin-whiskered face surrounded by a high
+collar--Mr. Gedney, normally. Samantha pointed to this proudly.
+
+"Brethren and sisteren," began Samantha, after she had introduced
+herself, "this here is my lawful, though sometimes wayward, pardner
+Josiah Allen. I was married to him in a brand-new green silk gown, made
+pollynay, and Mother Jones's parlor, come twenty year ago. Our mutual
+affection has been a beakin ever since, though I can't deny it has
+sputtered some once in awhile, and burned purty low, tryin' times like
+house-cleanin' an' wash-days."
+
+She went on with the famous tale of "How the Bamberses borrowed Josiah,"
+cutting it short when she heard the tiny bell behind the scene tinkle,
+as a signal that another picture was ready. Then she jerked the cover to
+with her umbrella-handle, and operated it again. This time the inside
+leaf had been fastened back with the lid, for this was a full-sized
+picture. The audience, by this time, was laughing at nearly everything
+she said, for Marie was a capital mimic, and she had picked out and
+strung together all the funniest things she could find in the Samantha
+Allen books.
+
+"This here," announced Samantha, "is my step-children, Thomas Jefferson
+and Tirzah Ann. They ain't bad children, if I do say it as shouldn't,
+and I have brung 'em up like they wuz my own."
+
+Winona was Tirzah. She sat stiffly in a high-backed chair (the back was
+pasteboard, covered with black muslin, cut in a Chippendale sort of way)
+and she wore a full, flowered gown, with her hair looped over her ears
+and fastened in the back to a "chignon" with two fat curls hanging from
+it. They had put Tom with her, with a view to mutual support. He, too,
+had a preposterous collar (collars may be made by the dozen if you have
+scissors and patience, and the Camp Fire Girls had both) and a flowered
+vest. His baggy clothes and a tall hat at his feet completed a picture
+that was so much like the ones you do see in old albums that the
+audience began to clap before Marie was through her introduction.
+
+"Woof!" said Tom when he got out of the frame. "Never again for me!" He
+turned to grin at Billy, who had still to go on. Billy was supposed to
+be 'Submit Tewksbury's beau, a dashin' city feller,' and he was trying
+to get an appropriate amount of dash into his mustaches.
+
+"Every time I go up against Camp Karonya," responded Billy sadly, "I
+have to do something that needs a lot of stiffening. I had to work two
+hours over that fiend tail of mine, and these whiskers are just as bad."
+
+"It'll be worse when you have real ones," remarked Louise consolingly.
+She was acting as putter-on-of-finishing-touches. There was a
+dressing-tent apiece for the girls and boys, and Billy was on the
+outside of his, trying to arrange the mustache to his liking by means of
+a small mirror pinned to the canvas.
+
+"At least I won't have to worry about their sticking on," was his reply.
+
+"There," said Louise, "they'll do now."
+
+"Billy and Adelaide wanted!" called Edith.
+
+Adelaide, on account of a mournful expression that still appeared at
+times, had been selected for "Submit Tewksbury," who had a broken heart
+and was good to one relative after another for thirty years or more. She
+had been told to look as sad as she possibly could, and she was posed
+with a medicine bottle and spoon, with which she had just--so Samantha
+explained--been nursing her relatives. Billy, behind her, looked very
+cheerful and debonair with his jaunty mustache and a very gaudy shirt
+which--so he said afterwards--he had bought especially for the occasion,
+for thirty-nine cents marked down from fifty. It had a large, spotty
+pattern on it, and it looked _very_ festive.
+
+The tableaux went smoothly on. Marie remembered all her lines, the
+audience appeared to enjoy it all very much, when suddenly in the midst
+of a speech she remembered something, and halted, secretly referring to
+the list of pictures which was pinned inside her palm-leaf fan. Widder
+Doodle, Submit Tewksbury, Elder Minkley, Maggie Snow--yes, they were
+four past Betsy Bobbet, the crowning glory of the evening, and no Betsy
+Bobbet had there been! Marie pulled herself together and thought a
+minute, talking on meanwhile.
+
+"Brethren and sisteren," she said, "I hope you'll excuse me for a
+minute. My wind's a gittin' low, and my new congress gaiters pinch me
+some. I'm goin' to ask you to wait a bit, till I fetch me a drink of
+water."
+
+The audience laughed, and clapped, as it had been doing most of the
+evening, and Samantha scuttled distractedly behind the scenes, where she
+clutched the nearest person to her. It happened to be Mrs. Bryan, who
+was making up one of the boys under a light.
+
+"Where's Betsy Bobbet--I mean Lilian Green?" she asked hurriedly. "It's
+way past her turn, and she's never been in at all."
+
+"Oh, my dear, didn't anyone tell you?" said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"They couldn't," said Marie. "I've been out front all this time."
+
+"I'm awfully sorry," said Mrs. Bryan. "Can't you do without her? She
+slipped and tore her costume so badly that it wasn't fit to appear in.
+She could pose, of course, but the tears would show."
+
+"I went right down over a tent-pole," explained Lilian, appearing to
+speak for herself. She was indeed badly torn, not to speak of the fact
+that she was limping a little. Her bonnet and veil--a green
+mosquito-netting veil--were wrecked--and she had managed to muddy
+herself thoroughly, too.
+
+"You certainly made a thorough job of it!" exclaimed Marie. "But oh,
+Mrs. Bryan, what shall I do? I've been talking about her all the
+evening--leading up to her. She's the keystone of the whole
+performance."
+
+"It would be a case of Hamlet with Hamlet left out without her, then,
+would it?" queried Mrs. Bryan. "My dear, I don't know what to say. If
+Lilian were damaged somebody else could supply her place, but we haven't
+any understudy for Lilian's clothes!"
+
+"There's only one thing to do," offered Winona, coming over from a group
+of girls. "Have her go on anyway, Marie, and make up something to
+explain why she looks so funny. Explain why she's so torn and
+crumpled--make a joke of it, so they'll think it was all on purpose."
+
+"Winnie, you're the pride of my life!" vowed Marie. "I'll have to do
+just that. It will be hard," she added doubtfully.
+
+"Oh, no, it won't," and Winona laughed reassuringly, "you're the
+cleverest one of us, and if you can't make up some reason why Betsy
+Bobbet looks mussed, nobody can. Now go on out and do it."
+
+She gave her a little push.
+
+"Ray-of-Light, you're a dear!" Marie said affectionately as she turned
+and went out. "Put Lilian in the frame just as she is, please," she
+said. "I think I can manage it."
+
+Lilian laughed a little at the idea of displaying herself to two hundred
+summer people looking as if she had come out of a subway accident, but
+she got into position like the good-natured girl she was, and Marie
+heard the little bell and began to make her impromptu explanation.
+
+"My friend, Betsy Bobbet, she's a considerable kind of a curis person,"
+she said. "She's sorter sentimental, an' sometimes she's too impulsive.
+Now, just before she had this daguerrotype took that I'm goin' to show
+you, she was writin' a pome to the Muse. This is how it went:
+
+ "Muse of Poetry
+ I would do much for thee
+ And I am full of tears
+ Because I have been writin' so many years
+ And still unappreciated I be--
+
+"Betsy can write pomes like that any time," explained Marie, and the
+audience giggled. "But I always tell Betsy," Marie went on, "that
+walkin' cross-lots ain't any place to compose poetry to Muses. Well, she
+was walkin' 'cross-lots in a brown study an' a red-striped morey waist,
+speakin' this out loud as she went. An' she got to gesturin' before she
+thought. An' Farmer Peedick, him that married Jane Ann Allen, had jest
+let his best bull out in the field. An' whether it was the red morey
+waist or the pome Betsy never did know, but she thinks it was the pome.
+She says she thinks the bull, not bein' used to fust-class poetry, was
+excited. So he just up an' ran after her. Well, she stopped recitin',
+an' ran, too. She jest got over the barb-wire fence in time. But I tell
+you, Betsy Bobbet is a wonderful woman! When she was safe she fixed that
+bull with her eye (it was a poet's eye, she says to me), an' recited the
+remainder of that ode to him. An', ladies an' gentlemen, you mayn't
+believe it, but that bull was cowed! Yes, sir. He looked at her, Betsy
+says to me, as if he was sayin' 'I can't stand that!' an' he ran. Yes,
+sir, he just ran!"
+
+She pulled aside the frame, and there smirked Betsy, very stiff and
+proper, with her bonnet and veil still a wreck and her red morey waist
+very much askew, and with a jagged rent down the front of her skirt. But
+her corkscrew curls twisted gracefully down either side of her face, her
+eyes were rolled up, and her mitted hand clutched a roll of paper. The
+audience howled.
+
+Marie closed the cover, bowed, and went on to the end of the pictures.
+
+The dances--the Indian dance, the minuet and the Russian dance--were
+beautiful and everyone applauded them, though they liked the Indian
+dance best. When they had finished some of the guests, to Louise's great
+delight, demanded Camp Fire work, and bought it, too. After that the
+girls distributed coffee and sandwiches free, and then the Scouts took
+the audience, in relays, up the river to Wampoag.
+
+Before they went somebody said to Marie:
+
+"My dear, you were splendid. I'm going to give that entertainment for
+our church this winter, and write to you for help. But the most
+convincing and amusing picture of the lot was 'Betsy Bobbet.' Do tell me
+how you ever managed to make the thing so life-like?"
+
+But Marie merely looked modest.
+
+"We did the best we could," she said. "It was quite simple, after all."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
+
+
+The next time Billy and Tom and Winona and Louise went off in Billy's
+canoe for the day, they did not take Sandy. She happened to be making
+one of her brief visits home. They took, instead, a shot-gun apiece
+(that is, the boys did), a book apiece (that was for the girls), a
+bagful of socks from the Scouts' mending-basket, and the usual amount of
+lunch.
+
+"We look like an Italian moving," Tom observed critically, looking over
+their joint baggage. "Three fishing-rods, two baskets, two paddles, two
+guns, two sunbonnets. Whew! Louise, I'll trade with you."
+
+"It isn't much at all," said Louise indignantly. "I could carry my
+share, and yours, too, if I had to."
+
+"You may," he returned promptly. "Here's my rifle. It won't go off
+unless you hit the trigger by accident."
+
+"Heap big chief!" said she, not offering to take it. "If I'd remembered
+how you hated carrying innocent little things like this around with
+you"--she pointed to the imposing pile of baskets, books and work in the
+bottom of the canoe--"I'd have telephoned for an expressman."
+
+"Have you a telephone?" asked Tom. "When did you put it in, and what did
+you tie it to?"
+
+"No," said Louise, "but we could have borrowed yours."
+
+The Scouts had just finished installing a telephone from Wampoag to
+their headquarters. They had done nearly everything themselves in the
+way of connecting and so forth. They were very proud of it, and the Camp
+Fire girls were wildly envious, for all _they_ had was a system of
+baking-powder-box-and-wire telephone, worked out from the American
+Girl's Handy Book by two young geniuses. It was all right as far as it
+went, but naturally it wouldn't connect them with the telephones at
+home, or at Wampoag.
+
+"Why, of course you could," consented Tom. "In fact, you can. Shall I
+paddle you that way?"
+
+"You needn't mind," she smiled. "Do look at Winona!"
+
+Winona had one of Marie's books, and she was sitting on the bottom
+reading it, forgetful of the world.
+
+"What does this mean, Billy?" as she looked up suddenly. "Marie has a
+note here in pencil 'But Raleigh was not exclusively Elizabethan!' and
+two exclamation points after it."
+
+"I don't know," Billy answered frankly. "I don't see why Marie wants to
+worry about it."
+
+"Raleigh was Gothic with Queen Anne chimneys," interrupted Tom. "If you
+want information just come to me, little one. Here, Winnie, put down
+that book. It looks too full of useful information for a nice day like
+this. Remember, this is a pleasure exertion."
+
+"All right," and Winona laid down the book. "Only I do wish I knew as
+much as Marie does."
+
+"And yet she never seems to study hard," remarked Louise, to whom
+lessons were a painful grind. "I believe she's like Billy Wiggs of the
+Cabbage-Patch--she 'inherited her education from her paw!'"
+
+"She could!" put in Tom mournfully. "Professor Hunter has enough and too
+much. Just wait till you get under him, Louise!"
+
+"Oh, I can wait. I'm in no hurry at all. He's awfully nice out of school
+hours, but----"
+
+"But why talk about school in vacation?" broke in Billy impatiently.
+"Isn't it a lovely day?"
+
+The girls were curled on the bottom of the canoe, in the middle, and the
+boys were paddling at the ends. The morning breeze, cool and fresh,
+struck their faces, whipping Louise's red hair about her face in little
+curls, and blowing Winona's blue tie straight back over her shoulder in
+the sunshine.
+
+"This is something like living!" Tom declared, spatting the water with
+his paddle because he was so happy. "Pass me about three bananas, will
+you, whoever's nearest the lunch? I feel hungry."
+
+"You aren't," said Louise swiftly. "You just want those bananas because
+you know they're there. Have some poetry instead. I brought a bookful."
+
+"Poetry!" snorted Tom, as she hoped he would.
+
+"Cæsar! There's a snipe!" cried Billy, dropping his paddle, reaching for
+a rifle, and taking hasty aim.
+
+"Never touched it," mocked Tom as the report died, and the snipe
+appeared not to have done so at all.
+
+"How do you come to be carrying all these shooting-irons around?" asked
+Louise suspiciously. "I thought Mr. Gedney was pretty strict about it."
+
+"Special permission," explained Tom. "We've both always known how to
+shoot, and old Billy here is supposed to be the most careful thing that
+ever was."
+
+"That wasn't a snipe," said Billy disgustedly. "That was a mosquito, a
+nice tame old Jersey mosquito. I always heard they grew to that size,
+but I never believed it before."
+
+"Don't cast any asparagus," said Louise. "The advertisements say there
+are no mosquitoes here."
+
+Billy eyed the now almost gone snipe.
+
+"Well, he may have been a plain fly," he conceded.... "Let's go on
+hunting. Perhaps we'll find a real snipe next time."
+
+They paddled along lazily for the next three-quarters of an hour,
+talking a little now and then. For the most part, though, they went on
+in silence, except when Louise giggled over "Fables in Slang," which she
+had pulled out of her blouse-pocket, or when someone saw what might be
+game, or especially good scenery. They went, presently, down an arm of
+the river that was scarcely more than a creek, and stopped there till
+afternoon for rest and refreshment. It seemed a charming spot, and
+almost deserted. Only in the distance one red-roofed farmhouse could be
+seen, adding to the picturesqueness of the landscape.
+
+There were three small sandwiches left, and the girls, with the aid of
+paper and pencil, had just worked it out that each person present was
+entitled to three-quarters of a sandwich. They were trying to decide who
+should get the three quarters that were cut out of the three
+sandwiches--it was more a point of honor than necessity, for nobody much
+wanted any of them--when there was a subdued howl from Tom, who had been
+lying on his back in the canoe, gazing up at the sky.
+
+Six stately geese were flying in an arrow-shape across the creek, above
+the canoe. Both boys fired.
+
+"Oh, what a shame to kill them!" mourned Winona; but Tom said hurriedly
+again that they had special permission from Mr. Gedney, and sat up to
+see if he had done anything.
+
+"We each got one!" said Billy in a tense whisper. "They've dropped on
+the farther shore--there by the farmhouse!"
+
+The boys pushed the canoe up close and sprang out. They were dashing
+excitedly across country after their prey. Suddenly the waiting girls
+heard wild howls, and the tall, angry form of a wild-eyed man in
+overalls suddenly appeared from nowhere with a pitchfork.
+
+"Oh, he's chasing the boys!" exclaimed Winona.
+
+"He certainly is!" seconded Louise, and began to giggle. "Listen to
+him!"
+
+It was really impossible to do anything else.
+
+"My geese! My prize geese!" shouted the overalled man, adding what he
+thought of Tom's and Billy's intelligence. "My pedigreed geese, you
+young idiots! I'll teach you!"
+
+"You ought to have made 'em wear their pedigrees around their necks,"
+Tom shouted back at the man.
+
+"Oh, can they get away?" cried Louise. "Look!"
+
+And Winona, looking, saw that their way back to the canoe was cut off by
+a dog--the traditional farmer's dog of the comic papers. He was
+stationed on the bank, eying the canoe and the girls in it in a very
+threatening way, and most plainly only waiting till the boys came back
+to bite them.
+
+Winona gave the canoe a determined push which landed it in midstream,
+and both girls began to paddle back by the way they had come, Winona
+because she had a plan, Louise because she was following Winona.
+
+"We'll meet them around this point, on the other side," she explained to
+Louise. "I saw a glimpse of water on the other side, and I think the
+point of land the farm is on is like a peninsula."
+
+Sure enough, they discovered the criminals crouched romantically behind
+a clump of trees at the other side of the point of land. They were so
+well hidden that the girls would never have seen them if Billy had not
+stealthily waved a red handkerchief which he always carried for
+wigwagging. The girls paddled up as softly as they could, and the boys
+crawled out and waded to the canoe, crouching low. Nobody dared say
+anything till the canoe and its crew was well out and downstream again,
+far from farmers with dogs and pitchforks and no desire to listen to
+explanations.
+
+"And we never even got those geese!" mourned Tom.
+
+"Got those geese!" said Louise severely. "You oughtn't to want to get
+pedigreed geese that belonged to a farmer--especially a farmer with that
+kind of a disposition."
+
+"He hasn't any business to let tame geese go prowling around the country
+that way," growled Billy, "the first day a fellow has leave to go
+shooting food for the Scouts at home! How were we to know they had a
+coat-of-arms and a family tree? They ought to have been kept at home, in
+their ancestral barnyard."
+
+"And we never even got the confounded things!" lamented Tom again. "And
+we might just as well have, too, because we'll have to go up and pay for
+them, of course, when Mr. Overalls has calmed down enough not to bite us
+on sight. They may be worth a thousand dollars apiece, for all we know.
+We were the pedigreed geese, I think!"
+
+"Never mind," said Louise soothingly, "be glad Father Goose didn't get
+you, instead of sorry you didn't get his pets. They probably would have
+been tough, anyway."
+
+"And we can fish," suggested Winona. "Nobody's going to jump out of the
+river and tell us that these are his pedigreed perch."
+
+"The game-warden may, if the river's been stocked lately," said Billy.
+
+"It hasn't," asserted Tom. "Don't you remember? We found out all about
+that before any of us came up here last year. All these fish are old
+enough to die. Pass me the bait, please, Winnie."
+
+"Here you are," said Winona.
+
+She baited a line for herself, dropped it in, and everyone else did the
+same thing. After that nobody said anything for quite a little while,
+unless an occasional "Confound those geese!" from Tom could count as
+conversation.
+
+"Got something!" announced Louise at length, jerking in her line.
+
+"What is it?" asked Tom with interest.
+
+"Feels like a perch--or a trout," said Louise pulling in her line
+rapidly.
+
+"It doesn't _look_ like one," said Winona.
+
+"M'm, not exactly," said her brother. "You ought to be interested in it,
+though, Win--it's a catfish."
+
+"You can eat catfish," said Louise, quite calmly. "In fact, I believe
+they're considered very good eating. I don't know but I'd rather have
+them than trout."
+
+"Especially if you can't get the trout," added Tom.
+
+"If you can't get what you want, you must want what you can get." So she
+baited her line again.
+
+"Well, what is it this time?" inquired Tom next time she pulled her line
+in. The rest had had fair luck.
+
+"Probably another pussy-fish," said Louise resignedly. But this time it
+was a real perch, and after that it was a sunfish, and then two more
+catfish. And presently there was enough for supper, and by the time they
+got back they knew it would be supper-getting time. Winona was cooking
+supper that week. So they put the fish in the empty lunch-basket and
+paddled for home. Louise took Billy's paddle, and Billy trolled all the
+way. He didn't get anything, but he enjoyed himself.
+
+"Who's that on the dock?" asked Tom as they neared the Camp Karonya
+landing. "Are they waiting for us?"
+
+"Tom's afraid the farmer with the ducks has come around the other way,"
+said Louise. "No, Tommy, my dear, that's only Mr. Sloane, who is a sort
+of unofficial uncle to Camp Karonya. We're supposed to have rented that
+dock from him, but he comes there and fishes just as much as if we
+hadn't."
+
+"Sort of a fourth sub-mascot?" said Billy. "Yes, I remember--the old man
+who helped you out about the scows when you were building the float."
+
+"He's the one," said Winona. "He's fishing."
+
+"And there's Puppums, too," said Louise. "Oh, the dear old doggie! He's
+come down to the dock to wait for you, Winnie!"
+
+"So he has," agreed Winona. "I wonder if he's been there long."
+
+Puppums liked canoeing very much, and when he thought Winona ought to
+have taken him and hadn't, he would go down to the dock, trailing her by
+scent, and sit there hours and hours--merely for the sake of looking
+reproachfully at her when she did get in, it was thought. Winona always
+hugged him, and apologized, and took him for a row if possible, and he
+knew it.
+
+When he caught sight of the canoe (like most dogs, he was short-sighted)
+he began to bark excitedly and run up and down the dock, and jump wildly
+about. He did everything but swim out to the canoe. Puppums hated
+water--which gave rise to a theory that there was a little pug in his
+ancestry.
+
+Mr. Sloane, too, rose as the canoe came near the landing-place. He did
+not jump up and down, because he had not been waiting for the canoeing
+party. He had evidently taken their return as a signal that it was time
+he went home himself, for he was collecting his rod and bait-can, and
+his coat, and the other things he had strewn about the dock. Puppums
+still careered wildly around and around. As Winona stepped ashore his
+excitement grew so intense that he ran full tilt into Mr. Sloane, who
+was bending over picking something up, and nearly knocked him over.
+
+"W-u-ugh!" said Mr. Sloane, and began to hunt frantically about the
+dock.
+
+And as the boys and girls gained the shore it became painfully evident
+that the little dog had jarred out the old gentleman's false teeth.
+
+Mr. Sloane had never made any secret of the fact that he wore "bought
+teeth"--indeed, he had told Winona and Adelaide, who were his especial
+favorites, just where he got them and how much they cost, and where
+others like them could be gotten. But still, when your friend's teeth
+are knocked out all at once by your family dog, well, you _do_ feel a
+little embarrassment. With one accord the four looked in the other
+direction, as Mr. Sloane, with a "Drat that pup!" continued to hunt for
+his teeth. The boys fussed with the canoe, and Winona and Louise began
+to hunt for a nonexistent something in the box they used for a locker.
+
+But Puppums was going to be polite at all costs. He trotted over, his
+tail wagging wildly at the prospect of being able to do something for
+his mistress, picked up the teeth, and carried them proudly to Winona!
+
+"Oh, Puppums--you _naughty_ dog!" she said, trying to take the teeth
+away from him as unostentatiously as possible.
+
+But Puppums, realizing from her voice that something was wrong, looked
+up at her depreciatingly, wagged his tail again, suddenly put his tail
+between his legs and started for the camp!
+
+It was no use to try to ignore things any longer.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Sloane," Winona cried. "I'm so sorry! He's a bad dog. I'll go
+straight after him and get them."
+
+"Now, never mind," said Mr. Sloane, kindly if rather indistinctly. He
+began to laugh. "That dog o' yours certainly is a rip-snorter!" he said.
+"Knock a man down an' carry off his teeth!"
+
+By this time the boys had stopped trying not to laugh, and were howling
+in unison in the background. And little Frances, Adelaide's sister, came
+up with a nice birch-bark box. She handed it to Mr. Sloane, dropped a
+pretty courtesy, and ran. And so did the others. The only unembarrassed
+members of the party were Puppums, who wasn't there, to be Irish, and
+Mr. Sloane himself.
+
+"Talk about banner days!" sighed Louise. "I was the only one of us that
+didn't get into trouble----"
+
+"Louise!" called somebody, from outside the tent where Louise was
+washing and getting ready for supper. "Did you know that you left the
+store-shed door open this morning when you came in for supplies, and
+somebody's carried off every bit of bacon!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
+
+
+And in the opulent days which followed the winning of the carnival
+prizes, and the selling of lovely amounts of Camp Fire goods, Camp
+Karonya decided that it ought to own a phonograph. The treasury, which
+was a suitcase under Helen's bed, had money in it, and the girls badly
+needed something to dance by. To be sure, the camp boasted a mandolin,
+two guitars, a mouth-organ and a banjo, to say nothing of Mrs. Bryan's
+Iroquois drum. But all these had to be worked by hand, and the
+orchestra, after performing for several long evenings while their
+friends practised folk-dances with abandon, struck.
+
+"We want to get a chance at the folk-dances, too," they remonstrated,
+very reasonably. Indeed, Louise got up and made a moving speech,
+alluding to her pressing need of folk-dances, and her slender chance of
+being able to do them while she played her instrument.
+
+"Here I am," she said pathetically, "twice as plump as anybody else in
+camp. I need folk-dances more than anybody here does. And I've spent
+this whole blessed evening plunking a banjo while other people got thin,
+people that were thin already! It may be good for my moral character,
+but, girls"--Louise's voice dropped tragically--"it's _ruining_ yours!"
+
+They all agreed that something should be done.
+
+Mrs. Bryan was entirely willing to go on pounding her Indian drum
+indefinitely, but the girls did not think it would be good for their
+moral characters to let her, either. So they held a business meeting on
+the spot, which happened to be the large level place they used for
+dancing ground; and decided to buy a phonograph.
+
+"I think we have catalogues of them at home," said Dorothy Gray. "Shall
+I write and have them sent on?"
+
+The girls considered that for awhile, but they finally decided not to.
+Everyone wanted a voice in choosing the phonograph, or at least in
+deciding on what kind of a phonograph they were to have.
+
+"But we don't want to pay the full price for it," said Helen wisely.
+"What we ought to do is to advertise in the _Press_ in the village. It's
+the country paper. Look at the market Win created for kittens----"
+
+But here Winona sprang for her, and they rolled over on the leaves, and
+the meeting ended in a frolic.
+
+However, they all liked Helen's idea, and two Blue Birds were sent off
+to the _Press_ with an advertisement for a second-hand phonograph or
+victrola in good condition. Next day two other Blue Birds went after the
+answers. There were three.
+
+One offered a fine music-box in good condition, which had never been
+used since the owner's wife died twenty years ago. He lived on the
+Northtown Pike (which nobody present had ever heard of), about seventeen
+miles from the village. The music-box played six tunes and was an
+heirloom, having belonged to his mother, but the farmer on the Northtown
+Pike would part with it for twenty-five dollars for he wanted another
+Holstein cow and this would pay for part of her.
+
+"Horrid old thing!" said Winona when Marie was done reading the answers
+aloud. "If it's an heirloom he hasn't any business parting with it to
+buy a section of any kind of cow--or even a whole one."
+
+"Well, Marie, go on to the next," said Mrs. Bryan. But the next was even
+more hopeless. What this man had was, from his description, a very cheap
+phonograph which was almost as old as the farmer's music-box; but he,
+too, thought he would like to have twenty-five dollars for it.
+
+"He doubtless wants to buy a section of cow, too," suggested Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Maybe they're buying her together," said Louise brilliantly; and Marie
+read the last letter. This was the only one at all promising. The
+writer, who was a woman with a good handwriting and correct spelling,
+said that she had a two-year-old victrola in good condition, and that
+she would gladly sell it for twenty-five dollars, because she was going
+to be given a new one.
+
+"That sounds better," said Mrs. Bryan. "I would advise a committee of
+you to go and look it over."
+
+"But how badly they all want twenty-five dollars!" groaned Marie. "Do
+you notice it? They all ask for exactly the same amount."
+
+"Probably buying the cow on shares," repeated Louise.
+
+"I vote we make Louise one of the committee to see the two-year-old
+victrola," said Winona. "She has business instinct, and the rest of us
+haven't such a lot."
+
+"What's more to the point, I also have a victrola at home, or Dad has,"
+said Louise, "and I know what it ought to be like to be good."
+
+So it was moved and seconded that Louise, Winona and Helen be appointed
+a committee of three to investigate the victrola.
+
+As early as they could in the afternoon after they had received their
+replies they started out. It was a gorgeous day, not too warm for
+comfort, and they chased each other about the road as if they were
+kittens, instead of responsible Camp Fire Girls out on a very
+business-like errand. After they had gone about a mile, which led them
+nearly to the village, it occurred to some brilliant person that it
+might be a good plan to ask somebody how to get to the address of the
+woman with the two-year-old victrola. It was The Willows, Lowlane, near
+Gray's Road, and so far as the girls knew that might have been nearly
+anywhere. So they did ask at the post-office, where they had quite made
+friends with the old postmaster.
+
+"It's three miles down the pike," said he. "Strike off on the left to
+Gray's Road--you'll see a signpost, I guess--and then turn down the
+first little lane you come to. They call it Lowlane now, the folks that
+own the house, but it was never anything but Low's Lane till they came
+there."
+
+"The first little lane we come to?" repeated Winona.
+
+The postmaster looked thoughtful. "Now, I don't want to be too sure," he
+said. "The first, or maybe the second. Elmer, do you recollect whether
+Low's Lane is the first or second turning on the Gray's Road way?"
+
+"Second," said Elmer the clerk readily.
+
+"There now!" said the postmaster. "I might a' told you wrong. I
+certainly had it fixed in my mind that it was the first."
+
+"Thank you," said the girls. "It won't be hard to find."
+
+It seemed, indeed, plain enough sailing, and the girls went on. The road
+was bordered with trees, and there were flowers they wanted to pick, and
+occasionally rabbits for Puppums to chase. He was not a swift enough
+runner to ever catch any of the rabbits he ran after, and the rabbits
+did not seem to mind, so Winona let him go on chasing.
+
+"We've gone quite three miles, I know," said Louise dismally when they
+had been walking some time. "And there's no Lowlane--not even any Gray's
+Road." Louise had trained a good deal since she had been in camp, but
+she still felt long walks more than the other two did, who were slim. "I
+'don't believe there's no sich animal' as Mrs. Martin, or a victrola.
+There aren't any victrolas or any lanes, high or low, on earth.
+Woof--I'm tired!"
+
+She fanned herself with her handkerchief, and the dog tried to jump at
+it, under the impression that she was playing a game with him.
+
+"It does seem a long way," said Helen sympathetically, "but there is a
+Gray's Road, for I'm sure I see a signpost a little ahead of us."
+
+"It's probably one of those automobile directions that says 'Three miles
+back to the village--seventeen miles forward to Jonesville. Use Smith's
+Lubricating Oil and Robinson Tires!'" and Louise shrugged her shoulders.
+
+Nevertheless, when they came up to the signpost, although it did advise
+automobiles about several kinds of supplies they ought to have, it also
+said that this was Gray's Road. They turned as they had been told, and
+went down it, in search of their second landmark, Low's Lane. This,
+unfortunately, wasn't in sight. "Let's ask," said Winona as they passed
+a little old house by the side of the road, and steered the others up
+the path that led to the porch. It was a ramshackle, unpainted
+packing-box of a place, with an old, old lady, heavily shawled, curled
+up in a rocker, for inhabitant. Helen was pushed forward to speak to
+her. "Can you tell us if we are near Low's Lane?" she asked, politely.
+
+"Hey?" said the old lady. "I'm a little deaf."
+
+Helen said it over again as loudly as she could.
+
+"Rain?" said the old lady. "No, no--it ain't goin' to rain!"
+
+"Low's Lane!" screamed Helen.
+
+"What?" said the old lady.
+
+"Ask her about the victrola," suggested Winona. "Sometimes deaf people
+can hear one word when they can't another. Perhaps she'd know by that
+where we wanted to go."
+
+"We want a place where they're selling a victrola!" shouted Helen.
+
+This time the old lady seemed to hear.
+
+"Victrola, hey? You go right on a piece till you turn to your left. It's
+the first house."
+
+"Thank you," yelled Helen.
+
+They were offered, and took, drinks of water, and went on again.
+
+"I think one of you might have asked some of the questions," said Helen
+indignantly.
+
+"I'll ask one now!" defied Louise. "Far be it from me not to do my
+duty." She turned and ran back to where the old dame still rocked on her
+porch.
+
+"Is it a good victrola?" she shouted.
+
+The old lady shook her head.
+
+"I wouldn't go so far's to say _that_," she answered. "Smart,
+though--awful smart and clever!"
+
+Louise ran back to the others without asking any more questions.
+
+"She says the talking machine isn't good, but awful smart and clever,"
+she panted. "What _do_ you suppose she means?"
+
+"I can't imagine," said Helen. "Anyway, we know how to get there."
+
+The first lane, sure enough, led to a house, but there seemed to be no
+willows anywhere about it. Still houses often have names that have
+nothing to do with the facts, so the girls pressed on. The place had a
+vaguely familiar look to Winona and Louise.
+
+"I'm sure I've come here before, by another way," said Winona.
+
+"I haven't," said Helen. "You must have come by water. I think the
+river's somewhere back of us. If you ask me, I think one way's enough to
+come."
+
+They lined up before the door and rang. But the bell, they discovered
+finally, was badly out of order. A "please knock" sign was blowing about
+the porch, they discovered still a little later. They knocked
+vigorously, and the door was finally unfastened by a draggled little
+girl of about eleven.
+
+"Why--why, how do you do, Vicky!" said Louise in surprise. "Why, of
+course, Helen, this is Sandy's house. Only this isn't the same door, is
+it, that we came in by last time, Vicky?"
+
+Vicky, who was as tousled as usual, shook her head.
+
+"What's the matter?" she asked stolidly. "Has Sandy been naughty?"
+
+"No, indeed," said Louise, "she's as good as gold. Can't we come in?"
+for Vicky didn't seem to feel specially hospitable--she was holding the
+door on a crack, and was not her usual sunny self. "Sandy's around here
+somewhere--at least she's not in camp."
+
+"Oh, yes," she said, and opened it wider. The girls filed in and sat
+down in the square hall, which was as littered as usual with clothes and
+paper bags and everything else that places are usually littered with.
+
+"Look at that hole!" whispered Louise, forgetting her politeness as
+Vicky stood near them, not intending, evidently, to sit down and
+entertain them if she could help it. "There's more hole than stocking!"
+
+It was quite true, but unfortunately Vicky had sharp ears.
+
+"They're my own stockings," she said crossly, "and I like 'em with holes
+in."
+
+"Oh, all right!" said Louise dryly. "Only they aren't usually worn that
+way."
+
+"Can we speak to your uncle?" interposed Helen, for the air was becoming
+stormy.
+
+"Isn't home," announced Vicky. "He had a cross fit and went out
+walking."
+
+"Is anybody home?" asked Winona. "We came on business."
+
+"You can do it with me, whatever it is," said Vicky, sitting down with
+the torn-stockinged leg under her.
+
+Helen plunged straight into the business at hand.
+
+"The old lady down the road said that this was the house where they had
+a victrola----" she started to say--and stopped in dismay over the
+effect of her words; Vicky flew into a temper and began to cry.
+
+"I want you to go away from here--coming to make fun of me!" she sobbed,
+stamping her foot at them. Before they could answer she ran out of the
+room, leaving them staring at each other in surprise.
+
+"Well, what on earth?" Winona slowly ejaculated.
+
+"Goodness only knows," said Louise. "Anyway, I seem to feel that she
+doesn't want to sell it to us."
+
+"Well, no," assented Helen, and the three of them thoughtfully and
+slowly let themselves out at the door they had come in by.
+
+They had gone only a little way back when they heard flying feet behind
+them.
+
+"Wait a minute," panted Vicky, catching up to them. "I
+guess--perhaps--I'd better explain. I'm sorry I got mad. But--but my
+_name's_ Victrola!" She flushed painfully. Evidently it was hard for her
+to tell. "I thought you were just making fun of me, but I thought about
+it, and I guess you weren't. I know the place you want--it's a little
+further, up the next lane."
+
+She started to run back, but Winona caught her hand and held her.
+
+"Why, you poor dear!" she said. "I don't see why you mind. It's a very
+pretty name. But we weren't trying to make fun of you. We really want to
+buy a phonograph for the camp."
+
+"They laugh at me--everybody does," faltered Vicky. "They were this
+morning--the boys down by the landing. That's why I was so cross. They
+pretend to wind me up, and--and I _hate_ it!"
+
+"So would I," comforted Louise. "But you mustn't mind, Vicky. All my
+life the boys have called me 'Carrots,' and 'Reddy,' and things like
+that. There's no use caring. Look here, honey, I'll tell you what to do.
+See if you haven't got a middle name you can use, or even one you ought
+to have had. Ask your uncle if there wasn't a middle name somebody
+almost gave you once, and if there was use it."
+
+"I wonder if I could!" said Vicky, brightening. She reached down and
+pulled up one of her stockings, as if the prospect of a better name made
+her want to be tidy.
+
+"Anyhow it's a pretty name," said Louise cheerfully. "I wouldn't worry
+about it."
+
+"Yes, you would," said Vicky, as she turned back. "There down this
+lane's the place you can get--it."
+
+It was Louise's turn to detain her this time.
+
+"Vicky! Vicky!" she called. "Won't you and Sandy come down to Camp
+Karonya and stay overnight, to-morrow night? We're going to do some
+stunts--just to celebrate. The Scouts are coming over, and one or two of
+our pet particular friends."
+
+"I don't know the way," said Vicky.
+
+"Sandy does," said Louise and Winona together.
+
+"Thank you," said Vicky sedately. "We'll come. And--please don't tell
+the others my name. I'll have the real one thought out by that time."
+
+"Of course we won't," they promised.
+
+"It _was_ mean to name her that," Helen declared as they went down the
+lane.
+
+"Maybe it was before there were machine victrolas, and her mother just
+thought it was pretty," suggested Louise. "The other children have fancy
+names, too; Alexandra and Lance. Remember Vicky told us there was a boy
+named Lancelot, the day we went up?"
+
+"To return your orphan?" said Winona. "Oh, yes--we all remember. Never
+mind, Ishkoodah dear, perhaps next time you'll find a real one."
+
+"Wouldn't it be fine if Camp Karonya _could_ look after some little
+girl--one of the Children's Aid children, for instance?" said Helen
+thoughtfully.
+
+"It would take a good deal of money," spoke practical Louise, "if we
+didn't one of us have it in the family."
+
+"Not such a lot," said Winona. "Oh, it would be lovely! A nice little
+orphan with blue eyes and curly hair, and we'd name her ourselves----"
+
+"We'd call her Gramophone!" suggested Louise; and, tired as they were,
+they all began to laugh. But by this time they were nearly at the house
+the machine's namesake had directed them to, and it was the right one.
+
+The owner had a fairly good victrola and six double-faced records, and
+she finally consented to let it go for twenty dollars. The girls paid
+down the money on the spot, and constructed a carrier for it out of two
+pieces of board which the machine's owner threw in.
+
+There were no adventures whatever connected with this end of the
+happening. Helen took the front end and Louise the back, and Winona
+steadied it. Then they set it down, after they had walked awhile, and
+changed places. It seemed rather a long way home, and they were
+exceedingly glad when they reached camp--that was all. Their sympathetic
+comrades attended to their routine duties for them, and all the
+adventurers had to do was to lie on the grass and tell about their
+travels--everything, that is, but Victrola's name and her grief over it.
+
+After supper the whole camp assembled to enjoy the machine, and danced
+to everything on its disc, even the sextette from Lucia, given as a
+vocal selection. But Louise did not do any folk-dances that night. She
+was so tired that she curled up on a soft spot and fed the machine till
+it was time to go to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
+
+
+"Did you dye that old petticoat and underwaist pink?" demanded Winona,
+sticking her head into Marie's tent.
+
+"Yes, I did," said Marie promptly, "and it's starched, and ironed with
+the charcoal-iron."
+
+"And did Adelaide borrow her brother's bathrobe for Louise?"
+
+"No, she didn't, but I did--at least, I sent Frances over for it," said
+Marie. "It's here, and safe."
+
+"And did Louise sew the hood on it?"
+
+"She did," said Marie resignedly. "Every single property for 'Gentle
+Alice Brown' and the 'Oysterman' is in a mound in the dressing-tent. Go
+look, for goodness' sake, or you'll have nervous prostration."
+
+Winona, property-woman and general manager of the performance, pulled
+back her head with a sigh of relief, and went to find the girl who had
+promised to straighten out the fishing-tackle necessary to the Ballad of
+the Oysterman--for they were to present that classic of Holmes's in a
+very few hours.
+
+The performance was to be at eight, and it was a strictly complimentary
+one. The Scouts were invited, and various special friends from Wampoag,
+most of them made over dealings in Camp merchandise. A committee had
+been appointed to see about illuminations, and another to attend to the
+refreshments. They were amassing honor beads by doing it. Marie's Blue
+Birds were busy everywhere. Camp Karonya was dazzlingly clean, and
+everyone was getting out the one dress-up frock she had brought along,
+and giving it attention. There was to be an exhibit, also, as the
+flaring posters Helen had prepared said, of "potteries, embroideries,
+jellies, hand-carvings, pickles and other objects." It had been going to
+be "other objects of art," but Winona pointed out that jellies and
+pickles _weren't_, no matter what the rest might be. So the poster
+stopped abruptly at "objects," and the space was filled up by a
+life-like portrait of a jelly-glass.
+
+Camp Karonya took a very brief meal of bread and milk and cookies, and
+the dish-washers hurried through their tasks. For eight o'clock has a
+way of coming long before you expect it. About seven-thirty the paddles
+and oars and motor-boats of the audience began to be heard, and the
+reception committee scurried down to the dock to meet their guests.
+First came their friends the Scouts from down the river, about thirty
+strong. After them, in little groups, came the summer people, including
+Billy's Aunt Lydia, who never missed a Camp Fire function if she could
+help it.
+
+The audience was seated, as usual, on planks laid from box to box and
+nailed. They did not have to sit there long. After a great deal of
+giggling and rustling behind the big green curtain that had been made of
+sacks, pieced together and dyed, Winona came out to announce the
+beginning of the entertainment.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," she commenced, "to-night we are going to have,
+beside several musical selections, some moving pictures with explanatory
+recitations--some _very_ moving pictures. After the opening song we will
+have the first one, 'Gentle Alice Brown.'"
+
+The audience applauded, and then the girls sang a Camp Fire song in
+chorus. After that Louise and Edith played a conscientious
+mandolin-banjo duet. Then Marie, who was the reader of the evening, came
+out with a copy of Gilbert's Bab Ballads and very slowly began to read
+"Gentle Alice Brown."
+
+At the first line the curtain was pulled back, revealing Winona alone
+against a sheet background. She was in an 1860 costume made from an old,
+full petticoat and tight underwaist, dyed pink, and helped out with
+small puffed sleeves and a sash. Her curls were bound with a wreath of
+artificial roses from the ten-cent store, slightly over one ear. She sat
+on a chair with her head on her hand, and she was looking mournfully
+over the chair-back. Marie began,
+
+ It was a robber's daughter, and her name was Alice Brown,
+ Her father was the terror of a small Italian town;
+ Her mother was a foolish, weak, but amiable old thing,
+ But it isn't of her parents that I'm going for to sing.
+
+As Marie went on, across the stage galloped ferociously Helen, who had
+been given the role of Robber Brown because she was one of the tallest
+of the girls. A red flannel shirt of Tom Merriam's, topped by a fishing
+hat and black mustachio, were most convincing. Her short kilt, which
+gave her rather the look of a Greek than an Italian bandit, was met by a
+pair of fishing-boots, and she wore three carving-knives and a cartridge
+belt. She strode ferociously across the stage, looking neither to right
+nor left.
+
+Edith Hillis, trotting meekly behind her as Mrs. Brown, wore a baggy old
+long skirt, a bandanna tied around her waist, one around her neck and
+another on her head. She only had one carving-knife. But the lovely
+Alice did not deign to look at her parents. She gazed sadly out over the
+audience, while Marie went on to tell how--
+
+ As Alice was sitting at her window-sill one day
+ A beautiful young gentleman he chanced to pass that way,
+ A sorter at the Custom-house, it was his daily road--
+ (The Custom-house was fifteen minutes walk from her abode).
+
+At this point the hero crossed the stage dashingly, with a cane under
+his arm. It was Adelaide, in a plaid cap, a waxed mustache, and a very
+precise duster which reached her heels. A pipe (she said afterwards it
+had a dreadful taste) stuck from one corner of her mouth.
+
+Gentle Alice sighed deeply, and so did her lover, who became aware of
+her presence with a tragic start. He halted, waved to her, sighed with
+his hand on his heart, and looked altogether very lovelorn. Gentle Alice
+did not notice him at first, but she gradually seemed to yield, and
+finally languished softly at him--and winked. So did he. Then he kissed
+his hands at her and went off reluctantly to work, while Alice wiped
+away her tears with a large bandanna such as her parents had worn. (They
+were the historic bandannas which had served Winona and Louise so well
+on their peddling trip.)
+
+The ballad went on to relate how presently Alice's conscience bothered
+her. So she asked the Brown's family confessor about it,
+
+ The priest by whom their little crimes were carefully assessed.
+
+Here Louise appeared, in the brown bathrobe, with its hood pulled up
+over her head, and sandals on. Alice threw herself at his feet, and
+waved her hands in grief.
+
+ "Oh, father," Gentle Alice said, "'Twould grieve you, would it not,
+ To find that I have been a most disreputable lot?"
+
+Louise assumed a benign expression and listened while Alice confessed
+her sins. Marie stopped, while Winona herself spoke:
+
+ I assisted dear mamma in cutting up a little lad,
+ I helped papa to steal a little kiddy from its dad--
+ I planned a little burglary and forged a little check
+ And slew a little baby for the coral on its neck!
+
+But Father Brown seemed inclined to be forgiving, and with a few
+remarks, ended,
+
+ We mustn't be too hard upon these little girlish tricks--
+ Let's see--five crimes at half a crown--exactly twelve and six.
+
+Alice thanked him in a few grateful couplets, and pulled out another
+bandanna with money tied up in it from which she paid him. The ballad
+went on to relate how Alice tremblingly confessed her last sin, about
+the beautiful gentleman, who passed every day:
+
+ I blush to say, I've winked at him--and he has winked at me!
+
+This shocked Father Paul for, as he explained,
+
+ If you should marry anyone respectable at all,
+ Why, you'd reform, and then what would become of Father Paul?
+
+So he pulled up his cowl, the ballad went on to state--and Louise went
+on to act--and trotted off to tell the news to Robber Brown.
+
+They came on together, while the Father repeated the news, and stood
+consulting in the corner, while Alice, from her actions, seemed to be
+thinking still of the sorter.
+
+Robber Brown took it quite calmly. He decided to be quite kind to Alice
+about it--merely to
+
+ Nab that gay young sorter, terrify him into fits,
+ And get his wife to chop him into little bits.
+
+He argued that Alice, after that, would not love him any more. So, while
+Father Paul exited, Robber Brown lay stealthily in wait, assisted by his
+wife. Presently along came the gay young sorter again, waving his hand
+jauntily to Alice. Robber Brown sprang out, crossed directly in front of
+the sorter, who appeared not to see him at all, and proceeded to track
+him up and down the stage two or three times, with Mrs. Brown trailing
+in the rear. After the three had gone up and down twice (Alice, also,
+oblivious to her parents' presence, and throwing kisses to the sorter)
+Robber Brown finally "took a life-preserver" in the shape of a
+stout-looking stick, and pretended to fell the gay young sorter.
+Immediately Mrs. Brown bounded up with a piece of chalk, and proceeded
+to mark him off in pieces for dissection, for, as Robber Brown remarked:
+
+ I have studied human nature and I know a thing or two--
+ Though a girl may fondly love a living chap, as many do,
+ Yet a feeling of disgust upon her senses there will fall
+ When she looks upon her lover chopped particularly small!
+
+Indeed, this terrifying sight as far as it went, seemed to have the
+desired effect on Alice. To be sure, she fell in a dead faint, and
+Father Paul had to catch her, while Mr. and Mrs. Brown, and two more
+bandits (in bandannas) carried off the late sorter; but immediately
+afterward a young bandit, very much like Robber Brown except that he was
+smaller, came in and was patted with obvious admiration by Mr. and Mrs.
+Brown, who led him up to Alice. She recovered slowly, sat up, and
+presently accepted his attentions with pleasure. Father Paul gave them
+his blessing, while Marie said:
+
+ And gentle little Alice grew more settled in her mind,
+ She never more was guilty of a weakness of that kind,
+ Until at length good Robber Brown bestowed her little hand
+ On a promising young robber, the lieutenant of his band!
+
+After that the curtain was drawn again, while the girls dressed for
+Holmes's "It Was a Gay Young Oysterman." This, while it was good, was
+not the hit with the audience that "Gentle Alice Brown" had been. When
+it was finished, and the oysterman and his bride were seen "keeping a
+shop for mermaids down below," the girls took down the curtain, and
+while more music was played the performers hurried into their pretty
+dresses. Then they came out, and strolled about the camp with the
+audience.
+
+"Where are Vicky and Sandy?" Winona remembered to ask Helen, as they met
+after the curtain was down. "Did they come?"
+
+"I think so," said Helen, rubbing hard at her cork mustache. "Adelaide,
+did you see Sandy anywhere?"
+
+Adelaide, who was just braiding her hair, turned.
+
+"Yes, I did," she said. "She's here somewhere, with another little girl.
+I saw them not long ago."
+
+Winona went in search of them, for when you ask a guest to an
+entertainment it's only polite to hunt her up. It was not hard to find
+the sisters. They were sitting with Louise, eating home-made ice-cream.
+
+Winona sat down by them.
+
+"I'm awfully glad you came, Vicky."
+
+"So'm I, too," said Vicky. She seemed rather shy here in the camp, but
+she looked happy. "I'm having a nice time."
+
+"I'm glad," said Winona. "Did you like the moving pictures?"
+
+"Yes," said Vicky, "they were awfully funny. And--oh, Winona, I've
+picked out a name."
+
+"What is it?" asked Winona.
+
+"Janet. Of course people can call me Vicky still, if they want to, but
+my real name will be Janet. I asked uncle, the way you said, and he said
+I did have a middle name, Janet, after my grandmother."
+
+"Oh, that's splendid!" said Winona. "I'm named after my grandmother,
+too."
+
+"That makes us a sort of relation, doesn't it?" asked Vicky.
+
+"Why, I hope it does," was the hearty reply.
+
+"And there's something I wanted to ask you about," said Vicky--now
+Janet--shyly. "Alone, I mean."
+
+"Come over here with me, and we'll walk up and down and talk about it,"
+invited Winona.
+
+Vicky took her hand, and they strolled off down one of the wood-paths.
+
+"I'd rather not ask Louise," explained Vicky, "because--well, she laughs
+so about everything. She might laugh at me. And that other girl is sort
+of grown-up talking. But--well, it's--I'd like to be like the rest of
+the people--other little girls, you know--and it's dreadfully hard when
+you haven't any father or mother, and your uncle's an artist with a
+temp'rament. Sometimes he gets us governesses, and they say we're queer,
+and sometimes we just do as we please. But--well, there isn't anybody to
+show us things."
+
+She looked at Winona wistfully, as if she thought she could show her how
+to be just like other children all at once.
+
+"Why do people always come to me to show them how?" wondered Winona to
+herself. "I don't know any more about how to do things than the other
+girls."
+
+She did not realize that it was her sunniness and sympathy--her
+Ray-of-Lightness, as Louise called it--together with a certain
+straightforward common sense, that made girls who wanted help come to
+her. They could be sure that she would not laugh at them, or tell anyone
+else what they had said, and they were sure of advice that had
+brightness and sense.
+
+"What sort of things do you want me to tell you?" asked Winona. "I'd
+love to help you, but some of the others know lots more about things
+than I do."
+
+"It's you I want to ask," said Vicky decidedly. "It's my clothes, to
+begin with. Are they right?"
+
+Winona stopped and looked Vicky over. They were out in the open by now,
+and it was bright moonlight, so she could see plainly what the little
+girl had on. It was a blue taffeta, very stiff and rustling, trimmed
+with plaid taffeta and black buttons. By its looks it had been bought
+ready-made, for it had a sort of gaudy smartness. It was of good
+material, but somehow, it was cheap-looking. Also by its looks,
+bread-and-butter had been eaten on or near it.
+
+"You mean your dress?"
+
+"Yes," said Vicky. "It isn't right, is it? But I don't know what to do
+about it. I bought it myself."
+
+"You mean your uncle gives you the money, and you go and buy your own
+things?" asked Winona.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Vicky. "But the ones the governesses used to get weren't
+much better. There was one governess who always picked out bright green.
+I hate green, anyway. And sometimes the cook used to. She would yet if
+I'd let her. But I won't. I don't think it's any of her business."
+
+"Well----" Winona hesitated.
+
+"Well, what had I better do?" demanded Vicky.
+
+"I don't know!" said Winona frankly. "But I do know that that silk dress
+is wrong. Why don't you get summer dresses, chambrays and ginghams and
+organdies?"
+
+"I don't know," said Vicky. "I never thought about it. Silk is better,
+isn't it?"
+
+"I don't think so," said Winona. "It doesn't wash. You see this dress
+isn't very clean."
+
+"No," acknowledged Vicky. "Does being clean count such a lot?"
+
+"Goodness!" Words failed Winona. "I tell you," she said finally. "Why
+don't you come over here and join the Blue Birds, Vicky? Marie could
+tell you a lot of things and it would be the quickest way to learn a lot
+about being like other people, if that is what you want."
+
+"I'd like to," said Vicky, "but I sort of keep house."
+
+"I have an idea, then," said Winona. Now, when Winona had ideas her
+friends usually waited to hear what she had to say. "Why couldn't some
+of the girls come up and stay with you, after Camp is over? It will be
+quite awhile even then before school opens. We could help you--show you
+how to do things."
+
+"Oh, I'd like that," said Vicky. Then she stopped, doubtfully. "That is,
+if I could pick out the ones."
+
+"Of course, you'd invite your own guests," Winona assured her. "And we'd
+pay what we cost your uncle extra.... But what about him? It's his
+house, and he mightn't like it."
+
+"Oh, he'd never care," said Vicky. "He never knows much about what goes
+on, anyway! And I know he'd like to have me learn how to be a well-bred
+little gentlewoman, because he talks about it sometimes. And anyway he's
+going off somewhere where he can't take us some time soon."
+
+"Then I don't see why we can't manage it!" said Winona enthusiastically.
+"But I can tell you now about the clothes. You want to buy dresses that
+will wash. And you don't ever want to play in silk dresses, or even
+organdies or batistes--tree-climbing, and things like that, I mean."
+
+"I might get some middies, like you wear," said Vicky thoughtfully. "And
+I suppose, long's I'm going to reform, I might as well get Sand to keep
+her dresses on. She goes chasing out in her underwaist and petticoat
+sometimes."
+
+"Oh, that was why she hadn't any on when Louise found her!" said Winona,
+seeing a light.
+
+"Yes," confessed Vicky. "What's that noise?"
+
+"That's the horn," said Winona. "It must mean that it's bedtime. She's
+playing 'taps.' Mrs. Bryan signals us with it, always."
+
+"I think I'd like to be a Blue Bird," said Vicky. "But I like the other
+plan better," she added quickly.
+
+"We're going to be here quite a while longer," said Winona, "so you'll
+have lots of time to think whether you want us and whether your uncle
+will be willing."
+
+"Oh, that's all right!" said Vicky as the two went back to camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
+
+
+It was quite true that the Camp was not to break up for some time, owing
+to the Wampoag people's appetite for Camp jellies and linens; but so far
+as Winona was concerned, life under the greenwood tree received a sudden
+check.
+
+It was a harmless-looking letter enough that the detachment of Blue
+Birds brought up from the post-office. Winona pounced on it with a cry
+of joy. "Oh, a letter from mother!" she said. "And we only had one
+yesterday, Florence!" So she tore it open.
+
+"Dear Little Daughter," it said, in a rather shakier handwriting than
+was usual with Mrs. Merriam. "I am sorry to have to tell you, as you are
+having such a splendid time, that we need you here at home. Yesterday,
+just after I had mailed my last letter to you, I slipped on the wet
+cellar stairs, and went down from top to bottom, and the result is a
+badly wrenched ankle. The doctor says that it is a severe sprain. Clay
+is a good little soul, but he can't do very much more than the helping
+out, and your father has to have his meals and everything. So I shall
+have to ask my little girl to come home and keep house for me. I will
+expect you the day after you get this. Your loving mother."
+
+"_Oh!_" cried Winona. "Oh, poor mother!"
+
+"What's the matter!" asked Florence.
+
+"Mother's sprained her ankle on the cellar stairs," said Winona, "and I
+have to go home. You needn't, Floss."
+
+"I shall, though," said Florence--and the younger Miss Merriam was a
+very determined little person. Her eyes filled with tears. "Frances and
+Lucy and I had a secret hike all planned," she said. "Oh, dear, it is so
+nice in camp! But I won't let you go home and nurse mother all alone,
+and you needn't think it!"
+
+Winona didn't argue. She gave the letter to her little sister to read,
+and went off in the woods to be by herself. She climbed up to the
+platform that two of the girls had built, and sat there. There was no
+use denying it, she did not want to go home. She was going, of course,
+and going to nurse her mother just as well as she possibly could, and
+look after her father with all the powers she had learned in the Camp
+Fire activities. And she was sorry her mother's ankle hurt her--very,
+very sorry. But--oh, dear! There was a beautiful new dance that Edith,
+who went into Wampoag and got lessons, which she passed promptly on, had
+been going to teach her. There was a new kind of cooking she had been
+going to teach a group of Blue Birds. There was a new dive--well, there
+were any amount of things, that if anyone had asked her about, she would
+have said she simply _couldn't_ break off. But she had to. And cooking
+at home in August was very different from doing it in the woods with a
+lot of other girls--and everyone she knew well was going to stay here--
+
+Winona sat up and mopped her eyes.
+
+"This isn't the way to follow the law of the Fire!" she reminded
+herself. "I can glorify work just as well home as here--better, in fact,
+for it's pretty certain there'll be more work to do!" She laughed a
+little.
+
+"Coming up, Winona!" called Helen from below.
+
+"Come on!" called back Winona.
+
+"What's the matter?" inquired Helen when she gained the platform.
+"You've been crying."
+
+"I've got to go home." Winona gave the news briefly. "Mother's sprained
+her ankle."
+
+"Oh, what a perfect shame!" said Helen.
+
+"I know I'm taking it like a baby," said Winona with a gulp, "instead of
+being noble and acting as if I liked going home. And of course I'm
+going. Only--only I do wish mother had picked out any time but this to
+sprain a perfectly good ankle!"
+
+"Can't she get somebody else to come take care of things?" asked Helen.
+"I don't know how on earth we'll get along without you, Win. You never
+say much, but somehow you're the centre of things. We'll miss you
+awfully!"
+
+Winona blushed at the compliment, and reached down to pat Helen's hand.
+
+"You're a dear, Helen, to think so. But you'll all get along all right.
+It's I that will have most of the missing to do. No, there's nobody
+mother could get. Aunt Jenny's off in the White Mountains, getting well
+from something herself. And all we have at home is Clay--the little
+colored boy mother got at the Children's Aid. From what Tom said he's a
+regular Topsy. No, I have to go home. Oh, think of it, Helen! Hot
+housekeeping all August and half September, with every single girl I
+know well up here, canoeing and swimming and folk-dancing and all sorts
+of splendid things! You'll all have beads down to your feet."
+
+This time it was Helen who patted Winona.
+
+Presently Winona mopped her eyes again and threw back her shoulders.
+
+"Come along, Helen; I've had my little weep out. Now I'm going to tell
+Mrs. Bryan about it, and trot off home looking pleased to death at the
+prospect."
+
+They swung themselves down from the tree-house, and started back to camp
+at a slow run. There was a good deal to do. There was everything of
+Winona's to pack, and Florence's, too, if she was really going, and she
+insisted that she was.
+
+"I won't be a bit of trouble," she said, "and I'll be a real help.
+You'll see!"
+
+So they packed everything, and said good-bye to everybody, and were
+paddled up the lake to Wampoag, where they were to take the train for
+home. They had to stop over at the Scouts' camp and break the news to
+Tom. But Winona invited him fervently to stay where he was. She knew
+that with the best will in the world to be useful a boy makes more work
+than he does, and has to be cooked for to quite an extent. Tom said he
+would be down the next day to see his mother, but he would go back
+again.
+
+"Good-bye, dears," said Mrs. Bryan, who was seeing them off, when she
+parted from Florence and Winona at the dock, "I know you'll be happy.
+Remember we'll miss you all the time, Ray-of-Light. And I don't know
+what I'll do without Florence to run errands for me. Come back as soon
+as your mother can spare you."
+
+"We will," said Winona. "Only it feels like the poetry--don't you
+remember?
+
+ "Remember what I tell you, says the old man to his son--
+ Be good and you'll be happy--but you won't have any fun!"
+
+"Just the same," said the Guardian, "being what you are, Winona, I'd
+venture to promise you that in the long run you will get more happiness
+out of being happy than out of having fun."
+
+Winona laughed as she kissed her good-bye.
+
+"I'm going to plan ways for glorifying work and being happy all the way
+down on the train," she said, "but I haven't any--well--thoroughly
+planned--yet!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was nearly nightfall when Winona reached home, for she had not
+started till a late afternoon train. She found her mother established in
+the living-room, where a door opening on the hall gave her a good view
+of the kitchen, and Clay in it. She looked well, but tired, and her foot
+was bandaged and on a pillow.
+
+"You're sure you didn't mind coming home, dear?" was the first thing her
+mother said. "It was a shame you had to!"
+
+Winona had to reassure her mother so fervently about her being willing
+to come back, and even liking to, that she began to find she really did!
+It was pleasant there, after all. The garden was full of blooming
+flowers, and it was a cool, pleasant day.
+
+"What shall I do first, mother?" she asked, as she and Florence sat each
+with one of their mother's hands, and tried to tell her all about
+everything at once.
+
+"The first thing for you to do," said Mrs. Merriam, "is to get baths and
+put on cool dresses, both of you, and come down to dinner. Your father
+and Clay are getting it. You aren't to do a thing till to-morrow, dear.
+You must be tired with your trip."
+
+"I don't think anything could tire me!" said Winona blithely. And she
+and Florence, as each of them in turn took baths in the one thing a camp
+doesn't possess--a bathtub--felt that it was good to be home and have
+mother pet you, after all!
+
+"It certainly is good to have you back, children," said their father, as
+he sat with a daughter on each side of him after dinner. They had their
+mother out on the back porch with them. It was nearly as large as the
+front one, and she could be moved, couch and all, through a front window
+with very little trouble. "Now I can have an afternoon off from
+housekeeping. But I've done well, haven't I, Mary?"
+
+"You certainly have," said Mrs. Merriam, "and it's been hard for you,
+too. But now that I have my Camp Fire Girls back nobody's going to need
+to do one thing."
+
+"Not a thing!" said Florence. "We've learned ever so many things,
+mother. We're going to house-keep better'n you ever did!"
+
+The family shouted. It was so like Florence.
+
+"I don't think quite that," said Winona modestly. "But we're going to
+have a lovely time running things, anyway!"
+
+So next morning the "lovely time" began.
+
+It seemed queer to waken on a mattress instead of on a pine bed; still
+stranger to hear the alarm-clock go off. Winona did not like
+alarm-clocks, and she threw a pillow at it before she stopped to think.
+But she got up as it told her, for all that, and was downstairs in
+twenty minutes. She had put on a blue ripplette work-dress, fresh and
+pretty. It was pleasant to have on a pretty frock instead of the camp
+uniform.
+
+"There are lots of nice things!" she said to herself sturdily. "I'm
+going to enjoy myself every minute, if I have to tie a string to my
+finger to remind me!"
+
+She found Clay, whose acquaintance she had made the night before,
+already down. The cereal was in the double boiler and the coffee in the
+percolator, already.
+
+"Hit ain' much to do fo' breakfast," said he encouragingly. "Ah do it
+maself, mos'ly." And indeed he proved so expert that all Winona found
+left her to do was gathering the flowers for the table, and cutting the
+oranges. Breakfast had more frills than usual, though--Winona had come
+home prepared for work, and she found some to do. The oranges were
+loosened back from their skins like grape-fruit, there were finger-bowls
+with flower-petals floating on top, the cereal dishes had little plates
+underneath, and even the hot corn-bread, which Winona, by the way,
+discovered Clay did not know how to make, was stacked in a highly
+artistic log-cabin pattern. Winona, with a little white apron over her
+fresh blue dress, sat and poured the coffee importantly. Her father
+smiled with pleasure, as she sat opposite him, flushed and pretty and
+dainty.
+
+"Well!" he said. "This is certainly a fine beginning, Winnie! Did you
+learn all this in the woods?"
+
+Winona colored with pleasure.
+
+"No, I think I knew most of it before I went," she said. "That is, all
+but the corn-bread--that was an experiment."
+
+"And see!" said Florence. "Flowers in the finger-bowls!"
+
+"But you mustn't work too hard, little daughter," said her father, as he
+went into the living-room to bid his wife good-bye before he went to
+business.
+
+Winona followed him closely with her mother's tray. Mrs. Merriam was
+dressed, and Mr. Merriam had helped her downstairs and to her couch. It
+had been rather fun to arrange the tray with doilies and the daintiest
+china. She carried it in as her father came out.
+
+"Good-morning, mother!" she said gayly. "Things are going beautifully,
+and housekeeping's fun!"
+
+"That's my brave little girl!" said her mother. "But I must warn you,
+Ray-of-Light, that you'll get over-tired if you try to put on too many
+trimmings. The trouble with housekeeping is, you never get a vacation.
+It keeps on all day long. Simplify all you can."
+
+Winona laughed. "I refuse to start on your tray!" said she.
+
+She made her mother as comfortable as she could, then went back to the
+kitchen.
+
+"Now, Clay," she said, "Mrs. Merriam's sent for me to come home to run
+things. You and I are going to get as much fun out of the work as we
+can, and do it just as well and as fast as we know how. Aren't we?"
+
+"Yas'm," said Clay doubtfully. "But dey ain' no fun to be got outen
+washin' dishes," he added with conviction.
+
+Winona looked thoughtful.
+
+"No, I suppose there isn't," she admitted. "But there ought to be. Up at
+the Camp we got credit for what we did, if it was done right. I
+wonder----"
+
+"You mean dem credits what folks buys groceries with?" interrupted Clay.
+
+"No," said Winona. "But--I'll tell you, Clay, I have a plan! I'll put a
+chart up here on the kitchen wall. Every time you get the dishes washed
+and put away in half an hour, without breaking them, three times a day
+for a week, you get credit--for fifteen cents. What do you think of
+that?"
+
+"Ah like it!" said Clay. "But Ah rather have de two cents a day."
+
+"All right," promised Winona rashly. "Now go ahead with the dishes while
+I put fresh paper on the shelves."
+
+"Don't take it too hard, dear," Mrs. Merriam warned her once more, when
+Winona ran in, breathless from vigorous bedmaking, to report progress.
+"What are you going to do now?"
+
+"Now? Nothing till lunch time. I'm so glad we have dinner at night.
+It'll be lots easier to get the hardest meal when it's cooler, and
+there's been a rest between."
+
+"You dear child!" said her mother, reaching out her hand to Winona where
+she sat by the sofa. "You're bound to look on the bright side."
+
+"I'm bound to glorify work and be happy," said Winona gayly. "Now,
+mother, I'd like some money. I'd rather not start with a regular
+housekeeping allowance till Monday. But right now I want a dish-mop, and
+a soap-maker, and some new white oil-cloth for the kitchen dresser. Can
+I have all that?"
+
+"Certainly," said her mother. "Keep the kitchen as spic and span as you
+can. The fresher the surroundings, the easier it is to work."
+
+So after luncheon, which wasn't much trouble because there was no man to
+cook for, Winona and Florence went shopping, leaving Clay singing "Ma
+Honey Man" cheerfully over his dishes. The money their mother had given
+them bought not only the things Winona went after, but pink and blue
+chambray for aprons for herself and Florence, and red for Clay.
+
+"The pretty aprons will make it more fun to be in the kitchen--don't you
+think so, Florence?" asked Winona.
+
+Florence, naturally, thought so, too, and they bought them and made them
+up before the day was over. Florence asked of her own accord for
+definite things to do. And an idea came to Winona--that they start a
+system of home honor-beads.
+
+"Of course they won't really count," she explained to her little sister,
+"but they'll always be there to remind us of our work."
+
+"That will be lovely!" said Florence, "but what will they be like?"
+
+"Wait and see," said Winona.
+
+That day was all used up making the new long aprons and the mob-caps to
+match, dainty and Kate-Greenaway looking. But the next morning after the
+beds were done they went to sit with their mother. She said they could
+make the beads there with her. Winona ran out into the garden and
+brought back a handful of flowers that she put in water, and set beside
+her mother's couch.
+
+"How do you feel, mother?" she asked.
+
+"It doesn't hurt badly at all," said her mother cheerfully.
+
+Winona carried out the tray, and moved about, straightening her mother's
+room a little more before she sat down to her work.
+
+"You're sure we're not in your way, mother?" she asked.
+
+"Indeed you aren't!" said her mother. "You don't know how lonely I've
+been with all my children gone. And do let in all the air and sunshine
+you can, dear. It may be hot later, so that we'll have to shut out the
+light a part of the day."
+
+"All right," said Winona, doing it. Then she called to Florence.
+
+"Florence, will you get the oil-paints that we use for stencilling?" she
+asked. "I can borrow them, mother, can't I?"
+
+Mrs. Merriam was perfectly willing, and while Florence was getting the
+tubes of paints, and the brushes, Winona brought out a jar of ordinary
+kidney-beans from the kitchen. She spread newspapers on the floor and on
+the table, and when Florence came back with the paint she set to work.
+
+"Just beans!" said Florence scornfully. "You can't make beads out of
+_them!_"
+
+"Can't I?" said Winona, "Well, if you don't like them when they're done,
+I'll buy you a string of any kind of colored ones that you want."
+
+"Thank you," said Florence, settling down to watch her sister.
+
+The first thing Winona did was to pierce each of the beans lengthwise
+with a steel knitting-needle, which she heated in the alcohol lamp's
+flame. This was the longest part of the work. Next she strung them all
+on a long piece of cord. Then while Florence held one end of the cord
+and she the other, Winona dashed each bead in turn with touches of
+color, one after another--rose, blue, green and violet. She finished
+them with little flecks of gold paint, and fastened one end to the
+chandelier, where the beads could swing free and dry soon. The girls got
+luncheon while the beads were drying.
+
+After luncheon was eaten and cleared away the girls went to work on
+their beads again. Florence held the string while Winona went over them
+with shellac.
+
+"I think we'd better put them outdoors this time," she decided. "The
+smell of the shellac may worry mother."
+
+So they swung the beads from the hammock rope.
+
+"Do you think you will want to wear them?" she asked Florence, as she
+came back and began to clear away the paint-spotted newspapers.
+
+"I should just think I would!" said Florence enthusiastically. "Why,
+they look just like the ones in the Wampoag stores, only lots prettier."
+
+"Who told you how to make them, Winnie?" asked her mother. "They are
+certainly lovely."
+
+"Nobody," said Winona. "I saw some like them, and thought I could do
+it--that's all."
+
+"I think you ought to get a real honor-bead for that," said Florence.
+"I'm going to put down everything you do that I think might get honors
+for you."
+
+"I'll keep track, too," said Mrs. Merriam. "That's a good idea,
+Florence. Then perhaps Winona's having to leave the Camp won't be such a
+setback. Give me a pencil, dear, and that little black notebook by it."
+
+They wrote down the making of the beads.
+
+"We must keep watch, you and I, Florence," Mrs. Merriam said.
+
+Winona looked radiant.
+
+"I'm going to write to Camp now, mother," she said, "and I'll ask Mrs.
+Bryan about counting things like this. It would be lovely if I got on as
+fast here as there--but I don't believe it's possible."
+
+"Wait and see," said Mrs. Merriam.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
+
+
+Of course, things didn't always go smoothly, even with Winona's young
+energy and good-will hard at work. "Accidents will happen in the best
+regulated families" was a proverb whose meaning Winona learned
+thoroughly before she was through. There was, for instance, a tragic
+Saturday when she made ice-cream with most of the ice in the ice-box,
+and forgot to telephone for more. A sizzlingly hot Sunday dawned, with
+no ice to be had. So the Sunday chicken and lettuce were badly spoiled,
+not to mention various tempers. Winona, tired, hot, and with a
+consciousness of guilt, spent most of Sunday afternoon in the kitchen
+trying crossly to invent a Sunday night supper which did not need milk,
+eggs or salad. The day ended with a found-at-the-last-minute meal of
+potted tongue and canned peaches, and a general forgiveness all round,
+but it was a long time after that before Winona forgot it; indeed, she
+was known to get out of bed to take final peeps at the ice-chest and
+make sure it was filled.
+
+Nevertheless, and in spite of all the mishaps that are bound to worry
+housekeepers, a light heart, a strong body and the fixed intention to
+make the best of things carried Winona triumphantly past her worries.
+Presently she found that things were settling into a regular routine,
+and that housekeeping was more interesting than hard. Best of all, she
+found she had a great deal of time to herself.
+
+Then Tom came home. The Scouts had had to break up earlier than they
+expected, for two or three reasons. One was that Mr. Gedney had to get
+back to his business, another was that several of the boys worked, and
+had to get back, too. So Tom descended on his family, and Billy appeared
+next door. And things began to happen.
+
+Tom tried faithfully not to be any trouble, and succeeded pretty well.
+And Mrs. Merriam's ankle got better, slowly, as bad sprains do.
+Presently she was well enough to be taken in a wheel chair to see her
+friends. She usually went to spend the day.
+
+One day everything seemed particularly calm and serene. Tom had wheeled
+the mother to the other end of town, early in the morning, and she was
+going to be taken for a long automobile ride by one of her friends. Tom
+had taken a pocketful of sandwiches, and gone off for a fishing-trip. So
+Winona built a mound of more sandwiches for herself and Florence, and
+prepared to take a day off.
+
+She was curled up on the front porch in a hammock, reading, when the
+first thing occurred.
+
+"Does Miss Winona Merriam live here?" inquired a familiar voice; and
+Winona, looking up, saw Louise, dusty and beaming.
+
+"Oh, Louise, you angel! How lovely it is to see you!" she said, jumping
+up and hugging her friend.
+
+"Yes, isn't it?" said Louise, hugging back. "I came down on the train,
+and I'm here to spend the day, if you want me."
+
+"Want you! I should think I did!" said Winona. "Come in and get cool."
+
+"I'm not hot," said Louise, "but I _would_ like a drink of water."
+
+They were in the kitchen, fussing about pleasurably together, when they
+heard steps clattering up the porch.
+
+"It's the ice-man," said Winona. "I must pay him."
+
+She ran upstairs, and Louise went on helping herself to sandwiches. She
+had eaten three, and was considering whether she really wanted anything
+more till lunch-time, when a large, fishy hand dropped over her shoulder
+and took a handful of ham-and-lettuce ones.
+
+"Tom Merriam! There won't be enough for lunch if we both eat them! I
+thought you'd gone off fishing for the day."
+
+"So did I," said Tom leisurely, "but I found I hadn't. Where did you
+blow in from?"
+
+"Camp," she said. "Winona's upstairs hunting for change. She thought you
+walked like the ice-man."
+
+"Poor Win! She has that ice-man on her mind," said Tom. "Nay, nay,
+little one. For far other reason am I here."
+
+He struck an attitude, with the sandwich he hadn't finished waving over
+his head.
+
+"Got hungry?" asked Louise prosaically.
+
+"Not at all," said Tom. "It was this way. As I was purchasing bait, I
+met my father."
+
+"Well--did he send you home?"
+
+"Not exactly. Only--there's a convention in town. A ministers'
+convention. And father's met two long-lost college chums, which--or
+who--are coming here to dinner to-night. One has a wife. Better tell
+Winona, and have Clay put on some extra plates. And--I forgot--here's a
+fish I caught before I used up my bait and met father. Have him boiled
+or something for dinner with some of that stuff like mayonnaise dressing
+with green things in."
+
+"Your father?" asked Louise frivolously.
+
+"No, the fish!"
+
+Tom rushed upstairs to change his clothes, while Louise thoughtfully ate
+another sandwich and called Winona.
+
+Winona came running down the back stairs.
+
+"Did you keep him?" she said. "I couldn't find where I'd put the
+change."
+
+"It wasn't the ice-man," said Louise, "it was Tom."
+
+"Tom?" asked Winona. "But he was gone for the day."
+
+"Anyway, he's back. And--Winona Merriam, we'll have to make more
+sandwiches for supper, or dinner or whatever it is. Two ministers and
+one wife are coming here to dinner to-night."
+
+Winona sprang to her feet and snapped her book shut.
+
+"_Sandwiches!_" she said scornfully. "Don't you know you have to _feed_
+convention people? Mother would die, and the Ladies' Aid faint in a
+body, if we gave them sandwiches for dinner. No. They have to have a
+course dinner!"
+
+"Where are you going to get it?" asked Louise meekly.
+
+"Here!" said Winona. "I found one in a magazine the other day. Let's see
+what we can do with it."
+
+Louise looked at Winona with respect. "Do you often rise to occasions
+this way?" she asked.
+
+"This is the almost human intelligence that I have sometimes," said
+Winona.
+
+"Sure it's intelligence?" asked Louise doubtfully.
+
+Winona led the way upstairs toward her scrapbook without deigning to
+reply. Both girls bent eagerly over the course dinner she had pasted in
+on the last page.
+
+"Shellfish, soup, fish, salad, roast, entrees, vegetables, dessert,
+black coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins," she read. "These, in the order
+named, constitute a simple dinner."
+
+"I'd like to know who brought up the woman who wrote that," commented
+Louise. "The Emperor of Russia, I should think."
+
+"Anyway, I am going to try to have it," said Winona. "We can have
+oysters to begin with, because Tom always has some around for bait."
+
+"That kind mayn't be good to eat," objected Louise.
+
+"Never mind. Perhaps these people won't know the difference, just think
+they're a brand-new kind."
+
+"You don't open them till the very last thing, and then you serve them
+with ice on their heads to keep them cool, and lemon slices. I know that
+much," said Louise, following Winona downstairs again.
+
+"Then we won't open them till the very last thing, and forget all about
+them till Tom comes downstairs again," said Winona with decision.
+"Soup--let's see. Oh, I know! Mother had me make some bouillon this
+morning, for old Mrs. Johnson down in Hallam's Alley. We'll serve that
+in the bouillon cups, and make Mrs. Johnson some more to-morrow, or take
+her chewing-tobacco instead. She'd much rather have it, she says."
+
+"All right. And Tom brought some fish in," supplied Louise.
+
+They went out to inspect the fish, and found that there would be plenty,
+if it was carefully distributed.
+
+"Doesn't everything dovetail beautifully?" said Winona thankfully.
+"What's next?"
+
+"Salad," said Louise, consulting the scrapbook. "Haven't you any lettuce
+in the garden?"
+
+"Of course we have!" said Winona. "All there is to do is to pick it."
+
+"Well--the roast?"
+
+But here there was a deadlock.
+
+"There isn't a thing in the house to roast," said Winona, "and this time
+of year you have to telephone early to get things." She moved to the
+telephone, and pulled herself back in dismay. "This is Wednesday!" she
+said. "And all the shops are closed Wednesday afternoon!"
+
+"It isn't afternoon, yet," said Louise.
+
+"Look at the clock," said Winona.
+
+And it was afternoon--one o'clock.
+
+"Perhaps that's a stray butcher," said Louise, as they heard a long,
+loud knock at the kitchen door.
+
+But it was only Billy Lee, who explained that he had tried every door
+but this in vain. He had a note to Winona from his sister. He perched
+himself on the stationary tubs while she read it, on the chance that she
+might want to write an answer.
+
+"Come over and stay with me this afternoon," it said. "I have a
+headache."
+
+"Oh, I can't, Billy!" explained Winona, looking up from the note. "We
+have dinner to get for two ministers and their wife, and--Billy, you
+have a great deal of steady common sense. I heard father say so. What
+would you do if there wasn't any meat, or any time to get any, or any
+place to get it?"
+
+Billy tucked his foot under him, and looked serious, mechanically taking
+a sandwich as he thought. The girls were eating them, too, for it had
+been silently agreed that that would be all the lunch they would bother
+with.
+
+"Why not try Puppums?" he suggested. "If they're missionaries they're
+used to roast dog. Every missionary has to learn to like it in the last
+year of his course."
+
+"Yes, or we might roast Clay," said Louise scornfully. "Why don't you
+suggest that? He isn't any use, goodness knows, and they may have been
+missionaries to the cannibals!" She glanced at the small darky, who was
+sitting on the cellar door in happy idleness, singing fragments of
+popular songs to himself.
+
+"You ought to make him useful," said Billy. "Here, Clay, get up and help
+your young ladies."
+
+"Ah _is_ helpin' 'em," said Clay with dignity; nevertheless he rose and
+came in for further orders.
+
+"Down home," continued Billy, "we always kill a chicken when we expect a
+minister."
+
+"But we haven't so much as a papier-mache Easter chick," objected
+Louise.
+
+"The people next door but one have," said Winona excitedly, starting up.
+"It's against the law to keep chickens within the city limits, but they
+do it. But they're away for the day."
+
+"They're always getting into your garden and tempting poor old Puppums
+to chase them," said Billy sympathetically.
+
+Winona, acting on his suggestion, went to the door and looked out.
+
+"Yes," she said. "There's one there now. There nearly always is."
+
+Louise lifted one eyebrow. "Well?" said she.
+
+"Very well," said Winona. "Come on, ladies and gentlemen. We are going
+to catch a next-door-but-one chicken, and pay the Janeways for him
+to-morrow."
+
+"When Puppums caught one last week," said Florence, appearing suddenly,
+evidently in full possession of the conversation, "you tied it round his
+neck!"
+
+She went down under the tubs to extract the wronged animal and
+sympathize with him on the injustice of life. But only Puppums heard
+her, for Billy and Winona, hindered by Clay, were careering wildly about
+after a vociferous, very agile fowl. It was finally captured with a
+crab-net, and led away to execution by Clay. It appeared that he, also,
+had had experience in chicken-killing for clergymen. He had often done
+it, he said, very artistically.
+
+As he and the rooster passed on their way to the scaffold, Winona ran
+into the kitchen, and out again with a scream.
+
+"It's Henry!" she said wildly. "It's Henry! We've caught the Janeways's
+pet rooster! Clay! Clay!"
+
+"Yas'm!" said Clay, appearing with Henry's head in one hand and his body
+in the other. "Dis heah roosteh she certn'ly is good an' daid! I c'n fix
+'em!"
+
+"And they loved him so!" said Winona tragically. "They were telling
+mother only yesterday how intellectual he was. 'Not clever, merely,'
+Mrs. Janeway said, 'but really intellectual, my dear Mrs. Merriam!'"
+
+Billy clutched the tubs in order to laugh better, and Louise sat down
+just where she was, on the floor.
+
+"What's the matter?" called Tom, running downstairs very clean and tidy.
+
+"Winona's murdered the Janeways's intellectual rooster!" explained
+Billy; and lay back on the tubs again.
+
+Tom, too, began to howl.
+
+"What--Henry?" he said, when he could speak. "Oh, Winnie, you _have_
+done it! They've had him in the family since their grandfather's time
+anyway. Well, you'd better make the best of it, and have Clay take out
+his interior decorations. Maybe we can eat him if you boil him long
+enough. I could have robbed the Martins's tank of their tame goldfish if
+I'd known you wanted a dinner of household pets." He sat down on the
+tubs by Billy and went off again.
+
+"I suggested Puppums in the first place!" gurgled Billy.
+
+"Never mind, Win," said Louise, going over to Winona, who stood
+mournfully by the window, "I'll attend to Henry. We'll boil him first
+and then bake him, and he'll be quite good. I'll make the stuffing for
+him, too. I know how quite well."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Louise!" and Winona brightened up.
+
+"Oh," teased Billy, "then the remorse isn't because he's Henry, but
+because he's tough?"
+
+"It's both," said Winona, "but there's no use being uselessly remorseful
+when you have work to do. I can feel ever so badly about it when I go to
+bed to-night. I often do. The fish is all right, anyway, and I'm going
+to make some sauce hollandaise for it out of the cookbook. Really all
+you need to know how to cook is a cookbook and intelligence."
+
+"I see the cookbook, but where----" began Tom.
+
+"Billy Lee," said Winona firmly, "if you came to see Tom, won't you
+please take him out on the front porch and see him?"
+
+"I didn't!" said Billy coolly. "I came to bring Nataly's note, and I'm
+staying to see you invent a ten-course dinner, if you'll let me. Let me
+stay to dinner, Henry and all, and I'll make your fish-sauce. All you
+need is a cookbook and intelligence----"
+
+"Two clergymen," counted Winona, "one wife, father, Louise, Tom,
+me--Florence is going out to supper, she said this morning. You'll just
+make eight, Billy. Come and welcome, only please leave the fish-sauce
+alone."
+
+But Billy had already tied himself into a big pink apron, and was mixing
+butter and flour in a saucepan with every sign of knowing what he was
+about.
+
+There was a brief, tense silence while the chicken, some white potatoes
+and onions, were put on to boil, sweet potatoes laid in the oven to be
+baked, and Clay sent into the garden for lettuce and radishes. They did
+not light any of the gas-stove burners except the one under the late
+Henry, because the afternoon was yet long. They went out on the porch
+and talked for a couple of hours. There was a general feeling that they
+mustn't get too far away from the dinner.
+
+About four Winona remembered to say to Tom, "Have you any bait-clams or
+oysters? We need them for our first course."
+
+"Bait!" said Tom. "Considering we've stolen the meat from the neighbors,
+and robbed the poor of the soup, and I caught the fish, we can afford to
+buy a few blue-points. I'll go down and get them. Is there anything else
+you'd like while I'm down town?"
+
+"Is it too late to order ice-cream?"
+
+"I'm afraid so," he said. "The ice-cream places won't be open till
+five-thirty, and then only for an hour, you know."
+
+"The dairies are," Winona remembered. "Please buy some cream on your way
+back, and we'll find a receipt and make it. There are nuts and raisins
+in the house. Crackers--cheese.... I think we'll have enough for
+dinner."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder!" said her brother thoughtfully, as he walked away
+to get his wheel.
+
+The others went back to the kitchen, and Billy went on with his sauce
+hollandaise--that is, he took it out of the bowl of water where it had
+been cooling, and put it in the ice-chest.
+
+"Why, it's good!" said Winona, rather impolitely, having sampled it on
+its way.
+
+"Of course it's good!" said Billy serenely. "Didn't I ever tell you
+about our old cook down south, and how I adored her? I used to tag round
+after her all the time when I was small--never would stay with my
+nurse--and I learned a lot of things. And seeing I'm going to be invited
+to this banquet, looks like I'd better make the ice-cream for you."
+
+"Oh, can you?"
+
+"Watch me!" said Billy for all answer.
+
+As a matter of fact, when Tom got back with the blue-points and the
+cream, he and Billy went to work together, and they compounded a
+pineapple ice-cream that was fit for the gods. Louise, meanwhile,
+stuffed the parboiled fowl and put him in to roast. The boys captured
+Clay, who had gone back to his cellar door and his songs, and set him to
+crushing ice. Winona sat down on the tubs where Billy had been, and gave
+herself up to deep thought. The entree had not yet been solved.
+
+"Pancake batter?" she said aloud at last, in a mildly conversational
+tone.
+
+"I'm sure of it," said Billy, poking his head in from the back porch.
+
+"If I take that pancake batter I got ready for to-morrow morning,
+sweeten it, and put butter and eggs and peaches in it, I don't see why
+it wouldn't be peach fritters. Anyway I can try ... then you drop them
+in the lard...."
+
+She thought it over a little longer silently. Then she jumped down, and
+went into the cellar for the batter and the peaches, and brought them
+out on the back porch, near the ice-box, to experiment with. Tom had
+gone back to the pantry to see if there was cake enough, but Billy was
+still packing ice and salt around the ice-cream.
+
+"Dear me!" said Winona, setting down her load on a low shelf. "I hate to
+see you doing all this. You're company, you know, and here we're letting
+you get a lot of the dinner. It worries me!"
+
+"Don't let it," counselled Billy, tossing a lock of hair out of his eyes
+and going on with the packing. "I'm having a good time. To tell you the
+truth, I always have a good time over here. I rather feel as if I
+belonged to the family--and that's a nice feel to have. You're a good
+little chum, Winnie.... If you don't let me pack all the freezers and
+things I want to I'll just have to go back to merely being let in once
+in awhile, like company."
+
+"I feel as if you belonged to the family, too, Billy," said Winona
+sincerely, "and if your packing freezers is any sign you do, go right
+on, please."
+
+"I am," Billy assured her with his usual placidity.
+
+"The lard's hot, Win! Come see if they'll frit!" called Louise from
+within; and Winona dashed off with her batter. But it was nice to have
+Billy feel that way about things. He was certainly the nicest boy she
+knew....
+
+They began together, she and Louise, to drop the yellow batter into the
+fat, while Clay and the boys turned the freezer by turns. Louise and
+Winona had become so excited about their dinner by this time that a mere
+fritter-sauce was nothing. They made one, it seemed to them afterwards,
+looking back, without knowing how they did it, and it was very good at
+that.
+
+"Oysters, soup, fish, salad," muttered Winona for the twentieth time. "I
+believe everything's ready but the cream, and that must be almost
+finished. Boys!" she called out through the back door, "will you please
+go and deck yourselves for the feast? Wear your tuxedos, please. We're
+going to keep up the Merriam reputation for hospitality, or die in the
+attempt!"
+
+"All right--just wait till we pack it," Tom called back.
+
+But she saw that they had separated in quest of their evening clothes
+before she left. Tom had just acquired his first set, and wasn't
+particularly fond of them. But he put them on meekly, just the same.
+
+"We'd better dress, too," said Louise. "I'll run over home and slip some
+things in a suitcase, and be right back again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
+
+
+Louise was as good as her word. She was back in a very few minutes, and
+in Winona's room again. She found her friend standing in the middle of
+the floor, her dress exactly what it had been when she left.
+
+"Better hurry," warned Louise. "We haven't overmuch time."
+
+"Hurry!" said Winona despairingly. "How can I? Do you know what I've
+done? I've hung away every single thin dress I own in the wardrobe,
+instead of putting them in the wash. I knew there was something I'd
+forgotten, and I couldn't think what it was."
+
+"Oh, how dreadful!" said Louise. "You'll have to put on something
+gorgeous, to match the boys' clothes."
+
+"What can I do?" asked Winona sadly, and swung open the doors of her
+wardrobe. There, crumpled, forlorn, dejected, hung a line of dresses
+each hopelessly past wearing in its present state.
+
+"Isn't that a nice trick for a Camp Fire Girl?" inquired Winona
+scornfully. "It's the kind of thing you'd lecture a Blue Bird kindly but
+firmly for doing, and make her see what a wreck she was going to make of
+her whole life if she kept on."
+
+"Never mind," said Louise soothingly. "You've had so many other things
+to do, it's no wonder you couldn't remember that. Haven't you anything
+but wash dresses? Where's your yellow silk voile?"
+
+"I _did_ remember that!" said Winona with a reluctant grin. "I sent it
+to the cleaner's day before yesterday. It won't be done till Saturday."
+
+"What about your flowered dimity? Is all the freshness out of that? You
+don't wear it often."
+
+"I sent for it from camp, for one of the girls to use in the Samantha
+tableaux, and the girl still has it, I suppose. She never gave it back.
+I forgot to ask for it, in the hurry of getting home. There's no use
+trying to think. I've thought and thought, and everything else is too
+hot to wear, or soiled. There's nothing for it but a shirtwaist and
+skirt."
+
+"Anything of mine would be up to your knees, and baggy," said Louise
+thoughtfully. "Wait a minute, Win, till I think."
+
+"I'll do my hair while you're at it," said Winona.
+
+"Why couldn't you borrow something of your mother's?" was Louise's next
+thought.
+
+"Mother wears long dresses," said Winona. "If she didn't I could--I'm
+nearly her build."
+
+"Couldn't you pin them up?"
+
+"I declare, I believe I'll try," exclaimed Winona daringly. She ran out
+of the room, while Louise went on with her own dressing, and came back
+in a minute with a fresh, silk-lined black organdy over her arm.
+
+"This is all there is for it," she said. "Mother would be willing, I
+know, if she were here. She always wants me to wear her things."
+
+"It's lovely," said Louise admiringly, as Winona's pink cheeks and blue
+eyes appeared above the soft black, "but I'm afraid we'll hurt it if we
+put pins in it."
+
+"I won't pin it up, then," said Winona. "The guests will never know the
+difference. I don't suppose father has mentioned my age."
+
+"You'll look awfully old!"
+
+"I don't care! Have you any black hair-ribbons you could let me have,
+Louise? I see where I never get the honor bead for not borrowing, by the
+way!"
+
+"You won't lose it on account of my ribbons," said Louise, "because I
+haven't any. But I don't believe hair-ribbons and your gown would match.
+Did you know you had a train?"
+
+"No!" said Winona joyfully. She loved "dressing up," and this was
+beginning to look very much like it. "I'll do my hair up on top of my
+head, and nobody'll think I'm younger than twenty!"
+
+"Good!" said Louise, and helped. They wound the goldy-brown mass up on
+the very top, and completed the effect by hunting out a pair of plain
+glass eye-glasses, which Tom had brought from the ten-cent store once
+long ago.
+
+"You look twenty-five anyway!" exclaimed Louise, and Winona fitted the
+glasses on her nose and assumed a severe expression to match. "Put your
+hair back off your forehead--that way.... That's splendid!"
+
+"I do look old!" said Winona, with a pleased expression. She trained up
+and down the room and looked at herself in the glass. "I'll go down
+now."
+
+"I'll be there in a minute," said Louise. "Don't wait for me."
+
+When Winona sailed down in her disguise to put the finishing touches to
+the table she found that Tom was already dressed, and was standing
+meekly at the head of the board. And also he had found time to decorate
+it.
+
+"How do you like it?" he asked in a tone even meeker than his attitude.
+
+Winona looked, pulled off her glasses in order to see better, looked
+again--and dropped down in a hopeless heap in the opposite chair. She
+did not say anything--the situation was beyond words.
+
+"Don't you like it?" said Tom again sweetly.
+
+"Like it!" said Winona, beginning to giggle.
+
+Four half-barrel hoops had been wreathed in smilax, and arched across
+the table at regular intervals, one at each end and one between each two
+places. In the middle of the table, completely hiding the olives, lay a
+half-opened gridiron, also wound with smilax. It was all very neatly
+done, for Tom was very neat-handed; but the general effect was rather
+startling.
+
+"It--why, it looks like somebody's grave!" said Winona protestingly.
+
+Her tone was so stern that Puppums rose from beneath the table and tried
+nervously to hide under the sideboard, revealing as he went a decoration
+of smilax round his neck, continued in a garland down his spine,
+fastened at the tail. He did not seem to like it.
+
+"That's what it is!" said Tom complacently, as Winona pounced on the
+abject dog and unwreathed him. "Here's the magazine I got it from. You
+said to. All there was in this month's copy was a page of neat and
+inexpensive grave decorations. I copied the handsomest one in the bunch,
+'William R. Hicks; complete cost of decoration three dollars and twenty
+cents.' That thing in the middle's a Gates Ajar, or the nearest I could
+get to it. It got a prize, too."
+
+"Do you suppose I want William R. Hicks's grave, or anybody's grave, on
+the table when we're having a special hand-made dinner that I've spent
+most of the afternoon on?" demanded his sister, laughing in spite of her
+objections.
+
+"What's the row?" asked Billy cheerfully, appearing in the door with an
+armful of roses and ferns.
+
+"I followed Win's directions about the table, and she doesn't seem to
+like it," said Tom in a voice that was intended to sound injured.
+
+"What's the gridiron for? A gentle reminder of the Cannibal Isles? We
+don't really know yet that they're missionaries!" said Billy.
+
+"Sorry you don't know a Gates Ajar when you see it," said Tom, grinning.
+
+"I do," said Billy decidedly. "That isn't one. Here are your roses,
+Winnie. You look like somebody's step-mother in all that train and
+glasses. Where did you get them?"
+
+"Winona!" called Louise, tearing downstairs, "I've just remembered that
+Clay has been calling the fritters 'crullers' ever since we made them.
+He'll send them in with the ice-cream if he isn't told not to."
+
+She fled to the kitchen.
+
+"Step-mother.... M'm," said Tom with a light of mischief in his eye; and
+followed Louise.
+
+"_Look_ at the table!" Winona implored Billy.
+
+Billy looked, took in the whole effect, and, as Winona had done, sat
+down to laugh in comfort.
+
+"It's not so bad, after all," he said comfortingly when he was through.
+"Let's take the bones out of these green wicket-things, and lay the
+vines straight across the table. They'll get into the eats, likely, but
+we can't stop for that. Can't you do anything with that gridiron ajar? I
+should think the stuff on it would look all right around a low bowl of
+roses."
+
+"Maybe it would," said Winona with renewed courage, and set to work
+stripping it while Billy took the supports from the smilax arches, and
+laid it flat, with an occasional rose at intervals. They found a low,
+wide bowl that, filled with roses, and wound with smilax, made an
+excellent centerpiece.
+
+Winona stepped back to view the general effect with a sigh of
+satisfaction.
+
+"Billy! I'll remember this afternoon of you to the longest day I live!"
+she said.
+
+"Billy! We want you!" called Louise from the kitchen in a smothered
+voice. Winona would have gone, too, for she was sure she heard giggles,
+but just at this moment Clay came in, and his inability to understand
+why he shouldn't add a wide red cheese-cloth sash to his white apron
+drove everything else out of her head. By the time she had argued him
+out of it the others were back, suspiciously grave.
+
+"Not here yet!" sighed Louise. "I feel as if I couldn't wait to have
+them taste my stuffing! Let's go into the living-room and sing, or go
+out back and play tag, or something."
+
+"Dar dey is!" shouted Clay, running to the window.
+
+The rest rushed, too, and looked over his woolly head.
+
+"A big one and a little one and a middle-sized wife, like the Three
+Bears," commented Winona. "They're coming in by the front way. Oh----"
+
+That was because the fritter-sauce boiled over just as the guests were
+ushered in. Both the girls forgot their manners, and ran to the kitchen
+to rescue it. So only Tom and Billy were in the living-room to be
+introduced.
+
+"My wife and daughter will be here presently," said Mr. Merriam, who had
+evidently forgotten that Mrs. Merriam was expected to stay away till
+about nine. "Tom, will you run up and tell your mother and Winona that
+our friends are here?"
+
+But even as he spoke Winona, a little breathless, but trained,
+psyche-knotted and eye-glassed, appeared in the doorway with Louise
+behind her. She came in with an air of dignity which her mother could
+not have bettered, and greeted her guests regally, in her excitement
+forgetting to wait for an introduction.
+
+Not so Tom.
+
+"My step-mother, and my sister," he whispered in the ear of Mr. Driggs,
+the tall minister, who promptly addressed Winona as "Mrs. Merriam."
+Winona thought he said "Miss," and went on talking excitedly about
+everything she could think of. Her father was deep in conversation with
+Mr. Donne, the other guest, who was a classmate of his. Tom's murmured
+"Mother isn't home yet--Winona's managing things----" scarcely stopped
+the flood of reminiscences.
+
+"I never heard that your father had a second wife," remarked Mrs. Driggs
+to Louise, who had selected her to talk to.
+
+"It's quite recent," said Louise sadly; and Mrs. Driggs did not ask any
+more questions.
+
+Before things got more complicated Clay announced dinner in an awestruck
+voice, and fled instead of holding aside the portieres for the guests,
+as he had been instructed. He had a good deal on his mind, for he could
+not read very well yet, so they had had to sketch each particular thing
+with a pencil, and pin the series of pictures against the wall in their
+order as they were to come. The pictures of the oysters and the sweet
+potatoes were very much alike, and, as Clay confided to Winona
+afterward, they worried him considerably.
+
+Winona seated her guests with the same dignity which had been hers ever
+since the train had; and led the conversation in the ways it should go,
+nobly assisted by Billy. It appeared Billy could talk like a grown-up
+person of forty when he wanted to--which wasn't often, for Billy was a
+rather silent person ordinarily. Tom and Louise were never, either of
+them, troubled by shyness, and except that they seemed to laugh a little
+more than the facts warranted they were just as usual.
+
+Every course, from old Mrs. Johnson's stolen bouillon to the black
+coffee, came on in its proper place and was eaten with enthusiasm. As
+the third course came on without mishap, Winona began to relax, and by
+the end of the dinner was quite at ease. Mr. Donne, beside her, was
+liking his dinner so much that for quite awhile Winona did not have to
+do any talking. When he did talk it was about Ladies' Aid Societies. Now
+Mrs. Merriam was the President of the Ladies' Aid of her church, not to
+speak of various things that she held minor offices in, and she was
+quite an authority. Mr. Donne had been told this, and he thought he was
+talking to Winona about something she was an authority on. Winona was
+rather bewildered, for she had never attended a Ladies' Aid meeting in
+her life, and like the inventor of the Purple Cow, till she was grown up
+"never hoped to see one." Nevertheless she struck out valiantly, and was
+getting on fairly well when Mrs. Driggs's voice struck across the
+general tide of talk.
+
+"Mrs. Merriam," she said, "I'm sorry to trouble you, but I never can eat
+fish without a sprinkle of nutmeg. Could you have a little grated on
+this delicious bit for me?"
+
+"Why, yes!" said Winona cordially. "Clay----!"
+
+"Hit ain' none, Miss Winnie," interrupted the small servant in a
+distressed whisper.
+
+"Then go borrow one at Mrs. Lee's, and hurry!" whispered Winona.
+"Anything, so you only get it and have it for Mrs. Driggs's fish."
+
+Clay looked black for a moment. Then a comprehensive grin dawned on his
+face. He trotted out with Mrs. Driggs's fish, and brought it back again
+a few moments later, liberally nutmegged and very much to the lady's
+taste. She ate it all and was happy.
+
+"You seem to have no difficulty in keeping discipline in your family and
+among your step-children, Mrs. Merriam," said Mr. Donne, almost directly
+after the nutmeg episode. "You must seem more like a sister than a
+mother to these tall young people."
+
+Winona was struck dumb with astonishment for a moment. She looked across
+at Tom, who looked back at her imploringly. She could see what had
+happened out in the kitchen, that time that the three others had been
+there alone and giggling. But this was no time to have a scene. She
+braced herself and settled her glasses more firmly, after one
+reproachful look at the three culprits, whose faces were tense with
+apprehension.
+
+"Yes," she replied quietly, talking, as Tom afterwards said, like a
+seraph, "They do seem like that. They are charming children, really."
+
+Mr. Donne went on talking about it. Winona went on replying with serene
+dignity. Even when he praised the cook she took it serenely, and when
+the Ladies' Aid came in sight again she called to mind a visit from the
+secretary at which she had been present, and quite overwhelmed Mr. Donne
+with particulars.
+
+Mrs. Driggs had been a little quiet and hard to talk to at the beginning
+of the meal, but Billy--Billy the quiet, Billy the shy among his own
+kind--proved to have the art of talking to grown people down to a fine
+point. He not only kept his end up, but he steered nobly away from risky
+questions of relationship, and other such perilous topics.
+
+"It certainly gives you confidence to be a married woman!" thought
+Winona, as she excused herself and went to see about unpacking the
+ice-cream. Clay's performance so far had been perfect, but she did not
+trust anybody but herself to get the cream successfully out of the
+freezer, without getting salt into it.
+
+"Where did you find that nutmeg, Clay?" she asked curiously, as they
+arranged the cakes and ice-cream, and put melted chocolate in a pitcher.
+
+"Law, Miss Winnie," said Clay, his smile nearly coiling itself around
+his ears, "I done tole you hit wasn't none. I des took dis yere ole
+wooden button-hook what hangs on a nail here, an' grate a li'l bit of it
+off. De minister's wife she never know de diffunce."
+
+Winona caught her breath, but this was no time to be overcome. The
+dessert had to be served. They were all laughing at something Louise was
+saying, when she came back. "I wonder if they would look so happy if I
+told them about the nutmeg!" she couldn't help thinking, but it did not
+seem a very good thing to tell anyone, just then--although it was too
+good to keep always. The Camp Fire heard about it afterward.
+
+Coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins, all appeared and disappeared, and then
+Winona led her sated guests out on the porch. She felt triumphantly
+virtuous. The dinner had been good straight through, the talk had gone
+smoothly, and the company seemed very happy and pleased. She sat down by
+Mrs. Driggs and went on talking. She was going on prosperously when Mr.
+Donne's voice, from the other end of the porch, stopped Mrs. Driggs's
+account of her last maid.
+
+"How long did you say you had been married, Mrs. Merriam?" he inquired.
+
+"Married?" echoed Winona desperately, trying to think of a way out.
+
+She was spared giving her answer. There was a sound of footsteps and
+wheels within the house, and Mrs. Merriam's wheel-chair, propelled by
+Florence, appeared in the doorway.
+
+"I got back sooner than I thought I should, Frances," said the real Mrs.
+Merriam's cheerful voice. "Florence came over and told me that our
+friends were here, so I had her wheel me back as soon as I'd had my
+supper. We didn't get home from the ride till a little while ago, and I
+couldn't get here for the meal."
+
+Winona did not wait to hear more. There was a long open window at her
+back. One spring--and all that remained to tell the tale of "young Mrs.
+Merriam" was an overturned porch-chair and the distant sound of a
+tearing garment. Up in her room, pulling down her hair and slipping on
+her fresh middy-blouse and white skirt, Winona heard the laughter, and
+knew the others were being forgiven, and the whole tale told.
+
+"Anyway!" she said to herself as she took off her glasses, shook down
+her hair, washed her hot face and prepared to walk downstairs and meet
+the family. "Anyway, that couldn't have been a better dinner if I'd been
+married sixteen times!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
+
+
+"This paying for deceased poultry," said Tom, "is getting monotonous.
+First there were those pedigreed geese up on the river, and now Henry. I
+know Henry never cost as much as the Janeways say he did."
+
+"I think we're paying for all it cost to send him to prep school and
+college," suggested Louise, who was staying over a day. "You forget that
+Henry was intellectual."
+
+"He was tough," agreed Tom, "if that's any sign! So was paying for him."
+
+"Oh, Tommy dear!" said Winona penitently. "Henry was really my fault. I
+oughtn't to let you join in with me. I can pay for Henry very well
+alone."
+
+"I think I see you!" said Tom. "No, Winnie, united we stand, divided we
+fall. I help pay for Henry--see you later--just remembered how late it
+is."
+
+He bolted upstairs, leaving Winona, Louise and Billy on the porch
+staring at each other.
+
+"What's struck Tom?" asked Billy. "First time I ever knew him to be in a
+hurry."
+
+"Why, I don't know," said Louise. "I thought you two generally hunted
+together."
+
+"Not to-night," said Billy. He vaulted the railing casually, and walked
+out into the middle of the lawn, where he could see Tom's lighted
+window. "He's up there with all the lights on, walking the floor as if
+he had something on his conscience, trying to tie all his neckties, one
+after another," reported Billy. "There--there goes the third one. He's
+going to try a red one now."
+
+"I know what it is," said Winona, seeing a light. "I've just remembered.
+He's going to call on a girl. He's been going to for all week, and just
+got braced up to it. He's been wearing me out all day, asking me for
+things to talk to her about. I suppose he's trying to decide on the
+necktie that matches his socks best."
+
+"But, great Scott, he's been to see girls before!" protested Billy.
+"I've been along when he's been seeing girls, and fellows, and even old
+gentlemen, and he never took it so hard."
+
+"It's a very particular, grown-up call," explained Winona, "with a
+card-case and a cane, and everything like that."
+
+"What's the cane for?" asked Billy, who had come back to his seat on the
+porch. "Girl collecting them?"
+
+"I think it must be for moral support," put in Louise.
+
+"I didn't know he had one," said Billy. "Where did he get it?"
+
+"Christmas present last year," explained Winona briefly. "Billy, don't
+you wish we were all back at Wampoag, having a moonlight swim?"
+
+"I certainly do," said Billy. "Not but that your porch is nice, too," he
+added with the politeness he never seemed to forget.
+
+Before they could lament camp life any further, Tom rushed down the
+stairs.
+
+"Winnie! Winnie! Where's my blue scarf?" he called from inside the front
+door.
+
+"On Louise," Winona called back promptly. "Don't you remember, you asked
+her if she didn't want to wear it with her sailor-suit?"
+
+"Can I have it, Lou?" he asked, coming out. "I wouldn't ask you, but it
+just matches my hatband."
+
+"Certainly you can have it," said Louise, with chilly politeness,
+unfastening it and handing it to him.
+
+"Good-evening, Mr. Merriam," said Billy, grinning, and rising in order
+to make a very low bow. "I never thought you were this far on the way to
+being a perfect lady, old boy--Mr. Merriam, I mean."
+
+"Going to call on an awfully correct girl," said Tom off-handedly. "I
+say, Lou, can I have that blue class-pin of yours?"
+
+"Certainly," said Louise again, still more coldly, detaching it and
+holding it out. "Anything else you think you'd like?"
+
+"Not that I can think of," said Tom, taking the class-pin. "That's a
+good old Lou," he ended, adding insult to injury. Then he sat down and
+pulled out his mother's celluloid memorandum tablets. He laid them on
+his knee and looked at them earnestly, as he adjusted the tie and the
+class-pin.
+
+"Did you think of any more things for me to say after I landed the
+California Exposition on her?" he asked his sister.
+
+Winona looked over at Billy to see if he saw the funny side of it. There
+was no use looking at Louise, for in her present sulky frame of mind she
+would not have seen anything funny in a whole joke-book.
+
+"How would the next election do?" she suggested gravely.
+
+"M-m--all right," said Tom, entering it. "That won't last forever,
+though, because all you can ever do is guess which man will get it. I
+think you might help a fellow out, Lou. You're generally so clever."
+
+"Ask her how she likes her hats trimmed," said Louise scornfully,
+without turning around to him.
+
+"Oh, no," said Tom, "that's too silly a question." But he put it down
+just the same. "Let's see. That ought to carry me on till nearly
+nine.... Cæsar! It's time I went! Don't mind if I go off and leave you,
+do you Bill?"
+
+"Not a bit!" said Billy calmly. "I'm all right. But"--Billy's eyes
+twinkled--"don't you really think you ought to wear your tuxedo, old
+fellow? Much more correct, you know. I saw it in a Hints to Best
+Dressers' column awhile ago. It said that no true gentleman was without
+evening clothes in the evening."
+
+Tom looked uneasy, but he was firm.
+
+"I won't get into that thing for anything less than a dance or a
+hand-made clerical dinner," he said, thoughtlessly jamming his hat down
+over one ear the way he usually wore it, then putting it straight with a
+jerk. "Great Scott! I must hurry!"
+
+"My ears and whiskers! The Duchess! Won't I catch it if I'm late!"
+quoted Louise scornfully from Alice in Wonderland, as Tom dived down the
+steps.
+
+"What on earth's got into Tom!" asked Billy. "The idea of doing that
+because you like it!"
+
+"I don't know," said Winona. "It is queer, isn't it?"
+
+"Going off acting like he was all grown up!" mused Billy, still lost in
+wonder at such a waste of a perfectly good evening.
+
+"I do wish you wouldn't always say 'like' for 'as if,' Billy,"
+interrupted Louise sharply. "I hate it."
+
+"We always say it that way down home," said Billy.
+
+"That's no reason for your doing it here! Being born in China doesn't
+make it good manners for you to eat with chopsticks," said Louise,
+walking into the house and slamming the screen-door behind her.
+
+"Can't Ah help yo' find yo' tempah, Louise?" Billy called teasingly
+after her, with a purposely exaggerated Southern accent. There was no
+answer.
+
+"You'd be cross, too, if you were Louise," Winona defended her friend.
+"One of the things she stayed down from camp over to-night for was that
+she and Tom were going off to kodak some cloud effects for a magazine
+prize. And she was going to try to get some photographs that would count
+in Camp Fire work, too. And Tom's walked off, forgetting all about it."
+
+"Why didn't you remind him?" asked Billy sensibly.
+
+"Louise wouldn't let me. She said she'd go straight back if I did."
+
+"Well, she needn't have taken it out on me," said Billy plaintively. "I
+didn't break any engagements. I suppose she has a red-haired temper."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile Louise, after she banged the screen-door, had gone straight
+through the house to the back. Mrs. Merriam was in the living-room,
+which prevented her crying there. She was very much hurt at Tom's
+forgetfulness. They had been chums for a long time, and this particular
+expedition after cloud effects had been something they had planned long
+before the Scouts' camp broke up. And now Tom had gone gayly off,
+forgetting all about it. It really was horrid.
+
+Crying on a bed is hot work in summer, so she decided to go out back and
+do it. She sat on the porch, put her arms on the back of a chair and
+began to cry.
+
+But circumstances seemed to be against her. Puppums, who had been asleep
+under a chair, got up, yawned, sauntered across the porch, and sat down
+by her. Then he proceeded to whine for her to turn around, make a lap,
+and take him up into it.
+
+"Oh, do stop!" said Louise indignantly, when the whining had gone on
+steadily for some minutes. But if you took any notice of Puppums he
+merely argued that a little more work would get him what he wanted, and
+went on begging. In the present instance he answered Louise by lifting
+his nose further up in the air, and howling, as if he wished to assure
+her that he felt for her.
+
+"You mean old dog!" said Louise, jumping up. "I'll settle you!" Puppums
+was very much pleased. He had an optimistic disposition, and he thought
+it was a game. He ran around and around the porch, finally, when he
+began to see that Louise was in earnest, hiding under the ice-chest,
+where he knew nobody could follow him. Louise stopped short, and eyed
+the ice-box. It occurred to her that she was thirsty.
+
+"This is what you might call being guided," said she, and opening the
+lid, looked in. She found a bag of lemons, a bunch of bananas, and she
+thought she remembered where Winona kept the bottled cherries and the
+cookies. She went into the kitchen and began work, and in a very little
+while was on her way back to the front porch with a tray, designed to
+show her remorse for being cross, piled with cookies and fruit lemonade.
+Mrs. Merriam, to whom she offered the first glass, pronounced it very
+good indeed, and sent her on her way. Puppums danced wildly about her,
+with the idea that she was clearing a table, and he might get bones.
+
+Winona and Billy were still talking as placidly as if Tom had not been
+wrestling with a formal call, and Louise with a bad temper, for the last
+twenty minutes.
+
+"Cookies--oh, and fruit lemonade! Louise, you dear!" cried Winona, while
+Billy took the tray and put it on a table.
+
+"Won't you have some, Billy? I know you like it, and--and I _do_ like
+your Southern accent," she added in a rush.
+
+"Thank you, Louise," said Billy. "I like your accent, too--and your
+fruit lemonade--very much."
+
+They both laughed. "Let's bury the hatchet," he added. "Louise, these
+certainly are fine cookies."
+
+The three were still sitting comfortably over their refreshments, even
+Puppums crunching cakes contentedly in a corner, when Tom hurried up the
+steps and banged himself down in a chair. His hat was jammed to one side
+in the old unceremonious fashion, his gloves had vanished, and even his
+cane was nowhere to be seen.
+
+"Have some," said Billy tactfully before Tom could say anything. They
+pushed the cakes toward him, and poured him some lemonade in Winona's
+glass, and after he seemed less gloomy they got him to talk.
+
+"Tell us all about it," said Winona soothingly.
+
+"Nothing to tell!" said Tom in something rather like a growl.
+
+"Have another cooky, and tell us all about it," repeated his sister in a
+persuasive voice. And after awhile, when he had had some more cookies
+and another glass of lemonade, he told them, gradually.
+
+"Well, I sent in my card, of course," he began. "Asked for Miss Davis."
+
+"Of course!" said Winona; for her brother's usual custom was to call up
+from the sidewalk, "I'm coming over to-night," and then to walk
+unceremoniously in whenever he thought of it, that evening.
+
+"I did that all right, thank goodness!" said Tom. "The maid kept me
+waiting about a year, with a copy of Snowbound, and a Gems from
+Shakespeare, and a pug-dog made out of plaster, to amuse me. The Davises
+never seem to sit around in their rooms and on their porches like other
+people. Just as I got to the point of thinking I'd better go back home
+_Mrs._ Davis walked in. I was so surprised at seeing her, instead of
+Elsie, that I couldn't think of a blessed thing to say--so I fished up
+this!"
+
+He jerked the tablets out of his pocket and threw them to Winona.
+
+"Keep 'em away from me," he said. "I never want to see the blessed
+things again. First thing I found was 'Civil War.' I'd picked out that
+for a start anyway--thought it would be nice and general, and we had it
+in History last term, so I knew a lot about it. You'd have thought that
+would have lasted awhile, wouldn't you?"
+
+"Seeing that the real thing lasted four years or so, I think it might
+have," answered Billy.
+
+"Not a bit of it!" said Tom mournfully. "Mrs. Davis turned out to have
+had a grand-uncle or something in it, and she said it was a painful
+subject. I don't think she ever had a grand-uncle. I believe she didn't
+know anything about it, and just invented the old fellow to get out of
+talking about it!"
+
+"Mercy, what suspicions!" said Winona, laughing. "You certainly have
+nearly ruined your lovely disposition. Never mind, Tommy, I sympathize
+with you. What did you tackle next?"
+
+"Tariff-reform, I think," said Tom.
+
+"What is tariff-reform?" asked Winona. "I never could understand it
+exactly."
+
+"Don't ask me to say it all over again!" begged Tom. "I was getting
+anxious by that time for fear I wouldn't have subjects enough left to
+use on Elsie. You know she isn't much of a talker. But I had to say
+something, and Mrs. Davis didn't, and I couldn't think of anything but
+this foolish book. Mrs. Davis didn't seem to care much about
+tariff-reform, either, so I gave that up and looked at the list again,
+and chose 'Weather.' She did warm up a little at that. But the best
+weather won't last forever, and you could just hear the silence bump
+every little while.
+
+"Then I got desperate, and used up Politics and Canoeing and the
+California Fair, and all the rest. Folks, I finished off every last
+thing I was going to talk to Elsie about, before she ever appeared!
+Except about trimming hats--that seemed such a foolish thing to ask a
+woman that old about."
+
+"They discussed Measles and Mice, and Music, and everything else that
+began with an M," quoted Louise from her favorite Alice in Wonderland.
+
+"Don't mind her," said Billy as soberly as he could. "Just go on. Did
+Elsie Davis ever come down at all?"
+
+"Yes," said Tom, "she did. Just as I finished my last subject, if you
+please! She seemed to be dressed for a party, but she said she wasn't.
+She sat down at the other end of the room, and tried to see if she
+couldn't keep as still as her mother. Mrs. Davis stayed right there,
+too, and smiled like an alligator--and there was I without an idea in my
+head or on the memorandum!"
+
+"Didn't they even show you the photograph album?" inquired Louise,
+forgetting to be offended.
+
+"They wouldn't talk, I tell you!"
+
+"Well, what _did_ you do?" asked Louise.
+
+Tom grinned a little, shamefacedly.
+
+"Well--I simply yanked out that old tablet, and began at Civil War
+again. I said 'As I was just saying to your mother!' and I gave her
+every subject over!"
+
+His hearers howled, and after a minute Tom himself joined in. "Did it
+work better this time?" asked Winona at last, wiping her eyes.
+
+"Not a work," said Tom cheerfully, reaching for the last cooky. "That
+is, all but the hat one. That was clever of you, Lou. She got almost
+human over that, and began to talk about how many engagements she
+had--had to break half of them. And I said 'I don't believe in breaking
+dates,' and suddenly I remembered the one with you to take the
+pictures--and I left then and there, like a streak of lightning. I left
+my cane--I don't care--she can have it to remember me by. Louise, I owe
+you an apology the size of the house. Why didn't you remind me about
+those snapshots?"
+
+"It's not too late," said Louise amiably. "The moon's just about right,
+now."
+
+Tom went into the house after the cameras, sending his hat flying up to
+the hat-tree, followed by his gloves.
+
+"Let's go, too," said Billy.
+
+"All right," said Winona. She leaned back, and laughed, as they waited
+for the others to come out.
+
+"I don't believe Tom will try any more formal calls till he's eighteen,
+anyway," she remarked.
+
+"It seems a pity, though," said Billy, getting up. "He wasted a
+perfectly good cane!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
+
+
+Louise went back to camp next day, and Winona went on with her work at
+home. Louise had left all sorts of presents and messages from the girls,
+and taken a great many from Winona away with her. Louise's visit cheered
+Winona up very much. There was only one hard thing about it--the news
+Louise had brought that the girls had extended the time of their stay
+again. The plan now was to stay in Camp Karonya till the fourteenth of
+September. School opened on the fifteenth. It seemed a long time to wait
+to see her friends again--for the doctor was certain that her mother
+would not be able to bear her weight on the injured ankle for a month to
+come.
+
+Meanwhile Winona wrote to the girls, and her mother and Florence kept
+track, in what Winona considered a very wild way, of the things she did
+that should entitle her to honors. The honor-list and a sheet of blanks
+lived under her mother's pillow, Winona was sure. If it gave her mother
+pleasure she was glad to have her do it; but it occurred to Winona the
+day after Louise left that it mightn't be a bad scheme to collect a few
+honors herself, things that she was sure would count. Also she wanted
+some fun, and she had found that the acquiring of honors usually led to
+it. So Winona proceeded to "start something."
+
+To begin with, next door lived Nataly Lee. Winona went over there the
+very afternoon of the day Louise left, and spent the most persuasive
+three hours of her life, explaining to Nataly that they, as the only two
+Camp Fire Girls in town, ought to start some good times for other
+people, who, not being Camp Fire Girls, probably didn't know how. And
+before she went back to get supper she had persuaded Nataly she was
+right.
+
+Next day she and Nataly, cheerful and enthusiastic, made a canvass of
+the girls in their classes who were staying home. Winona had rather gone
+on the principle that nearly everyone was off somewhere else, but she
+found it wasn't so at all. There were six girls beside herself and
+Nataly who were ready and willing to join a Porch Club that was to meet
+once a week, and have a picnic one week and a party the next.
+
+Winona and Tom and Billy, with Nataly, even, helping once in a while,
+spent some time in furnishing the Merriam porch with chairs and hammocks
+and screens and lanterns. Then the boys went forth and invited their own
+friends with a lavish hand. The first porch party was a grand success,
+although there were about three boys to one girl. But that righted
+itself next time, which was three days later, for the Porch Club made an
+unanimous and prompt decision that it wanted to meet twice a week. And
+more girls wanted to join. So, although they were not like her own old
+comrades, Winona found that she was making friends whom she would never
+have had at all, if it had not been that she was cut off from her own
+set of girls, still having good times at Camp Karonya. As for Nataly,
+she was a marvellously different person. The work of management, of
+social entertaining, proved to be exactly what she could do best. And
+having to teach things to others (for the Porch Club added an afternoon
+session, devoted to hand-craft work and reading aloud), made her find
+that she could do things very well here that she hadn't liked doing in
+camp at all! As for Winona, she let Nataly run things as much as she
+wanted to. She herself was just what she had always been, Ray of Light,
+holding the girls and boys together by her brightness and her fondness
+for them. She was the centre of things, after all. Not that she realized
+it, particularly; she only thought how queer it was that there were so
+many nice, friendly people in the world, willing to do nice things and
+have nice times if you only suggested it. And there are, too.
+
+"And, Helen and Louise dear," Winona wrote to her own two best friends
+back at Camp Karonya. "Some of the girls in our classes that we scarcely
+knew, and thought were quiet and stupid, are as nice and bright and
+funny as ever they can be, and ever so Camp Firey! I believe we can
+organize another Camp Fire this fall. And I have my housework arranged
+so that I have two hours in the morning, and most of my afternoon and
+evening, to do what I please with. So I have a gorgeous time working for
+honors. It's a scheme I shan't tell you about till it's all worked out
+and over with, but I think it's going to work all right. Florence
+suggested it, bless her heart. Love to the whole Camp Fire, and ask them
+to take a hike for me!"
+
+Winona's supplementary plan for honor-winning had been suggested to her
+this way:
+
+One day she was on the back porch, mending, and Florence had four bosom
+friends out in the back garden, making a most fearful racket. Mrs.
+Merriam had a headache, and Winona knew that in a little while the
+headache would be worse, or that she would have to go and send
+Florence's friends home, which meant hurting that independent young
+person's feelings.
+
+"Florence," called Winona, "wouldn't you and the other girls like me to
+come down to the end of the garden and tell you fairy-stories?"
+
+The little girls seemed to very much want to. So Winona took her mending
+and her rocker, and they sat down in the shelter of a big tree. Winona
+told them stories till it was time for her to go in and see about
+supper. By then her mother's headache was over. But after supper
+Florence came up to Winona, and said, "The girls want to ask something.
+They want to know if you won't tell them stories other times, too!"
+
+"Why, what a lovely idea!" said Winona. "Of course I will!"
+
+So to the Porch Club and the housekeeping Winona added two hours every
+other day, telling stories to Florence and her small friends. She felt
+rather shy over it at first, but gradually it began to be more and more
+easy. When the fairy-tales ran low she went to the library and hunted
+out the Robin Hood and Arthur legends, and even history stories once in
+awhile. And one day when she was rummaging the card catalogue for more
+stories about King Arthur she found out that the Malory book was only a
+very little of what there was to be told. Everything seemed to lead
+somewhere else. So the story-hours kept to King Arthur, except for one
+fairy afternoon a week, for the rest of the month, and Winona learned a
+good deal about him that she would never have found out by herself.
+
+After one or two meetings, sewing as she talked, she began to show the
+children a little about darning, too. They brought stockings after that,
+and kept quieter, she found, when they were working as well as she. The
+most surprising thing of all to her was that she had time enough for
+everything. The story-hours took care of all the household mending that
+her mother did not do; the Porch Club, which met at different houses in
+rotation, was no trouble at all, merely a good-times affair. The
+housekeeping was running smoothly, and Winona got time for
+letter-writing and walks with the boys, and even practice on the piano.
+There were lots of places where she and Nataly and Tom and Billy could
+go trolley riding on hot evenings, and there were always boys and girls
+running in and out, asking her to go places and do things. Winona
+discovered, as others have before her, that you can have a very good
+time by staying home in the summer.
+
+One night, toward the last of August, her mother asked her a question.
+
+"How would you like to go back to camp to celebrate your birthday,
+dear?" she asked.
+
+Now Winona's birthday, her fifteenth, was on the eleventh of September,
+just two days before the girls were coming back.
+
+"I would, very much," she said, "but do you think you will be able to
+spare me?"
+
+"I am quite sure of it," said her mother. "Indeed, I might be able to
+take charge of the house again by next week, if my ankle improves as it
+is doing now."
+
+"Oh, no," said Winona, "I won't take the risk. Besides, I couldn't leave
+the story-hour children, and the Porch Club has to have some things
+planned for it that I think I'd better help with. But if I can go up
+there over my birthday it will be lovely."
+
+"You'll have to get somebody else to tell the stories while you're gone,
+then," said Florence. "I don't want my story-hour broken up!"
+
+"By all means, don't break up Florence's private story-hour!" said Tom.
+"Why don't you do the story-telling yourself, Floss?"
+
+But, "That's true, Florence," said Winona. "I think I can find one of
+the girls in the Porch Club who will do it. You see, mother dear, I'll
+need to get all the loose ends up out of the way if I go back even for
+three days!"
+
+But all the loose ends tied themselves up neatly. Ellen Marks, one of
+the nicest of the Porch Club girls, promised to tell the stories for the
+two days Winona would miss. Nataly could look after things elsewhere,
+and by the eleventh Mrs. Merriam was nearly as well as ever. So the
+morning of that day saw Winona on her way back to Camp Karonya, with joy
+in her heart, and her ceremonial costume over her arm, in a special bag.
+
+The whole crowd of girls rushed out to meet her, and sang a cheer from
+the time her motor-boat was in sight till she landed. They surrounded
+her, and carried her into camp, where supper was nearly ready.
+
+It seemed very good to be back. The pine needles smelled as woodsily as
+ever, and the long wooden table looked very homelike, with its brown,
+chattering girls surrounding it, all trying to tell her everything at
+once. As soon as supper was over Helen and Louise swept her off to her
+old tent.
+
+"Hurry," said Helen. "Get into your ceremonial costume, honey. Heap big
+Council Fire to-night."
+
+"Council Fire?" said Winona in surprise. "Why, is it the night for it?"
+
+"This is an extra-special," explained Helen hastily. "Here, Win, let me
+help you."
+
+She began to unfasten Winona's travelling suit.
+
+"You have a lot more beads than you had," Winona observed a little
+wistfully, as Helen took her own gown down from the wall and began to
+put it on.
+
+Helen laughed as she slung the long string of colored honor-beads around
+her neck.
+
+"Maybe you'll catch up," she remarked carelessly. "You'll doubtless get
+an honor or so to-night."
+
+"Oh, yes," said Winona. "I ought to get a bead or two for home-craft,
+and I did some story-hour work, too."
+
+"As if that was all you did!" said Helen indignantly; and stopped
+herself short.
+
+"Hurry up, girls!" said Louise, sticking her bead-banded head into the
+tent. "Time to begin. Hear the drum!"
+
+"Oh, the nice old drum!" cried Winona happily, as she heard its
+well-remembered monotonous sound in the distance. The three girls linked
+arms, and hurried to the council hill.
+
+"Oh, but it's good to be back!" said Winona for the third or fourth
+time, as she sank into her place in the circle around the first place.
+She listened dreamily as the ceremony of fire-lighting and all the rest
+went forward. Things had been happening, it appeared. The reports were
+given one by one. Winona listened on, and Hike the Camp Cat trotted
+noiselessly over the ground and curled himself into Winona's lap. Even
+he remembered her. She stroked him and listened.
+
+Helen, they told, had managed to coax an old farmer down the road, the
+identical one they didn't buy the music-box of, to stop setting traps
+that hurt rabbits. Louise had, after many hoppings about in solitude,
+actually managed to master five folk-dances. Adelaide and little Frances
+had made an emergency dash down the river to get the doctor, when one of
+the other little girls had fallen from a tree and broken her wrist.
+There were other things as thrilling.
+
+"And all I did was stay home!" thought Winona as the tales went on, and
+the beads were awarded. Then she sat up and began to listen more
+closely, for Mrs. Bryan, Opeechee herself, was rising to give this
+report, and that was something sure to be special and worth while. When
+Opeechee related what a girl had done it was an honor worth having.
+
+"You have all done well, and deserved the honors you have been awarded
+on this, our final Council in the open," began the Guardian. "Here,
+together in the woods, it has been easy to follow the law of the fire.
+We have found it so, I know.
+
+"But now I want to tell you about a watcher of the Camp Fire who has
+been following the law without any of the helps we have. She gave up the
+camp and its good times, and went back to assume the duties of a
+woman--the tending of the real Fire of home. She had charge of the
+household. She kept a family of four beside herself, including an
+invalid mother, comfortable, well taken care of and happy, for one
+month. She made a pleasure out of her duties, and showed others how.
+Besides this, she collected girls who had not much social life and gave
+it to them. She led them for a month, three times a week. She told
+children stories and taught them sewing every other day for a month. And
+through it all she was happy, and made light for others wherever she
+went. She has carried the Torch of happiness and health and work and
+love, and passed it on undimmed to others. Winona, the Flashing Ray of
+Light, is just fifteen to-night. That is the earliest age at which
+anyone can be made a Torch-bearer--but I think she deserves the rank,
+Sisters of the Camp Fire. What do you say?"
+
+Before the girls could answer Winona was on her feet with the kitten in
+her arms, scarlet and protesting.
+
+"But I didn't do all those wonderful things, Opeechee!" she cried. "I
+just did what there was to do. I like to plan things and have people
+have good times. I just wanted to get as good a time out of it all as I
+could. And I don't believe I have enough honor beads to be a
+Torch-bearer."
+
+Mrs. Bryan paid her protest very little attention.
+
+"What do you say, Sisters of the Camp Fire?"
+
+The girls burst out into cheering.
+
+"Winona, Flashing Ray of Light, is to take the rank of Torch-bearer
+to-day," repeated Mrs. Bryan inexorably. "Rise, Winona."
+
+And as Winona stood up again (she had sat down hastily after her first
+objection) Mrs. Bryan repeated the honors she had won, and that her
+mother and Florence had kept track of so faithfully. She had expected
+the honor for story-telling, but the one for marketing--and the one for
+folk-songs--and--why, that Alice Brown pantomime had meant an honor
+bead! So had bringing in and arranging her mother's invalid-tray, and
+the Porch Club and the story-hour had given her a double right to the
+Torch-bearer rank, which requires leadership of a group. Then, of
+course, the wood-craft honors she had won before she went home--she had
+known about those. But to think that everything, even that hilarious
+ten-course dinner she and Louise had planned, had been good for a bead!
+Winona had far more than the fifteen required honors for the highest
+rank of the Camp Fire.
+
+"Repeat the Torch-bearer's Desire, Winona," said Mrs. Bryan, and Winona,
+half in a dream, said,
+
+ The light which has been given me
+ I desire to pass undimmed to others.
+
+Mrs. Bryan stepped forward, and threw a string of beads over her head.
+She had not been in Camp till now, and so the beads had not come one by
+one as they generally did. She fastened the pin on Winona's breast, and
+stepped back, while the girls sang a tempestuous cheer.
+
+Winona sat down on the grass, still bewildered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well, how does it feel to be a Torch-bearer--the only one in Camp?"
+asked Helen late that night, as the girls were undressing together.
+
+"Wonderful--only I don't believe it, yet!" said Winona. "Think of all
+those honors that I never even dreamed I was getting--and to think I was
+having such fun getting them, too! It seems as if I ought to have worked
+so hard it was uncomfortable, somehow, to deserve them."
+
+"It was dreadfully hard to keep the surprise a secret, sometimes," said
+Helen. "When your letters were a wee little bit lonesome, sometimes, we
+had hard work keeping Louise from telling. Oh, Winona, all the girls are
+so glad!"
+
+"I'm glad, too," said Winona soberly. "And oh, Helen, I _am_ going to
+keep on carrying the torch, too--as high as ever I can!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
+
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+ <meta content="Winona of the Camp Fire" name="DC.Title"/>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Winona of the Camp Fire
+
+Author: Margaret Widdemer
+
+Release Date: August 26, 2011 [EBook #37207]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
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+</pre>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i001' id='i001'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-cvr.jpg' alt='' title=''/><br />
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i002' id='i002'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-fpc.jpg" alt="THEY DESCENDED IN A BODY ON ADELAIDE’S TENT Page 125" title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>THEY DESCENDED IN A BODY ON ADELAIDE’S TENT <em>Page 125</em></span>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p><span style='font-size:1.6em;'>WINONA OF THE</span></p>
+<p><span style='font-size:1.6em;'>CAMP FIRE</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p><span class='sc'>By</span> MARGARET WIDDEMER</p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'><span class='sc'>Author of</span></span></p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>“Winona of Camp Karonya,” “Winona’s War</span></p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>Farm,” “Winona’s Way.”</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i003' id='i003'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-emb.jpg' alt='' title=''/><br />
+</div>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>A. L. BURT COMPANY</p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>Publishers—New York</span></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p><em>Published by arrangement with J. B. Lippincott Company</em></p>
+<p>&#160;</p>
+<p><span style='font-size:smaller;'>Printed in U. S. A.</span></p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<div class='center'>
+<p>COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY</p>
+</div>
+<p>
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+&#160;<br />
+</p>
+<h1>WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE</h1>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7'></a>7</span>CHAPTER ONE</h2>
+<p>
+The room they called the Den in Winnie Merriam’s
+house was dark, except for the leaping wood-fire in
+the big stone fireplace. Around the fire sat and lay five
+girls. They had been toasting marshmallows, but they
+were past the point where you eat the toasted ones with
+pleasure, or even steal the raw ones—which don’t taste
+burnt—to eat surreptitiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Helen Bryan, you’ve been feeding Puppums all
+your marshmallows for the last ten minutes,” accused
+Winnie, sitting up. She had been draping herself
+along a pile of cushions for the last fifteen minutes—thinking,
+evidently, for she had been quiet—a very
+unusual thing for chattering Winnie.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie Merriam was fourteen, but people usually
+took her for a year older, because of her slim height.
+She had big blue eyes in a face that was not regularly
+pretty, perhaps, but so gay and pink-cheeked and quick-smiling
+that people always <em>said</em> she was pretty—which
+does quite as well.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her chum, Helen, defiantly fed a last marshmallow
+to the fat near-fox-terrier in the centre of the circle,
+who didn’t particularly seem to want it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve got to be polite to my hostess’s dog, haven’t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8'></a>8</span>
+I?” she retorted. “And he asked for them so pathetically!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I expect the poor old pup will look more pathetic
+this time to-morrow,” said Winnie. “He’ll probably
+look like Buster Brown’s Tige in the last pictures—both
+paws up over his aching head. Then you’ll have
+to come back here and hold ice on his fevered brow,
+won’t she, Puppums?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Or yours, maybe,” suggested Marie Hunter, the
+quiet brown girl in the corner. “What’s the matter,
+Win? You haven’t said a word for ages. I’ve been
+watching you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve been <em>thinking</em>!” explained Winnie, nodding
+her curly brown head with dignity.
+</p>
+<p>
+“For the first time?” suggested Helen. “Don’t
+do it if it hurts, honey.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” said Winnie placidly, “I’ve often been
+known to do it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what were you thinking?” asked Edith
+Hillis, lifting her yellow curls from Marie’s lap. Edith
+was the fluffy member of the crowd, small for her
+age, yellow-haired and blue-eyed and rather too much
+dressed. She was supposed to care more for her complexion
+than for anything else on earth except Marie
+Hunter, but she was as sweet-tempered as she could be,
+and everybody liked her. “You looked as if you were
+thinking about something awfully interesting.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well,” said Winnie slowly, “I was thinking about
+<em>us</em>. We know each other very, very well, and go together,
+and have gorgeous times—I was thinking that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9'></a>9</span>
+it would be nice if we made ourselves into a club, or
+some sort of a society.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, say! That’s a perfectly gorgeous idea!” exclaimed
+chubby, red-haired Louise Lane, from behind
+Helen. “I vote we <em>be</em> a club, right away!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But is five enough?” asked Marie doubtfully.
+Marie was always the one who thought of things.
+She was a good deal of a bookworm, and did a great
+deal of beautiful embroidery, and never said much.
+But she was the one the girls were apt to ask advice
+of if they needed it badly. She was nearly a year
+older than Winnie and Edith. Louise wasn’t quite
+fourteen, and Helen would be fifteen in two months.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think five’s plenty,” said Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t, exactly,” demurred Winnie. “Seems to
+me there ought to be seven or eight anyway, or we’d
+be like an army all major-generals.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” came from Helen sleepily. “But that
+can wait. I think the thing to make up our minds
+about first is—what would it do if it was a club? I
+mean clubs have to have some object.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why!” exclaimed Winnie blankly, “I never
+thought of that!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well,” still opposed Louise, “I don’t see why
+we have to have an object. Just meet, and have a
+president and secretary and things, and enjoy ourselves.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about an embroidery club?” suggested
+Edith. “Marie and I like to embroider.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I <em>don’t</em>,” said Louise flatly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10'></a>10</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nannie was telling me about a walking-club she
+belonged to,” Helen suggested pacifically.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nannie was Helen’s step-mother—not at all like
+the step-mothers in the fairy-tales, but a pretty, gay
+woman of about twenty-eight, who was great friends
+with her step-daughter and the step-daughter’s chums.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A hiking-club?” asked Winnie. “That would
+be fun. Why couldn’t we combine both those things in
+one?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Lovely!” jeered Louise. “I can see myself trotting
+along up a mountain, embroidering as I go!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Listen to Louise being sarcastic!” said Helen.
+“I think the idea of combining two or three things is
+a splendid one.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s splendid?” asked a bright voice from
+the darkness at the other end of the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, are you there, Nannie?” called Helen.
+“We’re planning a club—a very fine combination club
+where you do everything.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It sounds like a Camp Fire,” said Nannie. “Your
+father’s downstairs, Helen. I ran up to tell you that
+we’re ready to go whenever you are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, not yet, please!” begged Winnie. “What
+is a Camp Fire, Mrs. Bryan? Do come sit down by us,
+and have some marshmallows.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It corresponds to the Boy Scouts,” Mrs. Bryan
+explained, dropping down among the girls, “and it
+includes doing about everything there is to do. It’s
+national, though, and you’re affiliated with headquarters.”
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i004' id='i004'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-010.jpg" alt="THEY MADE HER TELL THEM ALL SHE KNEW ABOUT CAMP FIRES" title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>THEY MADE HER TELL THEM ALL SHE KNEW ABOUT CAMP FIRES</span>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11'></a>11</span></div>
+<p>
+“Regular dues and meetings?” asked Helen,
+pricking up her ears. “Oh, stay here, Nannie, and tell
+us all about it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+They surrounded Mrs. Bryan, and made her tell
+them all she knew about Camp Fires, which was a good
+deal.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I like it!” announced Louise when Mrs. Bryan
+was done. “Me be heap big chiefess—wahoo-oo!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She jumped up as she spoke and waved Helen’s
+best hat above her head for a hatchet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, my hat!” cried Helen, making a wild dive
+for it. Puppums thought it was all a game for his
+special benefit, and dived after them—and the meeting
+broke up in disorder. But not before the girls had
+decided to <em>be</em> a Camp Fire, and made Mrs. Bryan
+promise to act as their Guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie, after the girls had gone, returned alone
+to the fire, and sat down by it, thinking over the things
+she had been hearing.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s going to be heaps of fun,” was the first thing
+she thought, and then, “It’s going to take lots of time!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Then she got up and shook herself. “Anyway, I
+love it!” she decided. Then she put the lights out
+and went to bed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen Bryan was over early next morning.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Winnie!” she called up to her friend’s
+window.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on up!” called Winnie back. “I’ve just
+had my bath, but I haven’t finished dressing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen came in by the open back door, spoke to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12'></a>12</span>
+Mrs. Merriam, who was getting breakfast, and tore
+up the stairs to Winnie’s room.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, there’s such heaps to tell!” she announced
+before she was well inside the room. “Rings and
+bands and dresses and ceremonies and—everything!
+Only we will have to take more girls in. You have
+to have at least seven to start with.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen stopped for lack of breath, and dropped on
+the bed. Winnie, who was doing her hair before the
+mirror, turned around.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s like the Boy Scouts, only it’s girls,” she
+decided thoughtfully. “Helen, I don’t see why we
+can’t have just as good times as they do. Tom’s always
+telling about the glorious times his patrol had last
+summer, camping up near Wampoag. I don’t see why
+we shouldn’t go camping, too, and have heaps of
+fun!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, of course we can!” agreed Helen. “None
+of your mothers will mind if Nannie goes along, and
+she’ll have to if she’s Guardian.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on down and have breakfast with us,” invited
+Winnie, straightening up from her last shoe-lace.
+“You haven’t told me half the things there are to tell.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I’ve had breakfast,” said Helen, “but——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, you can eat some more,” insisted Winnie.
+“We’re going to have flapjacks and maple syrup.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, all right,” said Helen, weakening. Flapjacks
+and maple syrup did sound good. So they went
+down together to the breakfast table.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie’s family, her father and mother and her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13'></a>13</span>
+brother Tom, and eight-year-old Florence, had to be
+told all about it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t I be a Fire Camp Girl, too?” demanded
+Florence on the spot.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know yet,” said Helen. “We’ll have to
+find out.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will be, whether you find out or not,” said
+Florence, who was a determined young person, and
+something of a tagger.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, thank goodness, to-day’s Saturday,” and
+Winnie changed the subject cheerfully. “We have all
+day to find out in, and there’s scarcely any home-work
+to do. Have you any, Helen?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Only a little history,” said Helen, “and I can do
+that to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Such heaps of good times coming!” sang Winnie
+rapturously as she sprang up from the table, to get
+a fresh supply of flapjacks.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you have as good a time as the Scouts do
+you’ll have fun, all right,” said Tom. “But I don’t
+see how you can—just girls!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen laughed, but his sister flew up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We can, and better, too,” she flashed. “Just you
+wait and see!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Seeing’s believing,” said Tom mischievously,
+passing his plate for the flapjacks as Winnie brought in
+the heaping plate that had been keeping hot in the oven.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s true,” said his father gravely, putting a pile
+of buttered quarter-sections on his son’s plate. “At
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14'></a>14</span>
+least, nobody who hadn’t seen it would believe you could
+eat so many flapjacks and not explode!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Everyone laughed; but Tom calmly went on eating.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re awfully good, mother,” he said. “I’ll
+tell you, Winnie, if you could learn to make as good
+flapjacks as mother with your Fire Camping, as Florence
+calls it, you’d be doing something worth while.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I don’t suppose there’s anything about flapjacks
+in it—do you think there could be, Helen?”
+asked Winnie.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Merriam laughed a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, do you know, my dears,” she said, “I have
+a strange feeling that there <em>is!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t see how,” doubted Winona. “But maybe,
+if I get time, Tom, I’ll learn how to make them. Come
+on, Helen, let’s go back to Nannie and ask her all the
+questions we can think of.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The two girls ran out hand-in-hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are there flapjacks in it, mother?” asked little
+Florence.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Merriam laughed again as she began to clear
+the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There are, and a great deal besides, or I’m much
+mistaken, dear!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15'></a>15</span>CHAPTER TWO</h2>
+<p>
+Within the next week Mrs. Bryan had sent for
+and filled out and returned the application blanks, and
+now the girls were merely waiting for the return of the
+blanks and their charter. Meanwhile, out of school
+hours, Winnie helped her mother about the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I mayn’t have time for much housework when I
+belong to the Camp Fire,” she thought, “and I’d better
+do all I can now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So she learned a good deal about cooking, and
+helped regularly with the dishes—and with the supper-getting
+and tidying. Finally—it was almost the end
+of May by then—the charter came, and material for the
+ceremonial dresses, and various other things; and the
+girls held their first Camp Fire. It was at Winnie’s
+house, with its big fireplace, that they had it. Mrs.
+Bryan invited two other girls to join, to make up
+the number; Dorothy Gray and Adelaide Hughes.
+Dorothy the girls all knew and liked—she was everybody’s
+choice for one of the vacant places—but nobody
+knew much about Adelaide, who was a newcomer in
+town, except that she had no mother, and lived with her
+father and her younger brother and little sister in one
+of the few apartment-houses that were beginning to be
+put up in the little town where the girls all lived. She
+was a quiet, rather sullen girl, and she dressed badly—almost
+untidily. The girls were surprised at her joining,
+for she seemed to keep away from people almost
+as if she did it on purpose. But Mrs. Bryan wanted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16'></a>16</span>
+her in, and the girls would any of them have done
+anything for Mrs. Bryan. Only they confided to each
+other that they hoped Adelaide wouldn’t spoil the fun.
+</p>
+<p>
+As each girl came, the night of the first meeting,
+she was taken, not into the living-room, but to a little
+room beside it, and asked to wait there for the rest.
+Edith Hillis was the last to come, and then they were
+summoned into the other room. It was lighted only by
+the blaze of the fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen explained things to the girls, as her step-mother
+had explained to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“When the drum begins to beat we are to come in,
+Indian file,” she reminded them, as a soft, measured
+beat began to be heard in the next room.
+</p>
+<p>
+Putting herself at the head of the line, she led the
+seven girls into the room to the rhythmic beating.
+They circled around it once, then sat down in a ring
+about the fireplace, and looked at Mrs. Bryan with
+admiration.
+</p>
+<p>
+She had on a straight brownish gown, with deep
+fringes at its bottom. She sat on the floor by a curious
+drum, of a sort most of them had never even seen
+pictures of. She was beating it softly, Indian fashion,
+with her closed fist.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Welcome,” she spoke clearly, rising as the girls
+came to a halt around her. “Have you come desiring
+to make a Camp Fire and tend it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” answered all the girls. It was then that
+they dropped into their places, in a semi-circle around
+the fire and their Guardian.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17'></a>17</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Then each of the girls, in turn, rose and repeated
+her wish to become a Camp Fire Girl, and follow the
+Law of the Fire. When they had all finished Mrs.
+Bryan leaned back in her corner, and talked to them
+about the Law—what each of the seven parts of it
+meant.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why—it covers everything!” said Winnie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly does!” seconded Louise. “All I
+have to do, it seems to me, is to go on living, and I’ll
+acquire unnumbered honor beads.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You may think so,” Helen warned her, “but
+you’ll find there’s plenty to learn about it. I’ve been
+studying it out.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s all right!” said Louise airily. She
+caught up the manual as she spoke, and ran her eye
+down the list of honors by the firelight. “Wash and
+iron a shirtwaist—I love to wash things. Make a bed
+for two months—I’d be hung with beads if I had
+one for every two months I’ve made my bed. Abstain
+from gum, candy, ice-cream—oh, good gracious!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That counts as much as the rest,” said Winnie
+mischievously, “and think how good it will be for
+you!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll get thin,” Louise remarked thoughtfully.
+“What are you going to start with, Winnie?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Health-craft, I think.” Winona had taken the
+book in her turn, and was looking through the pages.
+“I’ve always wanted to learn horseback riding, and I
+think perhaps father’ll let me, now it’s in a book as
+something you ought to do.” Then she remembered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18'></a>18</span>
+what her brother had said about the flapjacks, and she
+shook her head as she passed on the book. “No,” she
+corrected herself, “I don’t believe that will be the first
+thing I’ll do. I think I need home-craft quite as much
+as I do learning to ride.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about you, Helen?” asked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, clay-modelling and brass-work, or things
+like that,” was the prompt answer. “I want to take
+up art-craft when I get older, and I might as well begin.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can you clay-model in camp?” asked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just as well as you can make a shirtwaist,” replied
+Helen, unruffled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I like the hand-crafts, too,” said Edith Hillis. “I
+think I shall specialize on fancy-work.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Always a perfect lady!” teased Louise, who was
+something of a tomboy, and frankly thought it was silly
+of Edith to refuse to get her hair wet in the swimming-pool,
+and wear veils for her complexion.
+</p>
+<p>
+The other three girls, Marie Hunter and Dorothy
+Gray and Adelaide Hughes, did not say what honors
+they were going to work for. Everybody was pretty
+sure that Marie was going to write a play, and Dorothy
+did beautiful needle-work. But as for Adelaide, silent
+in her place, nobody could guess.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mustn’t any of you forget that there’s sewing
+to do, right now,” warned Mrs. Bryan. “And
+I want all of you to look at my dress, because each of
+you will have to make one like it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She stood up again, and they all examined the
+straight khaki dress with its leather fringes.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19'></a>19</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“That won’t be especially hard to make,” concluded
+Marie, who did most of her own sewing. “There’s a
+pattern, isn’t there, Mrs. Bryan?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes, and I have it. And there’s one more
+thing, girls—two, rather. We must each choose a
+name, and a symbol to go with the name. Then we
+have to name the Camp Fire.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A name—how do you mean?” asked Winnie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I mean that, of course, our Camp Fire has to be
+called something. Beside that, so does each Camp
+Fire Girl. I like birds and bird-study, so I am going
+to call myself ‘Opeechee,’ the Robin, and take a pair
+of spread wings for my symbol. It’s to put on one’s
+personal belongings like a crest—see? as I have it on
+this pillow-top.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls clustered around her to see the symbol,
+stencilled on the pillow-cover on her lap. She told
+them she was going to burn it on her shirtwaist box
+as well, and showed them where she had woven it into
+her headband, a gorgeous thing of brown and orange-red
+beads.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It would go on a paddle-blade, too,” said Helen
+thoughtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It shall on mine to-morrow,” declared Marie.
+“That is, if I’ve thought of a symbol by then,” she
+added prudently.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think this new name idea is perfectly gorgeous!”
+cried Louise enthusiastically. “I’ve always
+hated my name—you’d expect a Louise to be tall and
+severe and haughty—and look at <em>me!</em>”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20'></a>20</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+She jumped up in the firelight and spread out her
+plump arms tragically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We see you!” nodded Helen calmly, and Louise
+sat down again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll be glad you have red hair when you’re
+grown up,” consoled Edith. “It’s supposed to be very
+beautiful.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, it <em>isn’t</em>,” said Louise energetically, “with
+people always asking after the white horse. I wonder
+why red-haired girls and white horses are supposed to
+go together?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But nobody could tell her. They were all clustered
+about Mrs. Bryan and the manual, choosing names,
+and planning symbols, and you couldn’t hear yourself
+think. Winnie and Helen and Mrs. Bryan had planned
+to finish the evening by playing games, but all the girls
+were so busy talking that it was impossible to get a
+game in edgewise.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently Mrs. Merriam and little Florence came in
+with cocoa and sandwiches. And then, at about ten-thirty,
+the meeting broke up, after planning a bacon-bat
+for the next Saturday.
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+Winnie Merriam sat, as she loved to sit, by the
+dying fire. Her mother began to clear away the dishes,
+but Winnie stopped her with:
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please wait a little while, and talk to me, mother.
+I haven’t had half enough sandwiches, and besides, the
+nicest part of a party is talking it over afterwards.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very well,” said Mrs. Merriam, sitting down
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21'></a>21</span>
+across from her daughter and helping herself to something
+to eat. “I didn’t get much chance at the refreshments
+either, I was so busy helping you serve them.
+What was it you wanted to say particularly, dear?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wanted to ask you about my name, mother. I
+wasn’t christened ‘Winnie,’ was I?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, no, dear—you know that. You were christened
+‘Winona,’ after your grandmother—only
+somehow, we never called you that.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a real Indian name, isn’t it?” asked Winnie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly is,” her mother assured her. “Why,
+dear, I’ve told you the story of it many a time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not for a long time now,” persuaded her daughter.
+“I think I’ve forgotten some of it. Didn’t a
+real Indian give it to grandmother?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The Indian didn’t exactly give it to her, it belonged
+to the Indian’s baby.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, tell me the story!” urged Florence sleepily.
+“I want to hear, too!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Merriam made room for Florence in her lap,
+and went on above her with the sandwich and the story.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Your great-grandfather was an Indian missionary,
+and when he and your Great-grandmother Martin
+went out to live among the Indians, they took with
+them their little baby daughter, so young they had not
+named her yet. Well, one day, while your grandmother
+was sitting on the steps of the log house where
+they lived with her baby on her lap, a squaw came along
+with <em>her</em> baby. She had it strapped to her back, the
+way they carry them, you know. She was a stranger,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22'></a>22</span>
+not one of the mission Indians, and oh, so tired and
+ragged and dusty!
+</p>
+<p>
+“Great-grandmother Martin couldn’t understand
+her language, but she beckoned her into the house and
+gave her food for herself and milk for the baby. And
+then, by signs, she asked the baby’s name. And the
+Indian woman said ‘Winona—papoose Winona—yes.’
+It seemed she could speak a very little English.
+So then Great-grandmother Martin asked the woman
+what the name meant—for all Indian names have meanings,
+you know. But the woman hadn’t enough English
+words to answer her. So she got up from the floor
+where she had been sitting and took the bright steel
+bread-knife that lay where great-grandmother had been
+cutting bread for her. She held it in a ray of sunlight
+that crossed the room, and shook it so the light flashed
+and was reflected, bright and quivering, in the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+“‘That Winona!’ she explained.
+</p>
+<p>
+“After she was rested she wouldn’t stay. She
+went on her travels, wherever she was going,—great-grandmother
+never saw her again. But she didn’t forget
+the name, and as soon as she could she asked the
+Indian interpreter what ‘Winona’ really meant. He
+told her that it was the name of another tribe for ‘ray
+of light that sparkles,’ or ‘flashing ray of light.’
+</p>
+<p>
+“So Great-grandmother Martin named her own
+little girl Winona. The name was pretty, and the
+meaning was prettier still. And she grew up and married
+Grandfather Merriam—and when you came we
+named you for her.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23'></a>23</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then it really is a sure-enough Indian name,” said
+its owner. “And the meaning is lovely. ‘A ray of
+flashing light’—you couldn’t ask to be anything better
+than that, could you, mother? I believe if I can I shall
+keep my own name for the Camp Fire. It is prettier
+than anything I could make up or find.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly is,” said her mother.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why didn’t I have a Nindian name, too?” clamored
+Florence aggrievedly, sitting up and rubbing her
+eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Because your other grandmother didn’t,” said her
+mother, kissing her. “One Indian maiden in a family
+is enough. What names have the other girls chosen,
+Winnie?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona began to laugh.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Louise says she is going to call herself ‘Ishkoodah’—don’t
+you remember, in Hiawatha,
+‘Ishkoodah, the Comet—Ishkoodah, with fiery
+tresses?’ she says she thinks she can make a lovely
+symbol out of it. It’s funny, but Louise is always
+doing funny things. I think she’s really in earnest
+about this. And Helen says she’s going to call herself
+‘Night-Star.’ We don’t know the Indian for that yet,
+but we’re going to hunt it up at the library. She
+thinks she will specialize on astronomy—learn what the
+constellations are, you know. I’d like to do that, too.
+All I know is the Big Dipper, and that the slanty W set
+up sidewise is Cassiopea’s Chair. I learned that from
+the little Storyland of Stars you gave me when I was
+seven.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24'></a>24</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I want to know chairs, too,” said Florence
+drowsily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, dear, you shall,” soothed Winona. Then
+she went on talking to her mother.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So all the girls said they’d take sky names, and
+we decided to call our camp by the Indian name for the
+sky, because we want to camp out as much as we can.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think that is a good idea,” said Mrs. Merriam.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was mine,” said Winona. “But Mrs. Bryan
+remembered an Indian name for it—Karonya. We’re
+Camp Karonya—isn’t that pretty? And then Marie
+remembered the Indian name for South-Wind, one of
+them, Shawondassee, and took it. But the rest couldn’t
+think of Indian names, so we waited to hunt some.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do the names have to be Indian?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no,” Winnie answered sleepily, “but it’s
+better.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come!” said her mother, setting Florence, who
+was fast asleep, on her feet. “We’d all better go to
+bed, or we’ll be too sleepy to go to church to-morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And the sooner I go to sleep the sooner next
+Saturday will come, as you used to say when I was a
+little girl,” added Winona. “Oh, I can scarcely wait
+to find out what a bacon-bat really is on its native
+heath—or anywhere, for that matter.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Didn’t they tell you what it was?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No—Marie is planning it, and she wouldn’t say,
+except that it would be heaps of fun, and I was to
+bring a dozen rolls and some salt and a jack-knife.
+I’ll have to borrow Tom’s. Good-night, mother dear.”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25'></a>25</span>CHAPTER THREE</h2>
+<p>
+“Have you got everything, Winnie?” asked Helen
+anxiously, as they met half-way between Winnie’s gate
+and Helen’s, about ten o’clock on Saturday morning.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think so,” answered Helen a little uncertainly.
+“Marie told me to bring a pound of bacon—that’s all.
+What are you bringing?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Two dozen humble, necessary rolls,” said Winnie,
+“and salt. I had to buy a knife, because Tom lost
+his yesterday. He loses it regularly, once a week.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Pity he picked out to-day,” commented Helen as
+they fell into step. “Do you suppose we’ll be late?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mercy, no!” said Winnie, “We’re more likely
+to be the first!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We won’t be”—and Helen laughed—“Louise is
+always the earliest everywhere. She says she’s lost
+more perfectly good time being punctual than any
+other way she knows.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, we’ll be ahead of Edith, anyway,” Winnie
+remarked cheerfully. She adjusted the two dozen rolls
+more easily, for that many rolls, when you have far to
+carry them, have a way of feeling lumpy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a good thing it isn’t far to the trolley!” said
+Helen. “I didn’t know how nubbly this bacon was
+going to be.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So are my rolls! Let’s trade,” suggested Winnie
+brilliantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Almost human intelligence!” gibed Helen; so
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26'></a>26</span>
+they traded, and each found her load much more comfortable
+than the one she’d had before—which says a
+good deal for the powers of imagination.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t let’s sit up on the benches of that trolley-station—they’re
+the most uncomfortable things in
+town!” objected Winnie. “Come on, Helen. Let’s be
+real sports, and sit on the grass.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do believe we’re the first!” was Helen’s sole
+reply, as she eyed the little trolley-station worriedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, we <em>can’t</em> be,” said Winnie confidently, “unless
+Louise has died or gone West. If she’s in the land of
+the living I know she’s here. Once I asked the crowd
+over in the afternoon to make fudge, and she got there
+just as I was in the middle of sweeping out the kitchen,
+at one o’clock!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You never told me about that!” reminded Helen
+interestedly. “What did you do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona laughed. “Do! I didn’t have to do anything.
+Louise did the doing—she took the broom out
+of my hands, and sent me flying upstairs to dress, and
+did the sweeping herself! Oh, and there she is!
+Lou-i-ise!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here I am!” Louise answered placidly, rising up
+in her white blouse from the very centre of the field
+by the station, and looking, with the sun shining on her
+brilliant hair, like a large white blossom with a red
+centre. “I got here long ago. Come on over here
+on the grass. It’s horrid on the benches, and I’m making
+friends with the nicest little brown hoptoad.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27'></a>27</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ugh—no!” shuddered Helen, who did not care
+for hoptoads. “Here’s Nannie, with Adelaide and
+Dorothy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So the girls ran over to meet their Guardian, and
+the hoptoad was averted. Just behind the newcomers
+arrived Marie and Edith, Marie dignified and neat, as
+usual, in her dark-blue sailor-suit, and Edith in a fluffy
+pink dress that did not look as if it could stand much
+strenuous picnicking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you bring the rolls, Winnie?” called Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly I did, and Helen has the bacon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And I have the hard-boiled eggs,” said Louise
+gayly, “and here is the trolley—it sounds like a French
+lesson. We mount the trolley that we may go to the
+picnic. Come on, girls.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls were bound for a little wood, five miles
+out, where nearly everybody that went on picnics had
+them. They sat down on a rear seat in a giggling row,
+while Marie went ruthlessly on counting supplies.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Adelaide, did you bring condensed cream? And
+who was to bring cake—were you, Edith? Dorothy
+has knives and forks and a kettle.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Cake?” from Edith blankly. “Why, no, Marie,
+I brought eggs. I thought you said to—I thought we
+were going to fry them with the bacon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+A howl of laughter went up, in which Edith joined
+in spite of herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How did you think we’d do it, dear?” Mrs.
+Bryan asked at last, trying to straighten her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s easy,” promised Louise cheerfully. “You
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28'></a>28</span>
+just peel the eggs carefully, throw away the shell, poke
+the raw egg on the point of a stick, and toast it over the
+fire till it’s all gone.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Edith giggled. “Well, I don’t see how you could
+expect me to get it straight over the ’phone, anyway.
+If I’d known you expected me to bring a cake—I don’t
+believe it was me you—ow!”
+</p>
+<p>
+For a lurch of the car had sent the satchel in which
+Dorothy had the knives and forks smashing against
+the raw eggs they had been talking about; and as
+Stevenson said of the cow when they asked him the
+immortal question about the cow meeting the locomotive—it
+was “so much the worse for the eggs.” They
+broke promptly, and one fatal corner of the bag that
+held them began to leak on Edith’s pretty pink dress.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dorothy tried to repair damages with her handkerchief,
+but there was a yellow smear on the front breadth,
+for all they could do. As it proved afterwards, it was
+poor Edith’s hoodoo day.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor little eggs!” Louise lamented pensively.
+“Nobody’s wasting any sympathy on them—and
+they’re all broken up.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, what an awful pun!” cried everybody; but
+Louise went on. She lifted the limp bag gingerly, and
+looked at it as if she was very sorry for it indeed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let’s serenade the eggs, girls!” she said. “Just
+follow me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+And the people in the front seats of the trolley heard
+a hearty chorus of young voices ringing out from the
+two back seats:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29'></a>29</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Good-bye,&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;eggs,&nbsp;&nbsp;good-bye—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Don’t&nbsp;&nbsp;cry,&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;eggs,&nbsp;&nbsp;don’t&nbsp;&nbsp;cry;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Although&nbsp;&nbsp;you&nbsp;&nbsp;break&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;our&nbsp;&nbsp;sweet&nbsp;&nbsp;sake<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While&nbsp;&nbsp;we’re&nbsp;&nbsp;marching&nbsp;&nbsp;away&nbsp;&nbsp;upon&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;picnic—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Good-bye,&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;eggs,&nbsp;&nbsp;good-bye—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;bye,&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;eggs,&nbsp;&nbsp;by&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;bye<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We’ll&nbsp;&nbsp;be&nbsp;&nbsp;eating&nbsp;&nbsp;up&nbsp;&nbsp;our&nbsp;&nbsp;lunch,&nbsp;&nbsp;but&nbsp;&nbsp;we&nbsp;&nbsp;won’t&nbsp;&nbsp;have<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;you&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;crunch—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Good-bye,&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;eggs,&nbsp;&nbsp;good-bye!<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls were in fits of laughter by the time they
+had done singing Louise’s doggerel.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And yet—it really is silly!” said Marie consideringly
+when they were done.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t insult my beautiful, high-brow pome,” said
+Louise cheerfully, hopping out of the trolley, for they
+were at their journey’s end. “Who’s going to fetch
+water? Don’t all speak at once.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll get the water,” Edith promised, speaking
+for herself and Marie. “It won’t be as hard on my poor
+clothes as frying bacon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So the two of them took the kettle and started off.
+</p>
+<p>
+The place the girls had chosen for their bacon-bat
+was a little wood at the end of the trolley-line, which
+possessed a spring, and an open, sheltered sort of ravine
+where picnickers were wont to build their fires. The
+girls sauntered along in ones and twos till they reached
+this ravine, set down the things they carried, and scattered
+to look for sticks.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie and Helen, peacefully gathering wood as
+they went, suddenly heard screams, and dropped their
+wood and ran toward the sound.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30'></a>30</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s—it’s near the spring,” panted Winona to
+Helen. “Oh, I do hope nobody’s fallen in!”
+</p>
+<p>
+They arrived at the spring just as Adelaide Hughes
+and Mrs. Bryan reached it from another direction.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now the spring was not an untouched, wildwood
+affair at all. The authorities had done things to it
+which made its water a great deal better for drinking
+purposes, but much less picturesque—and deeper. Its
+bed had been widened and lined with concrete, and
+barred across at intervals, whether to keep the earth
+back or the concrete solid nobody but the Town Council
+that had done it knew. And although falling between the
+bars didn’t seem very easy even for a slim, small girl,
+Edith seemed to have accomplished it. She was wedged
+between two of the bars across the water, and what
+was more, she had managed to drag Marie Hunter
+down with her in her fall. Marie only had one foot
+in the water, and she was struggling to get out, though
+the force of the stream was making it hard for her, for
+the pool was about four feet deep. But Edith, wedged
+between the bars, was devoting her energies exclusively
+to screaming for help. The reason was apparent when
+the rescuing parties came closer. One arm was caught
+down beside her, so that she could balance herself, but
+not get out. Winona took one look at the situation.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll get Edith out!” she called to Mrs. Bryan.
+“Can you manage Marie?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan was a slender, delicate-looking woman,
+but she was stronger than Winona realized.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly!” she encouraged. And Helen and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31'></a>31</span>
+Winona began eagerly trying to extricate their friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was impossible to reach Edith and take her free
+hand to pull her out by—the bank each side the sluice,
+or stream, or whatever you choose to call it, was too
+deep. Winnie thought a minute. Then she took off the
+long, strong blue silk scarf she wore in a big bow at
+the neck of her blouse.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can I have yours, too, Helen?” And Helen
+handed hers over promptly. Either alone was long
+enough, but Winnie wanted the two to twist together,
+for fear one would not bear Edith’s weight.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can you get around to the other side with your
+end, Helen?” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen scurried around up back of the source. Then
+she and Winnie, each holding an end of the scarf-rope,
+walked down either side of the stream till they were
+parallel with Edith. They knelt down and lowered the
+scarf till Edith could slip her free arm over it, and
+pull herself up. With its aid as a brace, she managed
+to free the caught arm, jammed against her side.
+After that it was easy enough, and in a few minutes
+she extricated herself entirely, and half dragged,
+half pulled herself up the steep bank. By the time
+the girls were done pulling her out she and they were
+pretty well worn out, and they dropped on the grass,
+Helen and Edith on one side and Winnie on the other,
+and took time to find their lost breaths.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan and Marie came up to them now—getting
+Marie out of the water had been a fairly easy
+matter—and made the others get up.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32'></a>32</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Edith and Marie must go straight and get off
+their wet things!” the older woman advised. “And
+Adelaide’s feet are wet, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where had we better go?” asked Marie, calm
+as ever, though nobody could have been much wetter
+than she was up to her waist.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Old Mary’s is the quickest place,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+“Hurry, now—run, or you’ll catch cold. Adelaide
+and I are coming, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The whole party—for Winnie and Helen wanted to
+see the finish—set off at a brisk trot for Old Mary’s.
+</p>
+<p>
+Old Mary was an elderly Irishwoman who earned
+her living mostly by taking in washing, but also by
+selling ginger-ale, cookies and sandwiches to such picnics
+and automobile parties as came her way. Her little
+house was close to the picnic-woods.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re sure of a good fire to change their things
+by, that’s one comfort,” said Winnie to Helen as they
+ran along in the rear of their dripping friends.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, but——” Helen began to laugh. “What
+are they going to change to?” she inquired. “We
+didn’t any of us bring our trunks—it isn’t done on
+picnics!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’ll have to go to bed!” was Winnie’s solution,
+and they both began to laugh again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a shame, though, to have them miss all the
+picnic,” said Winnie, sobering down.
+</p>
+<p>
+But when they arrived on the scene they found
+the victims hadn’t the least intention of going to bed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure, I’ll iron their bits of clothes dry,” said Old
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33'></a>33</span>
+Mary, “an’ who’ll be the worse if they borry a few
+clothes from me ironin’ horse till the others are dry?
+The people that own ’em ’d never mind—I’ve an elegant
+trade in the washin’ of clothes, an’ there’s plenty
+to fit yez all on the horse.”
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not half-past eleven yet, and the girls would
+not be going home for some hours, so there would be
+plenty of time for the things to dry. So Edith and
+Marie accepted Old Mary’s offer on the spot. Among
+the various family washes that she was doing were
+some things of their own. They managed to pick out
+enough dry clothing for all their needs—all but dresses.
+There were shirtwaists and blouses galore, but it was
+too early for many wash-skirts to be going to the
+laundress.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, there was an ample red cotton wrapper,
+the property of Mary herself, which at least covered
+Marie. But Edith was little, and there was nothing
+which came near fitting her but an expensively trimmed
+white organdy party-dress, which Mary said frankly
+she did not feel she could lend.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What shall I do?” asked Edith in desperation.
+“I can’t sit here all day till my dress dries!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I dunno, darlin’. Sure ’tis too bad. Wait a minute,
+though.” She hurried out of the room, and presently
+returned waving something blue. “If ye wouldn’t
+mind these overalls, now,” she said, “they’re just
+washed an’ ironed for little James Dempsey to wear.
+An’ the beauty of overalls is they fit anybody.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“<em>Overalls!</em>” said Edith mournfully.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34'></a>34</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+But overalls were better than a day in bed, and the
+end of it was, that out of Old Mary’s hospitable cottage
+walked a tall Irishwoman with two long braids
+over her trailing red wrapper, and a small Irishman
+with yellow curls over very baggy and much turned-up
+overalls, instead of neat Marie and fluffy Edith. They
+and Adelaide had put on dry stockings, and had many
+thicknesses of newspaper on their shoes till they could
+get to the fire to dry them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good-mornin’!” said Marie cheerfully to her
+astonished friends, as she sailed majestically up to the
+freshly-made fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure we’re the world-renowned vaudeville team,
+Hunter an’ Hillis.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just back from doing their justly-famous diving
+stunt!” added Winnie. “Better come near the fire,
+girls, and try to get your shoes dry.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The fire, which the rest had made during the
+“diving-stunt,” was burning beautifully. The girls laid
+down waterproofs and blankets, and disposed themselves
+comfortably around it, for the fire-makers were
+tired, and the rescuers and rescued were particularly
+glad to lie down and be warm and dry and limp.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Two long hours to dinner-time!” from Winnie
+presently in a very sad voice. “I don’t feel as if I
+could stand it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nor I!” several voices chimed in.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then why do you?” suggested Mrs. Bryan sensibly.
+“If everybody’s hungry we might as well have
+dinner now!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35'></a>35</span>CHAPTER FOUR</h2>
+<p>
+At the mention of dinner everybody became energetic
+as by magic. Winnie split her two dozen rolls
+neatly down the middle, and set them in rows on a
+newspaper, ready for the broiled bacon. Marie, with
+her red wrapper pinned up out of harm’s way, banked
+the fire, while Edith mixed cocoa and condensed milk
+industriously in the bottom of a gigantic kettle which
+was discovered, too late, to have been intended to boil
+the water in. It occurred to Winnie that Edith in
+overalls was much more fun than Edith in fluffy ruffles
+that she had to remember to take care of, as she watched
+her flying around with her curls waving in the wind,
+looking like a stage newsboy. Helen, on her knees by
+the heap of provisions, was unwrapping her bacon, and
+somebody else was peeling all the hard-boiled eggs.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Didn’t anybody bring cake?” asked Louise plaintively.
+“Have we nothing but rolls, bacon and eggs?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, what else do you want?” asked Marie with
+a dignity rather interfered with by the way her scarlet
+draperies flapped in the breeze. “All the bacon-bats
+I ever heard about they just had rolls and bacon—we
+have a lot of things extra.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Glad I never attended one of the just-rolls-and-bacon
+kind,” Louise rebelliously declared.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie, who liked cake herself, and thought she had
+seen some, went back to the heap of provisions and
+began to dig at it like a small dog at a mole-hill.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36'></a>36</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Marie!” she called triumphantly in a minute,
+“There <em>is</em> cake! And a lot of bananas!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s good,” Marie serenely remarked. “Bring
+them along.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie reappeared in a minute, very flushed and
+triumphant, with a hand of bananas under her arm, and
+a huge chocolate cake, with almost undamaged icing,
+poised carefully before her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I remember!” said absent-minded Dorothy,
+“I brought that cake. It was in the satchel with the
+knives and forks.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You certainly saved all our lives,” said Louise
+feelingly, and went on whittling toasting-sticks for the
+bacon. “Here, Winnie, take a stick and start in to be
+useful.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How do you do it?” Winnie wondered—“cook
+bacon, I mean? I never did it this way before.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just string it on the stick any way at all,” Marie
+advised, and speared a slice scientifically as she spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Easy when you know how!” laughed Winnie,
+sharpening her own stick a little more and threading
+some bacon on it.
+</p>
+<p>
+In a few minutes everybody had slices of bacon
+frizzling gayly, and getting more or less charred.
+When they were done enough they were popped between
+the opened rolls, and—eaten, cinders and all.
+The water, though it was boiled in something else than
+its own proper kettle—something remarkably like a
+dish-pan cunningly slung over the fire by a wonderful
+system of forked sticks—came to a boil without accident,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37'></a>37</span>
+and was poured on the cocoa. Each girl had
+brought her own drinking-cup, so there was no difficulty
+about crockery. It seemed to Winnie, balanced on
+one elbow on her rug, that nothing had ever tasted
+so good as the bacon sandwiches and hard-boiled eggs,
+washed down by all the hot cocoa you could drink.
+</p>
+<p>
+By the time the cake and bananas came the girls
+felt as if they couldn’t eat another thing. But they
+did. It was delightful lying around the fire talking
+and eating and laughing. It was one of those mild
+days which come in May sometimes, bright, with a little
+breeze. After awhile somebody started a Camp Fire
+song, and one by one they all joined in. After that
+they lay quiet for awhile, talking and being lazy.
+</p>
+<p>
+When they began to clear away Edith declared that
+she didn’t dare go near the spring again. So it was
+Winona and Louise who took the few things there
+were to wash, the cocoa-kettle and dish-pan and drinking-cups
+and the silver, over to the spring. It was pleasant,
+lazy work, not a bit like home dish-washing. Louise
+splashed the things up and down in the running water,
+and Winona dried them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t it nice?” sighed Winnie. “Oh, I do wish
+we could camp outdoors all this summer, instead of
+living in hot houses! Don’t you always hate to sleep
+indoors when it’s hot?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise rolled over on her back and looked at the sky.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I think I do,” she spoke thoughtfully. “You
+have to, though. Out in California they say everybody
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38'></a>38</span>
+has sleeping-porches, and never thinks of going inside
+at night. I wish people had them here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+A brilliant idea came to Winona—which, by the
+way, she afterward carried out. “Our side-porch is
+almost all screened. I wonder if mother wouldn’t let
+me sleep there? I’m going to ask her, anyway.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wish I could, too,” breathed Louise, “but our
+side-porch is where everybody goes by—that’s the worst
+of living on a corner. I know I never could break the
+milkman and the baker of contributing rolls and milk
+on top of me in the early morning!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What a splendid idea! Then you could have
+‘breakfast in your bed,’ like Harry Lauder,” said
+Winnie, and both girls stopped to giggle. “But
+honestly,” began Winnie again, as she reached out for
+some long grass near her and began to plait it, “don’t
+you think we can all camp out this summer?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“N-no, not here—at least, I don’t believe they’d let
+us, the people who own it, I mean. But there must be
+somewhere that we could go, somewhere not too far
+off to cost a lot to get there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder!” said Louise, pulling a thick red pig-tail
+around in order to nibble its end thoughtfully. She
+had a habit of gnawing at her hair when she thought
+hard. “What about Cribb’s Creek?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s too near,” Winnie opposed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, where did the Boy Scouts go last year?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Up on Wampoag River, a little way below Wampoag,”
+said Winona. “They said it was a cinch, because they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39'></a>39</span>
+could sell all the fish they caught to the
+Wampoag hotel-keepers, and get things they needed,
+and yet it was just as wild as it could be if you went
+a little way along the river.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Wampoag was a summer resort not far from them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, how far’s that?” asked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“About ten miles to the boys’ camp,” answered
+Winona. “But there would be plenty of good camping-ground
+nearer home, and quite close to that little
+village—what’s its name?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Green’s Corners,” supplied Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder who Green was, and if he really <em>did</em>
+have corners,” Winona thoughtfully remarked.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise giggled. “He was a square man, I suppose,”
+she said, and Winnie gave her a shove. “Oh, don’t!”
+she said. “That’s an awful pun.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thought it was a very good one. Well, to
+come back to business, the boys didn’t go by train.
+Indeed, I don’t think you can, unless you go away
+round. They hiked.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, why shouldn’t we, too?” asked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Or part of the way, anyway!” added Winnie,
+</p>
+<p>
+“People would take us for a band of ‘I won’t
+works!’ We’d look it, too, by the time we got to the
+end of the journey.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But we needn’t do it all at once,” said Winnie.
+“We could break the journey overnight. Don’t you
+know, people in England have walking-tours that last
+for days and days? I’ve read about it. They stop in
+inns overnight and have adventures.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40'></a>40</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I’d like the adventures, if they didn’t mean
+falling into ponds and getting your clothes wet,” said
+Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie yawned.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I suppose they think we’ve tied the cups round
+our necks and jumped in,” and she lazily started to
+get up. “Come on, Louise, let’s find Mrs. Bryan and
+ask her about camping. She’s sure to know about
+hikes and everything.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Finding Mrs. Bryan proved to be hard, because she
+was not in the kind of a place where you would expect
+to find a grown-up step-mother. They finally discovered
+her by a flutter of blue skirt that hung down below
+the branches of an old apple-tree. She was sitting
+comfortably in one of its crotches, trying to carve
+herself a willow whistle.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on up, girls!” she hailed them cheerfully.
+“There’s always room at the top!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are the rest of them?” asked Winnie,
+beginning to climb. Louise followed more slowly, for
+Winnie was more slender and quicker in her movements.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Scattered all over, I suppose,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+“Edith went back to old Mary’s to see if her clothes
+were dry. Did you want them for anything special?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No indeed,” Winnie assured her. “It was you
+we wanted for something special.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I’m here,” and Mrs. Bryan dropped an
+affectionate hand on the pretty brown head beneath
+her. “What is it, dear?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41'></a>41</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s about camping out,” spoke Winnie and Louise
+in a breath. “Do you think we can do it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan laughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“‘Can we do it?’ Why, my dears, that’s just
+what we’re for! What would be the fun of belonging
+to a Camp Fire if we couldn’t go camping outdoors?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, lovely!” cried Winnie. “Then you’ll go, too?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I certainly will!” said Mrs. Bryan promptly. “It
+would have to be when Mr. Bryan was having his vacation,
+though, because it would never do to leave, not
+only my own hearth-fire, but my own poor helpless
+husband, untended. And, of course, it will not be till
+school is through.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, oh, it begins to sound almost real!” Winnie
+cried with a joyous little jounce that shook several pink
+blossoms from the tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just wait!” warned Louise from her lower limb.
+“When we start that twenty-five-mile hike, it will seem
+quite too real for comfort, take my word for it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t you think we could hike to camp?” appealed
+Winnie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll have to practise shorter hikes first,” was the
+answer. “If you do that there’s no reason why we
+couldn’t all walk the distance. I suppose we’ll camp
+somewhere on the Wampoag River.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, that’s what we thought,” said the girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course, we’d have to break the journey,”
+Winnie went on.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, yes, I think so,” Mrs. Bryan answered.
+“Oh, here are Helen and Marie now. Oh, Helen!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42'></a>42</span>
+We’re up in this tree! No, don’t come up—all the
+seats are full!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then come down!” called Helen. “We have
+something to show you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The something proved to be a small and very scared
+garter-snake, that Helen was carrying in a forked stick.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor little snakelet!” said Louise. “Do let him
+go home, Helen—I’m sure he’s not grown-up yet.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So Helen put down the snake and off he went.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you find your clothes?” Louise asked Marie
+rather superfluously, for she had on her sailor-suit,
+rather fresher-looking than it had been before.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was all done when we got there,” said Marie,
+“but Edith’s dress was harder to do—all those ruffles,
+you know—so Mary’s still ironing it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then we’d better sit here and wait for her,” suggested
+Louise. “And oh, girls, we have a plan.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A real plan, all hand-made?” mocked Helen.
+“Do tell us about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So then the camping-trip was discussed and votes
+taken about it. Helen, of course, could go. Marie was
+sure she would be allowed to.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mother says I stay in the house and read too much
+anyway,” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+The other girls, drifting up one by one, were all
+wild over the idea. Edith, in her freshly-laundered
+frock, was a little doubtful about the hike, but as she
+said, if she fainted from exhaustion she could take a
+train or a carriage or something the rest of the way.
+</p>
+<p>
+They talked camping till it was time to go back and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43'></a>43</span>
+pack up things for the return trip. So the girls rose
+up from around the apple-tree, and stowed everything
+away in the baskets and satchels they had brought, and
+walked back to the trolley. First, though, they gave
+old Mary all the provisions they had left; cocoa, six
+rolls, and a generous half of the chocolate cake.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That certainly was a life-sized cake!” breathed
+Winnie as she set it on Mary’s kitchen table. “But it
+won’t be as hard to eat as it was to carry, will it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure ye needn’t worry but what it’ll get et,”
+laughed Mary. “Many thanks, an’ good luck to yez all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They piled into the trolley, rather sleepy with the
+long day in the wind, and, except for Marie and Edith,
+rather crumpled. Winnie’s blouse had a grass-stain,
+and Louise’s was marked neatly across the back, like
+a Japanese stencil, with a wet brown bough-mark.
+There were also burrs, more or less, on everybody.
+But what were burrs?
+</p>
+<p>
+Everybody heaved a sight of contentment as they
+settled down in their seats.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly was a lovely picnic!” they said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How beautifully fresh and clean Edith Hillis
+keeps her dresses!” said Mrs. Merriam to Winnie, as
+Edith turned to wave good-bye at the Merriam gate,
+and went down the street with Marie and Helen.
+“You’d think that pink dress had just been washed
+and ironed, and yet she’s been out in the woods with
+the rest of you tousled-looking children all day!”
+</p>
+<p>
+And Winona laughed so that it was at least two
+minutes before she could explain.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44'></a>44</span>CHAPTER FIVE</h2>
+<p>
+“I’d advise you girls to hurry up with those squaw
+dresses,” hinted Tom Merriam darkly, as he fled
+through the sitting-room on his way back from Scout-practice.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie looked up. She and Helen and Louise were
+sitting in a row on the window-seat, sewing for dear
+life on their ceremonial gowns.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We are hurrying all we can,” she smiled. “These
+have to be done by to-night anyway.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They are, nearly,” chimed in Louise, shaking out
+her garment and observing its fringes with satisfaction.
+“What’s he talking about, Win?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tommy! Tom! Come back and tell us!” called
+his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t!” shouted Tom down the stairs. “You’ll
+find out in time—you’re going to need ’em, that’s all!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What on earth do you suppose he means?” wondered
+Helen, as the last glimpse of Tom’s khaki-clad
+form vanished up the stairs.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winnie laughed as she finished off a seam.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t believe it meant anything,” she said.
+“Tom’s always trying to get up excitements.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“<em>I</em> think it means something!” said Louise, beginning
+to take out bastings. She was the best seamstress
+of the three, and consequently was done first. “Here,
+Helen, let me finish that sleeve for you while you do
+the other one.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45'></a>45</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+She took up the sleeve, and jumped up and began
+to dance with the sleeve for a partner.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Something’s&nbsp;&nbsp;goin’&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;happen,&nbsp;&nbsp;honey,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Happen,&nbsp;&nbsp;honey,&nbsp;&nbsp;happen&nbsp;&nbsp;mighty&nbsp;&nbsp;soon!<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thank you!” said Helen gratefully, referring
+not to the song and dance, but to the aid.
+She hated sewing, and nothing but the Camp Fire
+requirements would ever have made her persevere till
+her gown was done. Winnie did not mind sewing one
+way or the other, and by a queer contradiction harum-scarum
+Louise loved it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls worked on, and discussed on. Winnie was
+sure Tom meant nothing, and the others were just as
+sure that he had some reason for saying what he had.
+</p>
+<p>
+That night the girls were to hold their first Council
+Fire. That was why they were hurrying so to finish
+their dresses.
+</p>
+<p>
+When it came Winnie’s turn to answer the roll-call,
+she rose, slim and graceful in her khaki dress,
+before her turn was reached.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Opeechee, Guardian of the Fire, may I speak
+before my turn comes to answer to my name?” she
+asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Speak,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Opeechee, I do not want to change my name.
+May I not be known in the Camp Fire as Winona?
+The name is one that an Indian gave one of my own
+people many circles of moons ago, and it is mine by
+inheritance.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46'></a>46</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Will you tell the Camp Fire about it?” asked
+Mrs. Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+So Winnie told the Camp Fire the story her mother
+had told her, of the weary Indian woman her grandmother
+had helped, and whose papoose had been called
+“Winona,” “Flashing Ray of Light.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Could anything be better than to be a ray of light
+in dark places?” asked Winona. “I like the meaning
+of my name, and if the Camp Fire will let me keep it
+I promise to be a brightness wherever I can, always,
+that will light the dark places for people who need it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you say, Daughters of the Camp Fire?”
+asked Mrs. Bryan when Winona was done.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If we all have different Camp Fire names, won’t
+it seem strange for Winona to have the same name
+straight through?” objected Marie. “It is a beautiful
+name with a beautiful meaning, if it weren’t that it is
+her every-day name.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nobody ever calls me anything but Winnie,” said
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why not use the translation?” suggested Helen.
+“‘Ray of Light’ is pretty. And then Winnie could
+keep the meaning.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have spoken well!” said Mrs. Bryan. “What
+do you say to that, Daughters of the Camp Fire?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good!” from all the girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Kolah, Ray of Light!” spoke Mrs. Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then she went on with the business of the evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Two of our Camp Fire Girls are to become Wood-gatherers
+to-night. Will they rise?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47'></a>47</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona and Marie had qualified, and they stood up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ray of Light,” Mrs. Bryan went on, “will you
+tell us how you chose your name?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“‘Flashing Ray of Light’ is the name my fathers
+gave me,” clearly spoke Winona, “and I have told the
+Camp Fire the reason of its choosing. But I keep it
+because I intend to carry out its meaning. I have tried
+to earn my right to it by being bright, and helping
+all I could, no matter how dark the days were, nor
+how much nicer it would have been to be cross. As
+my symbol I have chosen the firefly, because it lights
+dark places.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Flashing Ray of Light brings brightness to our
+Camp Fire,” said the Guardian. “We welcome you to
+your place in our Camp Fire Circle.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She gave Winona her pretty silver ring with its
+raying fagots, and repeating the formula which went
+with it.
+</p>
+<p>
+When the girls had welcomed her rank and sung
+her a cheer, Winona sat down, she hoped, for the last
+time.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How does it feel?” whispered Louise, who sat
+next her. “I wish I’d collected my requirements as
+quickly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It feels partly awfully proud and partly awfully
+relieved,” Winona whispered back. “And I feel as if
+I oughtn’t to have picked out such awfully easy honors
+to take. Anybody could make a shirtwaist and know
+about their ancestors and trim a hat——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, they couldn’t!” contradicted Louise, who
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48'></a>48</span>
+admired Winona very much. “You just happen to be
+cleverer than the rest of us, that’s all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m <em>not!</em>” said Winona as vehemently as it could
+be said in a whisper. “Marie’s getting her Wood-gatherer’s
+ring to-night, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan’s voice rose again in the same formula.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shawondassee, tell us how you chose your name.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shawondassee means ‘South Wind,’” answered
+Marie’s steady voice. “I chose the name because the
+South Wind coaxes instead of scolding, and I thought
+it was a good name to remind me to do the same thing.
+As my symbol I have chosen the willow shoots, because
+they come up year after year, no matter how often they
+are cut down, and I wish to have their perseverance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Perseverance and cheerfulness!” whispered
+Louise. “Who would have thought Marie needed
+either of them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You can’t tell much about Marie, because you
+never can get to her to talk about herself,” answered
+Winona. “But she certainly is one of the hardest
+workers in the class at school.”
+</p>
+<p>
+At this point the girls had to stop talking, to join
+in the Wood-gatherer’s verses for Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nearly all Marie’s required honors were Patriotism,
+for she was the student of the crowd.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It fairly makes me shiver to think how much that
+girl knows,” whispered Louise. “My honors are going
+to be plain home-craft—making pies and chaperoning
+ice-chests and massaging floors, and so forth.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Will your mother let you?” asked Winona; for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49'></a>49</span>
+Mrs. Lane kept two maids, having the money to do it,
+and a big family.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let me!” exploded Louise. “She’ll weep tears
+of joy if there’s any prospect of my getting thinner!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as Louise spoke there fell one of those uncanny
+silences which have a way of occurring at the worst
+possible times. Louise’s statement pealed cheerfully
+through the room, and poor Louise, blushing scarlet,
+tried to make herself very small—a hard matter.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls could not help laughing, but Mrs. Bryan
+had mercy on her embarrassment, and went on with the
+awarding of the honor beads each girl had won since
+the last meeting. Winona’s were rather various—a
+few from each class. Helen’s were nearly all hand-craft—stencilling
+and clay-modelling. She had brought
+along a bureau-scarf she had done, to show, and a
+beautiful little bowl she had modelled and painted and
+fired. Louise had only three beads so far, one for identifying
+birds, one for preserving, and one for making
+her ceremonial dress.
+</p>
+<p>
+Edith Hillis, to everybody’s surprise, was given an
+honor for folk-dancing, and proceeded, when she was
+asked, to get up and demonstrate. This held up the
+regular course of the meeting for quite a little while,
+because when she showed them the Highland Fling all
+the girls wanted to learn it. So for at least a half-hour
+they practised it, till the floor over Mr. Bryan’s head,
+in his study beneath, must have seemed to be coming
+down.
+</p>
+<p>
+After they had all tired themselves thoroughly they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50'></a>50</span>
+sang for awhile. About midway of the second song
+Mrs. Bryan evidently remembered something, for she
+gave a start as if she were going to speak. As soon as
+they had finished she raised her hand for silence, and
+said:
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have a message for Camp Karonya. It should
+be delivered at the business meeting, I suppose, but—it
+won’t keep till then. The Boy Scouts, Camp No. Six,
+of this town, invite the Camp Fire Girls to a dance
+given by them in the school-house assembly-room next
+Wednesday night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, how perfectly lovely!” cried Edith. “Of
+course we’ll go!”
+</p>
+<p>
+A confused noise of voices broke out, all speaking
+at once. You could catch an occasional word—“blue
+messaline,” “white organdy,” “orchestra,” “how perfectly
+dandy!”—but for the most part it was just a
+noise.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan waited placidly till it had quieted down.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is your pleasure in this matter, Daughters
+of the Camp Fire?” she asked then.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, we’ll go!” cried everybody at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then you’d better instruct the Secretary to write
+them to that effect,” suggested Mrs. Bryan gravely, for
+the tumult seemed inclined to break out again.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona jumped up and put it in the form of a
+motion that the Secretary should reply, and actually
+induced the girls to second and ratify it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll write the acceptance right away!” declared
+Helen with enthusiasm.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51'></a>51</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+She went into the next room, got paper and ink,
+came back, sat down in the middle of a ring of interested
+suggesters, and wrote a very pleased acceptance.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona, robbed of her usual confidante, turned
+to the girl on her other side, to talk clothes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m going to wear my blue organdy, with the
+Dresden sash and hair-ribbons,” she said without looking
+to see to whom she was talking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are you?” said the other girl, hesitating a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona looked at her, at the sound of her voice.
+She had thought she was speaking to Louise. But
+Louise was on the other side of the room, and the
+girl next her was Adelaide Hughes, one of the two
+girls Mrs. Bryan had brought into their Camp Fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was two months now since Winona and Adelaide
+had begun to meet each other weekly at the Camp Fire
+good times and Ceremonials, but when you have all
+the bosom friends you want it is hard to see such a
+very great deal of other people. Winona realized now
+that she had scarcely exchanged two consecutive sentences
+with Adelaide all the time she had known her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide was a thin, tired-looking girl of about
+thirteen, with big blue eyes and a sensitive mouth, and
+hair that had curious yellow and brown lights. She
+did not join very heartily, ever, in the frolics, but she
+seemed to enjoy everything with a sort of shy, watching
+intensity.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And what are you going to wear?” Winona asked,
+more out of friendliness than curiosity.
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide colored.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52'></a>52</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I don’t know,” she said. “I—a white dress,
+I think.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Voile?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide shook her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, lawn—if I come. But maybe I won’t be
+there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, what a shame!” said Winona with the
+bright friendliness that was a part of her. “Of course
+you must be there. Helen accepted for all of us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know, but—but maybe I can’t come,” repeated
+Adelaide.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course you can!” insisted Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide’s eyes filled with tears, and she shook her
+head.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona slipped one arm around her. The two
+girls were sitting a little apart from the rest by now,
+in a dusky corner.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s some reason why you think you can’t,
+some horrid reason,” she coaxed. “Now, just tell
+Winona what it is.” She spoke as if she were petting
+her own younger sister, though Adelaide was only a
+year younger than she was.
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide’s eyes overflowed, and she felt gropingly
+for her handkerchief, to dry her eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here’s one,” whispered Winona, slipping her own
+into Adelaide’s hand. “Now, tell me, dear. It isn’t
+very bad, is it? Maybe I could help.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You <em>can’t!</em>” said Adelaide fiercely, “and I won’t
+tell you a thing unless you promise not to.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Winona cheerfully, “I promise.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53'></a>53</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I haven’t any party dress, and father can’t
+afford to get me one,” choked Adelaide, “and all I have
+is an old white lawn I wear afternoons, and it’s <em>horrid</em>.
+And—and, Winona Merriam, if you offer to loan me
+a dress I’ll never speak to you again!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wasn’t going to,” comforted Winona, stroking
+poor sobbing Adelaide’s shoulder, while her own quick,
+friendly mind cast about for a way out.
+</p>
+<p>
+For Adelaide must come to the dance, and evidently
+she wouldn’t borrow anything from anybody.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not borrow—how queer!” said Winona, voicing
+her thought. “Why, I don’t know any of the girls
+I wouldn’t borrow from, if I needed to, or they from
+me. Don’t you ever borrow anything, Adelaide—except
+trouble?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I don’t,” said Adelaide chokily but proudly.
+“It’s—it’s different when you <em>have</em> to!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t see why!” said sunny, friendly-hearted
+Winona, who always took it for granted that she
+liked people, and of course that they would like her!
+She had never known what it was to be rich, but never
+either what it was to be painfully poor. “Well, let’s
+think of some other way. I suppose you haven’t time
+to earn the money for a dress for this party. Opeechee
+was telling us last week that we ought to try to earn so
+much money apiece, and that there were lots of ways
+for doing it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, there wouldn’t be time,” answered Adelaide
+mournfully; but she stopped crying and began to look
+interested.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54'></a>54</span>CHAPTER SIX</h2>
+<p>
+The two girls sat and thought hard for a moment;
+then Winnie suddenly thought of something.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just a minute, Adelaide!” she whispered, and she
+went over to the corner where Mrs. Bryan and Marie
+Hunter were discussing business together. The rest
+were still all talking dance excitedly by the fireplace.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Opeechee,” she said, “may I ask you something?
+Would there be any reason why the girls couldn’t wear
+their ceremonial dresses to the dance?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan thought for a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s no actual reason why we shouldn’t,” she
+said. “Only the idea is that the dresses should be kept
+for rather intimate and private things.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But it would be such a good idea if we wore
+them,” insisted Winona eagerly. “You see, perhaps—perhaps
+some of us mightn’t be able to afford new party
+dresses, and maybe we mightn’t have any old good ones,
+either.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, Winnie, you have that blue——” began
+Marie, and checked herself as she saw a light.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Some of us mightn’t have any new party dresses,”
+repeated Winona obstinately, but with an appealing
+look at Mrs. Bryan. She did so hope she would understand!
+“Anyway, the boys expect us to,” she went
+on eagerly. “Tom said this afternoon that we’d better
+get the dresses ready, only we didn’t know then what
+he meant.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55'></a>55</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan looked at Winona’s vivid, earnest face,
+and—understood.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think you are quite right, Ray of Light. I’ll
+speak to the girls.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She stood up and struck lightly on the little Indian
+drum to call the girls’ attention.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls!” she said, “as the dance that the Scouts
+have asked us to is an affair to which we have been
+invited as an official body, it seems to me that it would
+be only courteous for us to wear our ceremonial gowns.
+So I am going to ask that you all do it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a murmur of approval all over the room.
+When you have just acquired a beautiful new costume
+it’s human nature to want to wear it early and often.
+There was only a plaintive wail, which Marie suppressed,
+from Edith Hillis:
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, my lovely new green messaline!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona crossed over to the place where Adelaide
+still sat.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well?” she said triumphantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you tell Mrs. Bryan anything about me?”
+Adelaide demanded suspiciously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I didn’t,” replied Winona rather indignantly.
+“What do you take me for, when I said I wouldn’t?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I didn’t know,” apologized Adelaide. “And—thank
+you, ever so much, Winona! You—you don’t
+<em>know!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona laughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, yes, I do. At least, I’ve often wanted new
+clothes when I couldn’t have them. But mother says
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56'></a>56</span>
+if you can’t the next best thing is to go on wearing
+what you have, and be so cheerful nobody has time to
+think what you have on!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nobody ever told me that,” pondered Adelaide,
+as if it were an entirely new idea to her. “But my
+mother’s dead, you see. And, anyway, it doesn’t sound
+as if it could be true. Did you ever try it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” Winona said, and laughed. “I did—it
+was funny, too. I was visiting some cousins of mine.
+I hadn’t expected to stay, and I hadn’t brought a single
+party thing, and none of their clothes would fit me.
+They had perfectly lovely dresses. And suddenly we
+were all invited to a party, and I had nothing but a
+blue linen; and all the rest of them in the fluffiest
+clothes you ever saw!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well,” said Adelaide, “didn’t it feel <em>horrid</em>.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, it did for awhile,” owned Winona. “But
+everybody was sitting around as stiff as stiff—you
+know, some parties are like that at first. And somebody
+just had to say something. And pretty soon I thought
+of a game that just fitted in, and asked them to play it.
+After that I was so busy thinking up games that I
+never remembered a thing I had on till we got home
+that night. And I only did then because my cousin
+Ethel said, ‘Oh, I’ve torn my dress!’ and I said it
+was queer I hadn’t torn mine, too—and then I remembered
+that it was linen and wouldn’t tear. We certainly
+had a good time at that party!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide looked at Winona’s shining eyes and
+flushed cheeks enviously.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57'></a>57</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, you could do that,” she said, “and people
+would be so busy watching you that they wouldn’t know
+whether you had a flour-sack on or a satin. But I can’t,
+because I keep worrying all the time about what people
+think of me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I should think that <em>would</em> be horrid,” Winona
+sympathized.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is,” said Adelaide, “only I——”
+</p>
+<p>
+The rest that Adelaide had been going to say was
+drowned, because just then came the signal for the
+closing song, and soon the Council Fire was over.
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+“What on earth were you talking to Adelaide
+Hughes so long about?” demanded Louise curiously as
+they walked home, for their ways lay together.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, just things,” was Winona’s answer. “I
+think she’s awfully shy, and a little afraid of the rest
+of us, Lou.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And you think we ought to make a special fuss
+over her?” said Louise mournfully. “I knew that was
+coming. Well, I suppose we will—Helen and I always
+do what you tell us to. I wish I were shy, and people
+ran around saying, ‘we really must make an effort to
+draw poor little timid Louise out!’”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona burst out laughing—the idea of “poor,
+little, timid Louise” was so irresistibly funny.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s going to be a gorgeous dance, though.”
+Louise went on. “Wasn’t it splendid of the Scouts to
+think of doing it? And what about my being right?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58'></a>58</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“You certainly were right,” Winona admitted.
+“Are you sure you don’t mind going on alone?”
+</p>
+<p>
+For they had reached the Merriam house.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a bit,” said Louise cheerfully. “It’s only a
+block, anyway. Good-night, honey.”
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+“Oh, it’s lovely!” exclaimed Winona next morning
+when she ran downstairs. She flung herself on Tom
+bodily and hugged him hard as she spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s lovely?” asked Tom, detaching himself,
+or trying to. “Go easy, Winnie; it was just sheer luck
+that you didn’t break any ribs or my collar-bone or
+something. Affection’s all right in its place, but——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But its place isn’t on you, you mean?” retorted
+Winona, unwinding herself cheerfully from her
+brother. “Why, I mean the dance, of course.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that!” said Tom. “That’s nothing! It
+ought to be pretty good fun, though, don’t you think
+so?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I know it will!” cried Winona fervently.
+“Are the boys going to wear their uniforms?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well,” said Tom doubtfully, “we don’t know.
+You see, we’ve hiked in ’em, and rolled around on the
+grass in ’em wrestling, and done about everything to
+those poor old uniforms that you can do to clothes, and
+they really aren’t fit for civilized society.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Meaning ours?” said Winona. “Thanks for the
+compliment! Why don’t you have them cleaned? I
+suppose even khaki cleans!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59'></a>59</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know,” said her brother, “I’ll ask mother.
+Maybe we can manage it. But—oh, say, Winnie,
+there’s something I wanted to speak to you about.
+You know, there are new people moved in next door.
+They’re Southerners, here for the mother’s health or
+something. There’s a boy about my age, and a girl
+somewhere around yours. I don’t know much about the
+girl, but Billy Lee’s an awfully decent fellow, and we’ve
+got him in the Scouts. Now what do you think about
+taking his sister into your Camp Fire? She’d just
+about fit in as far as age goes, and it would be nice
+and neighborly. We’ll have to ask her for the dance
+anyway, because there aren’t enough of you Camp
+Firers yet to go around. The girl must need something
+to do, because Billy seems to worry about her
+rather. Stands to reason it isn’t natural for a fellow
+to fret about his sister having a good time unless she
+needs it pretty badly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I don’t know,” said Winona. “When you
+come to a strange place things are bound to be stupid
+till you get to know people. We’ve lived here always,
+you know. But I’ll go over and see her as soon as
+I’ve done the breakfast dishes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Accordingly, when the breakfast dishes were done
+and the dining-room tidied, Winona washed her hands
+over again very carefully, and put cold-cream and talcum
+powder on them, for she did not like the smell of
+dish-water, especially when she was going calling.
+Then she made her way to the house next door.
+</p>
+<p>
+All the houses on that block stood in deep yards,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60'></a>60</span>
+which went all around them. Winona crossed the path
+and went up the porch, feeling a little shy. She had
+not asked anyone to join the Camp Fire before. They
+were to take in five new girls at the next monthly meeting,
+just before they went camping, but all of them
+had let the girls know that they wanted to join. Winona
+was a moving spirit in Camp Karonya, and she knew
+that anyone she vouched for would be welcome. But
+she did hope the next-door girl would fit in with the
+rest of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+The door was opened by a colored maid, but before
+she could say whom she was, a dark, handsome boy of
+about fifteen, in a Scout uniform, came running down
+the stairs.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re Winnie Merriam, aren’t you?” he asked
+eagerly. “I’m Billy Lee. I asked your brother to
+send you over to see Nataly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona liked Billy on the spot, he was so friendly
+and natural and nice, and very good-looking besides.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If his sister’s like him she’ll be splendid to have
+in the Camp Fire,” she thought, and her spirits went up
+with such a bound that she was able to smile brightly,
+and say enthusiastically as she held out her hand to
+Billy Lee:
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, indeed, I’m Winona Merriam, and I’m so
+glad Tom did send me. I know your sister and I are
+going to be friends.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I do hope so,” said Billy as confidentially as
+if he had known her for years. “I’m having a gorgeous
+time in the Scouts—went on a hike yesterday,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61'></a>61</span>
+and we never got back till nine o’clock, and three of
+the fellows got all stung up with a hornet’s nest.”
+</p>
+<p>
+This didn’t sound much like a fine time to Winona,
+but she supposed boys knew what they liked. She
+couldn’t help laughing, though.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If&nbsp;&nbsp;that’s&nbsp;&nbsp;your&nbsp;&nbsp;idea&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;wonderful&nbsp;&nbsp;time<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Take&nbsp;&nbsp;me&nbsp;&nbsp;home—take&nbsp;&nbsp;me&nbsp;&nbsp;home!<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+she hummed. She thought she’d sung it under her
+breath, but it was evidently loud enough to be heard,
+for Billy Lee burst out laughing, too.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I didn’t mean that getting stung was a
+pleasure exactly,” said he, “but we do have dandy
+times.”
+</p>
+<p>
+All this time they had been standing in the hall.
+Suddenly it seemed to occur to Billy that Winona had
+come to see his sister, not him. He ushered her hurriedly
+into the living-room.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll send Nataly down to you,” he promised. But
+in another minute he came tearing downstairs again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She says, would you mind coming up to her
+room?” he panted. “She hasn’t felt so awfully well
+to-day, and she isn’t exactly up.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona followed him, consumed with curiosity as
+to what could ail a girl, not to be up on a beautiful
+spring morning, and what “not exactly up” meant.
+She found out in another minute.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bed-room where Nataly was had all its windows
+closed, and there was a close scent of toilet-water and
+sachet-powder and unairedness through the whole
+place.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62'></a>62</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here’s Winnie Merriam, that I told you about,
+sister,” said Billy Lee, and bolted. He never seemed
+to walk, only to run.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nataly Lee rose from the couch where she had
+been lying, and came toward Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m very glad to see you,” she greeted Winnie
+languidly. “I think I have seen you—out in your
+back garden yesterday.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I shouldn’t wonder,” said Winona. “I was playing
+tag there with my sister Florence and little Bessie
+Williams.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you still play tag?” asked Nataly, gesturing
+her visitor to a seat, and lifting one weary eyebrow.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not as a confirmed habit,” said Winona mischievously.
+“But you can’t play it well with only two, and
+the children wanted me to, so—well, I just did, that was
+all. Don’t you like tag?” she added. (“I was morally
+certain she’d faint,” she confided to Tom afterwards,
+“but she didn’t.”)
+</p>
+<p>
+As a matter of fact, Nataly pulled closer the blue
+brocaded negligee that was obviously covering up a
+nightgown, and said, “I don’t know much about games.
+I like reading better.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, do you?” exclaimed Winona, interested at
+once. “I love reading, too, but somehow there’s so
+little time for it except when it’s bad weather. Don’t
+you do anything but read?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not much,” replied Nataly languidly. “Sports
+bore me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona gave an inward gasp of dismay.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63'></a>63</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mercy!” she thought, “what a queer girl!” But
+outwardly she persevered. “Don’t you ever dance?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Nataly opened her heavy hazel eyes with a little
+more interest.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes, I dance, of course.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So do I,” said Winona. “I love it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you?” said Nataly. “I shouldn’t think so—you
+seem so—athletic.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I’m glad,” said Winona innocently, beaming
+with pleasure. “But I’m not, particularly. I can swim,
+of course, and row and paddle a little, and play tennis
+a little. But I’ve never played hockey or basket-ball,
+either of them, much. Or baseball.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do girls play baseball up here?” demanded
+Nataly, sitting up and letting a paper novel with a
+thrilling picture on the cover slide to the floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They do,” averred Winona solemnly, but with
+sparkling eyes. She was tempted to go on shocking
+her hostess by thrilling stories of invented boxing-matches
+between herself and her little schoolmates,
+but she thought better of it. “But that wasn’t really
+what I came about,” she went on, looking longingly
+at the closed window, for the airless room was beginning
+to make her cheeks burn. “Next week the Scouts
+are giving us Camp Fire Girls a dance, you know—and
+you are coming, aren’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I think so,” Nataly spoke slowly, lying back
+on the sofa and beginning to finger her paper novel
+again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well”—it came out with rather a rush—“would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64'></a>64</span>
+you like to join the Camp Fire? I think you’d like it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She went on enthusiastically telling Nataly all about
+it, till she was brought up short by a genuine and unsuppressed
+yawn on Nataly’s part.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All that work?” said Nataly plaintively. “Oh,
+I couldn’t do any of those things—I’d die!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I’m sorry,” Winona was a little taken aback.
+The idea of considering whether things were too much
+trouble or not was a new one to her. She had always
+gone on the principle that—why—you <em>wanted</em> to plunge
+into things head-foremost, and do them with all your
+might—that was the way to have fun! So the idea
+of lying on a sofa and shuddering at the idea of work
+was a great surprise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I really couldn’t join,” said Nataly, with
+the first energy she had shown. “But I’m very glad
+you came to see me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, so am I,” said Winona politely. “And you
+will come and see me as soon as you can, won’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, indeed,” promised Nataly. She threw up
+her hand and pressed a button back of her sofa as she
+spoke, for Winona was rising to go.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Emma will show you the way downstairs,” she
+said languidly, “and don’t you want this? It’s very
+interesting—I’ve just finished it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“This” was the paper novel with the melodramatic
+cover.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, thank you!” said Winona, taking it politely.
+“It’s very kind of you. And you will come over?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65'></a>65</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes,” responded Billy Lee’s sister, “I shall
+be very glad to call.”
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+“Well, how was it?” demanded Tom of his sister
+that evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona laughed and shrugged her shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, very nice. Only Nataly Lee’s about a
+million years older than I am, and she made me feel
+as if I were seven instead of fourteen. And she certainly
+is the <em>queerest</em> girl! She doesn’t seem to want
+to do anything for fear it will be too much trouble!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about joining up with your Daughters of
+Pocahontas?” inquired Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona didn’t stop to rebuke him for his flippancy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, about that,” she replied, “she reminded me
+of one of the haughty ladies in the Japanese Schoolboy’s
+housework experiences—don’t you remember?
+‘I have not the want to,’ she sniffed haughtily with
+considerable frequency! But she’s coming to the
+dance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Queer,” said Tom. “There’s no nonsense about
+Billy—he’s a good all-around fellow. Well, you never
+can tell.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” acquiesced Winona philosophically, “you
+can’t, and it’s rather a good thing, too!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66'></a>66</span>CHAPTER SEVEN</h2>
+<p>
+“You certainly are taking it easy, considering
+there’s going to be a dance!” declared Tom. “Usually
+when anything like that is going to happen you run
+around like a hen with its head cut off!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No reason why I should, this time,” said Winona,
+laughing. “You Scouts are giving the dance, not we.
+Though perhaps it’s because my dress is off my mind.
+You always have to press a frock out and clean your
+white shoes, and be sure your sash is all right, when
+you’re wearing anything festive. But thanks to your
+suggestion about wearing the ceremonial dress, you’ll
+see ‘ten little Injuns’ walking in to-night, headbands,
+moccasins and all—and I have nothing to worry about.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona stretched herself out in the Morris-chair
+and looked provokingly comfortable and unoccupied.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I heard about it,” said Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona flushed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What did you hear?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“About you and your ceremonial dresses. But I
+guessed, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who told you—and what did they tell?” demanded
+Winona, sitting up and looking ruffled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Marie—that all the girls mightn’t have party
+clothes,” Tom placidly replied.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Marie hadn’t any business to!” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I guessed the rest. You see, Lonny Hughes
+is in the Scouts, too, and he—well, he tells me things
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67'></a>67</span>
+sometimes. And I know Adelaide felt pretty badly for
+awhile because she couldn’t keep up with some of you—Edith
+mostly, I guess. He said he had to fairly bully
+his sister into joining you girls, even after Nannie’d
+coaxed her. You certainly were a good sport, Win!
+You know, there’s just Lonny and Adelaide and a
+younger sister, and the father. They have one of those
+little flats over James’s drug-store, in the Williamson
+Block, and Mr. Hughes doesn’t get an awful lot of
+salary. Anyway, the kids keep house, and Adelaide
+has to look after herself all the way round. So she
+takes this hard, the money end, I mean.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think she’s silly!” said downright Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe!” said Tom wisely, and went on bestowing
+loving care on his repeating rifle, the joy of his life.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona retired into a book, and Tom, looking up
+a second later, caught sight of its cover.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Great Scott!” he ejaculated, eying it. “Where
+did you get <em>that?</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where did she get what?” asked Louise, walking
+unceremoniously in. “Hello, Tom. Oh, Winnie, I
+want you to show me about this headband. I can’t get
+the colors matched right—you know you have to be
+rather kind to beautiful golden hair like mine. It
+won’t stand every color there is.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No rest for the wicked!” said Winona cheerfully,
+sitting up and abandoning her book. “You don’t
+mean you’re going to try to get this done for to-night?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I certainly am,” said Louise doggedly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68'></a>68</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right.” And Winona, pulled up a little table
+between them. “Here—this is the way.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The two girls bent over the little loom, their heads
+close together. Tom, meanwhile, finished cleaning
+his gun, wrapped it carefully in oiled red flannel, and
+looked around for more worlds to conquer.
+</p>
+<p>
+The first thing his eyes lighted on was the paper
+novel Winona had reluctantly laid down—the one
+Nataly had loaned her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“For the love of Mike, where did you get this?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Your friend’s sister, next door,” said Winona
+mischievously. “Don’t you like her taste in books?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Crazy about it!” said Tom. “‘Beautiful
+Coralie’s Doom; or, Answered in Jest,’” he read from
+the vivid cover. “Say Louise, this hero was a dream.
+You ought to hear the amount of things he’s called
+the heroine, and this is only the first chapter!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Go ahead,” urged Louise, while Winona tried
+vainly to get the book away from her brother, “I guess
+I can bear it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let’s see. Child, sweetheart, angel, cara-mia,
+little one—I’ll have to start on the other hand, I’ve used
+up all my fingers on this one—loved one, petite, schatzchen—wonder
+what that is? The only thing he’s left
+out so far is ‘kiddo.’ I suppose we’ll come to that
+further on. ‘Lancelot looked down at her through his
+long, superfluous eyelashes,’” Tom went on, reading
+at the top of his strong young voice. “Those were
+well-trained eyelashes all right. I’ll bet he hung by
+’em every day to get ’em in shape to use so much.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69'></a>69</span>
+I’ve found six sentences about those lashes on one page,
+and every one the same.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You wouldn’t expect him to have a new set every
+time, would you?” inquired Louise sarcastically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a wonder he didn’t have to. One set must
+have been pretty well worn out by the end of a chapter.
+‘Ah, you wicked fellow,’ Coralie said archly,” he
+went on, sitting down on the floor with the book.
+Winona made a dive for it, but she wasn’t quick
+enough. “This wicked part’s what gets me. There’s
+an average of twenty-five ‘wickeds’ to every chapter,
+and the poor fellow’s never even forgotten to return
+an umbrella!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Or a book his sister was reading,” suggested
+Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And what’s a ‘saucy meow,’ Winona? Coralie
+did ’em all the time. Can you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But here Winona threw herself bodily on him, and
+this time she managed to recover her book, which she
+sat on.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, this literature class is very interesting, but
+my happy home wants me,” said Louise, rising and
+taking up her loom and the headband, which was in a
+fair way to be properly finished now. “Thanks, ever
+so much, Ray of Light. You’re the best girl as ever-ever-was.
+See you to-night, Tommy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, <em>that’s</em> some girl,” said Tom admiringly.
+“No nonsense about her. Do you want me to take
+you over, Winnie?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That would be awfully nice of you, but we thought
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70'></a>70</span>
+we’d ‘attend in a body,’ as the papers say,” answered
+Winona. “Aren’t you boys going to?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, you see, there are extra girls,” explained
+Tom. “There aren’t enough of you Scoutragettes to
+go round, so we’ve asked some other girls, and we
+have to go after them. But we’ll get them early, and
+be there to meet you when you get there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I don’t want to croak.” And Winona arose
+to go into the kitchen, for that way lay an honor bead,
+and it was nearly supper-getting time. “But I think
+the boy who goes after Nataly Lee <em>won’t</em> be drawn
+up to meet us, unless we kindly hold back the order of
+march for him.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shouldn’t wonder,” called Tom after her. “Get
+something good for supper, there’s a useful sister!”
+</p>
+<p>
+But though there was a slight delay in the order of
+march, it was Louise Lane, of all unexpected people,
+who was responsible for it: her headband went wrong
+after all, she explained when, flushed and panting, she
+appeared in her other one at the meeting-place.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls fell into step and marched, two and two,
+out into the street up the short block to the school-house,
+where most of the public affairs in the town were held.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, isn’t it gorgeous?” whispered Winona irrepressibly
+as they came steadily and lightly up the centre
+of the hall, till they faced the Scouts.
+</p>
+<p>
+These last were drawn up in a military formation,
+in the order of their seniority, with the Scoutmaster
+at their head. He was a plump, cheerful, middle-aged
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71'></a>71</span>
+man, the father of three of the Scouts, and vice-principal
+of the High School. But you would never
+have thought he had seen a class-room, he looked so
+military and colonel-fied, there at the head of his line
+of erect, soldierly-looking boys.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s like real receptions!” whispered Helen to
+Winona, as the orchestra blared out “Hail to the
+Chief!” which was as near to “Welcome to the Camp
+Fire Girls” as the orchestra’s resources could come.
+Then Mrs. Bryan and Mr. Gedney gave the order to
+break ranks, and the orchestra slid with surprising
+ease into a Paul Jones. So did the boys and girls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We got here first, you see,” whispered Tom to
+Winona as he crossed her. The round went on for quite
+a little while before the whistle blew for the breaking
+up into twos, so Winona was able to question and
+answer bit by bit as she and her brother met and parted.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about the extra girls?” she whispered, for
+no extra girls were to be seen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The fellows are going after them now,” explained
+Tom. “This was a dance——” Tom had to leave,
+and finished on the next round, “for the Camp Fire.
+The others didn’t come first, naturally.”
+</p>
+<p>
+And sure enough, by the time the first dance was
+over, the extra boys were back, bringing partners with
+them—girls Camp Karonya knew, and who were presently
+going to form a second Camp Fire—for Camp
+Karonya’s membership list was almost full now. The
+newcomers had evidently been asked to wear fancy costume,
+and the effect of the Indian dresses that the Camp
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72'></a>72</span>
+Fire Girls wore, and the boys’ military clothes, was
+lighted up and made more beautiful by the dash of color
+made by an occasional gypsy or Oriental lady.
+</p>
+<p>
+The hall had been decorated in a half-military,
+half-woodland fashion, with tents draped against the
+walls, crossed rifles, green boughs and lighted lanterns.
+It was a warm night, so they had filled the big fireplace
+at the side of the room with boughs. The entrance
+to the kitchen, where the cooking-classes were held in
+the school every Friday, was covered by a tent. Behind
+that tent, the exciting rumor spread, was a real
+colored caterer who was going to serve refreshments
+of unparalleled splendor at the proper time.
+</p>
+<p>
+But at about ten o’clock a frenzied rapping was
+heard from the place which was supposed to hold the
+mysterious caterer. It rose above the music. Mr.
+Gedney hurried to the door to see what had happened.
+An irate negro appeared—the city caterer who had been
+imported to lend grandeur to the scene.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mr. Gedney,” he said in what he may have thought
+was a tragic whisper, but which echoed through half the
+hall, “I’se been a-caperin’ fo’ nineteen yeahs, an’ ah
+nevah had anything as shockin’ happen to me as dis
+heah befo’.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, what’s the matter, Thomas?” Mr. Gedney
+asked, while the more curious of the dancers marked
+time gently within earshot.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Dey done stole mah ’freshments!” wailed the
+darky, forgetting, in his emotion, to lower his voice.
+“Ah had de ice-cream an’ de san-wiches an’ de fruit-punch
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73'></a>73</span>
+an’ de fancy-cake”—a soft moan went up unconsciously
+over the room as the hungry dancers heard of
+these vanished glories—“an’ Ah put dem out on de
+side poach till Ah wanted dem. Ah didn’t know Ah
+was comin’ to no thief-town. An dey’s <em>gone!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Gedney rose to the occasion nobly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll find some of them, Thomas,” he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time nearly everyone in the room had paused
+about the door. Mr. Gedney raised his voice.
+“Ladies,” he said, “if you will excuse your partners
+for half an hour they will go out on the trail of our—ah—vanished
+refection. Scouts, attention! By twos,
+forward—hike!”
+</p>
+<p>
+In an instant every Scout, with a hasty excuse to
+his partner, had vanished from the building.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s that Bent Street gang,” hissed Tom to his
+sister in passing. “We know where they hang out,
+and where they’re likely to have cached the eats.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I only hope there’ll be something left by the time
+the Scouts find the food,” wailed Louise. “Don’t look
+so happy, Winnie—it’s insulting!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She’s swelling as if she had an idea,” suggested
+Helen, who had come over. “What is it, Win?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So I have!” said Winona, her eyes sparkling as
+they always did when Great Ideas came her way. She
+was rather given to them. She ran across to Mrs.
+Bryan and began to talk to her in an excited whisper.
+</p>
+<p>
+When she had done Mrs. Bryan nodded.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Splendid!” she said. “Tell the girls yourself,
+my dear.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74'></a>74</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+So Winona stood swiftly out in the middle of the
+floor, a slim, gallant little figure in her Indian frock
+and the long strings of scarlet beads she had added to it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Girls!” she said. “Those refreshments mayn’t
+ever come back. The boys won’t be back with them
+right away, anyhow. Let’s get together and make some
+more!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good!” called out all the girls at once, and came
+flocking around Mrs. Bryan and Winona for orders.
+But Mrs. Bryan wouldn’t give any.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You manage it, Ray of Light!” said she as
+Winona turned to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We want sandwiches and fruit punch and cakes,
+and—we can’t get ice-cream this late at night,” she
+remembered.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We can get oysters,” said Helen’s competent voice
+from behind a group of girls. “That oyster house
+down on Front Street is always open till twelve.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then we can make creamed oysters—good!” said
+Winona. “Let’s see—sixteen couples—about fifty
+sandwiches, if you count three to a person. Six loaves
+of bread, about. Marie, you belong to a big family—do
+you think you have any bread in the house your family
+could part with?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Three loaves, anyway,” said Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll bring the other three,” spoke up Elizabeth
+Greene, one of the new members.
+</p>
+<p>
+They both threw on their wraps and hurried out.
+Fortunately, most of the girls lived close by.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll send Thomas for the oysters,” suggested
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75'></a>75</span>
+Mrs. Bryan next. “None of you want to go to Front
+Street this time of night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She produced her purse from the pocket of her ceremonial
+dress, and went to send Thomas for the oysters.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Has anybody got anything in their house to fill
+sandwiches with?” Winona went on.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We have two pounds of dates,” offered Edith
+Hillis, “and some rolls of cream cheese.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And I have the other half of both sketches, peanut
+butter and lettuces,” called out Louise, “three heads,
+and two big glasses.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, go get ’em,” said Winona unceremoniously,
+and two more sisters of the Camp Fire hurried
+on their wraps and fled out into the night.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have milk and butter, myself,” went on Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nannie,” hinted Helen to Mrs. Bryan, who had
+returned, “do you remember those three big layer cakes
+you made for the Presbyterian fair? I’ll make them
+over again if I can have them now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No you won’t, my child, because they’re my contribution,”
+returned her step-mother briskly. “Thank
+you for reminding me. I’ll get them, and pineapples
+and lemons for your contribution to the lemonade.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Dorothy remembered that she had some oranges
+and bananas, and Adelaide finally recalled to the rest
+that creamed oysters need thickening, and went after
+flour and salt and pepper.
+</p>
+<p>
+A couple of the other girls had candy at home,
+beautifully fresh and home-made. In fifteen minutes
+every girl was back laden down, and all of them invaded
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76'></a>76</span>
+the little school kitchen. Fortunately most of
+the sixteen had taken cooking lessons there, and knew
+just where to find everything, even to their own aprons.
+So there was no time lost searching for matches and
+knives and bowls, and other such necessaries.
+</p>
+<p>
+One group of four cut and squeezed and sliced
+fruit for the fruit-punch—or fruit-lemonade, to give it
+the only name it was really entitled to. Another set
+prepared the sandwiches, which, what with pitting and
+chopping the dates for the date-and-peanut-butter ones,
+and cutting and spreading six big loaves of bread, was
+quite an undertaking. Another group handled the
+creamed oysters. This last wasn’t exactly a group,
+though, because, try as you may, it is impossible for
+more than two people to make one cream gravy, or white
+sauce. The rest cut cake and arranged plates and
+looked after the serving generally.
+</p>
+<p>
+Thomas the “caperer” sat in a corner and
+“shucked oysters,” as he called it, with his two attendant
+waiters standing statue-like behind him. It made
+a very impressive, if rather useless group.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan lent a helping hand here and there as
+it was needed, but in the main she left the guidance of
+the affair to Winona’s generalship.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, I didn’t know how easy it was to have
+people do things!” Winona whispered to the Guardian,
+when that lady came over to her once to advise a little
+more butter in the gravy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You happen to have executive ability, that’s all,”
+explained Mrs. Bryan.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77'></a>77</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona laughed. “Oh, it doesn’t take executive
+ability when people want to help!” she returned gayly.
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys got back in just forty-five minutes, with
+rather dirtier uniforms than they had taken away.
+They were panting, also, and had a general cheerful air
+of having had something happen. But with them they
+bore, triumphantly, the untouched freezer, full of
+beautiful molds of ice-cream; also a large pasteboard
+box full of untouched, but rather crumpled-looking,
+fancy cakes.
+</p>
+<p>
+The sandwiches, they explained regretfully, were
+beyond recall, and so was the salad. The Bent Street
+gang had been just about to begin their last course
+when the Scouts descended.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We had a bully time!” said Billy Lee to Winona,
+who emerged from the kitchen, trying hard to look
+unoccupied, as did all the rest of the girls. “We didn’t
+expect a lark like that in the middle of this. But it’s
+hard on you girls to miss half the refreshments!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t worry,” said Winona cheerfully. “We
+aren’t going to miss any of the refreshments, and
+neither are you! What do you think Camp Fire Girls
+are good for?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Lots!” said Billy honestly, “but I don’t see——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s because you aren’t looking,” laughed
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+She pointed towards the little tent that draped the
+kitchen door. From out that tent issued haughtily
+Thomas’s two negro waiters, each bearing a steaming,
+creamed-oyster-laden tray.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78'></a>78</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’d better sit down,” suggested Winona,
+“Everybody else has.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, this is great!” cried Billy enthusiastically,
+between bites of creamed oysters and sandwiches, and
+sips of fruit lemonade that was really better than that
+the Bent Street gang had stolen. “You don’t mean
+to say you girls did all this right off the bat, while
+we were hunting the hoodlums, do you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, of course we did,” and Winona dimpled
+with pleasure. “There were such a lot of us that it
+wasn’t hard at all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anyhow, whoever managed it was a mighty clever
+person,” said Billy, meditatively eating his last oyster.
+“Don’t you think so?”
+</p>
+<p>
+This happened to be a rather embarrassing question.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, no!” she said thoughtlessly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then it was you!” said Billy, jumping cleverly
+to his conclusion.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We all helped,” said Winona, blushing. “Everybody
+brought something. I only thought of it first—that
+was easy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Easy if you know how!” said Billy skeptically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winona knew how,” asserted Helen’s voice behind
+them. She began to talk to Winona and Billy very
+earnestly about several things that didn’t seem to have
+much to do with life in general. They had to turn half
+round to face her, which was what she wanted, for it
+prevented Winona from seeing that all the members
+of the Camp Fire were clustered near her place. The
+first she knew of it was Mrs. Bryan’s voice saying:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79'></a>79</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“All together, girls—a cheer for Ray of Light, who
+saved the refreshments!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls’ voices rang out in the triple cheer for
+Winona, who blushed harder than ever.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I didn’t do anything but suggest it!” she explained
+uselessly. Then she remembered her manners
+and sprang up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you, Sisters of the Camp Fire—even if I
+<em>don’t</em> deserve it!” she said gayly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then the band started up and dancing went on.
+</p>
+<p>
+The evening ended with a riotous Virginia reel
+(which, by the way, meant an honor bead for every
+girl, because the boys none of them knew much about
+reeling, and had to be shown) and a final ringing cheer
+for the Camp Fire Girls by the Scouts. Then the party
+broke up. Though broke up is hardly the word, for
+the girls marched out, as they had come, in a body, with
+a military file of Scouts on either side of them. Altogether
+it certainly was the most festive of parties, and
+everybody thought so even next morning, when the
+mournful things about a party are apt to occur to you.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scouts insisted, by the way, on replacing the
+various things that had been taken out of various pantries.
+The girls had intended to pay their families
+scrupulously back, but the Scouts extracted an exact
+account of the commandeered supplies from their sisters
+and cousins. Then they saw to it that everything, from
+the last loaf of bread to the last peanut, was redelivered
+by four next day. And so ended “the very
+best party,” as everybody agreed, “that we ever had.”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80'></a>80</span>CHAPTER EIGHT</h2>
+<p>
+“It <em>was</em> a nice party!” sighed Winona, for the
+tenth time, next day.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was,” admitted Tom. “I enjoyed it myself.
+Also the eats were good. Very clever of us to give a
+party like that. The question is, if you girls had to
+manage a real meal what would happen?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s exactly what we’re going to do,” said
+Winona. “This very afternoon, at Mrs. Bryan’s!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, can’t I go?” clamored Florence.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, it’s just Helen and Louise and Adelaide
+Hughes and I,” Winona hesitated. “It’s the maid’s
+day out, and we’re going to get the supper and clear
+it away. Four of the others are going to do it a day
+or so later. And we’re all going to try to get the same
+supper at our own houses, the next night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then of course I want to go!” said Florence, “so
+I can get the same supper at home the next night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Still Winona hesitated. It certainly is a nuisance to
+have a small sister who wants to tag, when you are
+just starting off to have a particularly nice time with
+your most intimate friends. And to add to the charm
+of the situation, just then in rushed Puppums through
+the back door, and seeing Winona with her hat in her
+hand, promptly sat up and began to beg wildly. Winona
+began to laugh.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, come on, then, the whole family!” she said.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81'></a>81</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Florence and Puppums both yelped for joy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shall I send Tom over to bring you back this
+evening?” asked Winona’s mother, who was sitting
+near.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no—it isn’t far,” said Winona, “and it won’t
+be late when I get back. Besides, I’ll have Florence and
+the doggie.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very well,” said her mother. “And don’t try
+to cook things that are too gorgeous, my dear, because
+we haven’t as much money as the Bryans, and it might
+turn out to be very expensive.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll remember,” said Winona, starting off with
+her little sister beside her, and Puppums careering
+wildly about them both. But it was one of the things
+that never did worry the Merriams, whether or not
+they had as much money as their neighbors. The
+three children and the dog, as their friends said,
+“always did seem to be having such a good time!”
+They were handsome and light-hearted—that is, the
+children were. Puppums was more remarkable for
+brains than beauty, as Tom said; being part pug, part
+bull-terrier and part fox-terrier, with a dash of retriever
+suspected in his remote ancestry. However,
+as long as he had his own way and plenty of bones
+and enough laps to sit on, neither his looks nor anything
+else worried the Puppums dog. His family had
+intended to give him a very fine name, but as Puppums
+he started when he was a small, wriggling mongrel-baby,
+and to nothing but Puppums would he ever
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82'></a>82</span>
+deign to answer. So the family made the best of it.
+It was a way they had, anyway.
+</p>
+<p>
+Florence began to career around her sister very
+much as the dog was doing, singing at the top of
+her voice meanwhile. So, as Winona did not have
+to talk, she began to think. What her mother had
+said about their not having so much money as the
+Bryans set her to wondering, not about herself, but
+about Adelaide Hughes. She had noticed that Mrs.
+Bryan seemed to want Adelaide to make friends with
+the other girls, and that Adelaide herself was very apt
+to leave the first advances to them. And the reason,
+she supposed, was that Adelaide felt she was too poor
+to keep up with them, or so Tom had said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But I don’t ever feel as if I had to keep up with
+Helen, and she has twice as many dresses and twice
+as much money to spend as I have,” meditated
+Winona. “I wonder if I could ask Adelaide about it
+without hurting her feelings. I will if I get the
+chance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+About this time Winona and her caravan reached
+the Bryan house, and Florence ran ahead so quickly to
+ring the bell that Winona had to run, too, to be there
+when the door opened.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve brought my family, Mrs. Bryan!” said
+Winona. “I hadn’t any choice—they simply would
+come. It’s really your fault for being so popular
+with them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Your family’s very welcome!” said Mrs. Bryan.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83'></a>83</span>
+“If it’s willing to be useful. What about it, Florence,—will
+you run errands for us if we want you to?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Course I will!” said Florence, flinging herself
+bodily on Mrs. Bryan and hugging her hard. “I
+want to work!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Puppums wants to help, too,” said Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, you can’t help that way, you little villain,”
+said Louise, appearing aproned in the doorway and
+making a dash for the dog. He had his paws on the
+table, and was most ill-manneredly trying to find out
+what was wrapped up in the paper with the lovely
+meaty smell. Louise rescued the package, and carried
+it out to the kitchen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is everyone here?” asked Mrs. Bryan. “No,
+I miss Adelaide.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She’s just coming now,” said Helen from the
+living-room window. “I wonder if she’s remembered
+to bring her apron?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh,” cried Winona, “I never brought mine!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll go get it,” said Florence. “You see, you
+need me already!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She flew off, with the dog at her heels.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Truly, I’m sorry, Mrs. Bryan,” apologized
+Winona again, “but she would have felt so badly
+if I hadn’t let her come!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You ought to sit on her more,” suggested Louise,
+popping her head out of the kitchen door again. “I
+do on mine.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, you have such a lot of brothers and sisters
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84'></a>84</span>
+you have to,” said Winona, for Louise was the oldest
+of six.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Bessie wanted to come,” said Louise, “but I put
+my foot down.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“On Bessie?” laughed Winona, as she ran to open
+the door for Adelaide. “I hope you didn’t hurt her.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you bring your apron, Adelaide?” called
+Helen anxiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There! She’s asked every one of us that question
+in turn,” said Louise, coming out into the living-room
+for the fourth time in five minutes. “I do hope
+you did!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes, I did,” said Adelaide. “I have it here
+under my arm.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And here’s Florence back with mine!” said
+Winona. “Now may we start?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t quite time yet,” said Mrs. Bryan. “If
+we plan for supper at six, one hour is a great plenty
+of time for supper-getting, especially with all of us
+at it. It’s only four-thirty now, and I want to tell
+you a plan I have. Come here, Florence. It’s about
+you and your friends.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, a plan about me!” said Florence. “That
+is nice!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You see, girls,” went on Mrs. Bryan, “there are
+always little sisters or cousins of Camp Fire Girls, like
+Florence and Bessie and the rest, who want to play,
+too. They aren’t old enough to belong to Camp Fires
+of their own, so the way we do is to make them an
+annex to ours, under the name of Blue Birds—the Blue
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85'></a>85</span>
+Bird stands for happiness, you know. And we help
+them, and show them how to have good times, too, and—they
+don’t have to tag any more.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I didn’t mean to tag,” said Florence, looking a
+little ashamed. “I just wanted to—to come, too!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, if you will go and find Bessie Lane, and—Adelaide,
+you have a little sister about their ages,
+haven’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes,” said Adelaide. “Frances is nine.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, Florence, get Bessie and Frances if you
+can find them, and we’ll discover something for our
+nest of Blue Birds to do.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think it’s lovely, being a Blue Bird,” said Florence,
+very much impressed by belonging to a society
+of her own.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, if you’re a bird, fly!” said Louise, giving
+her a little push.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls talked for a while longer, then donned
+their aprons and went out into the kitchen, where they
+stood and waited for further orders.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There are four of you,” said their Guardian.
+“There’s the table to set, salad and dressing to make,
+meat and potatoes to prepare, and dessert. Cocoa and
+cake, too. You’re welcome to anything in the ice-box,
+but the game is to get supper without buying anything
+extra, unless something like bread or sugar gives
+out—some staple.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That will be more fun,” said Winona, who had
+had some experience lately with cooking. “It’s much
+more interesting thinking out ways to make things out
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86'></a>86</span>
+of other things, than when you cook straight ahead!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide stared as if Winona had said a very
+strange thing. But then Adelaide always did look at
+Winona more or less that way.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think the most fun is eating out of paper bags,”
+said Louise. “No washee dishee. However, I only
+think that—I wouldn’t dare say it. How’ll we
+divide?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Decide that yourselves,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let’s see what there is in the ice-box, first,”
+Winona suggested prudently, when Mrs. Bryan had
+left them alone. So they investigated.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Eight large baked potatoes!” counted Louise.
+“How on earth did you miscalculate so badly as that,
+Helen, or are they there for our special benefit?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, it just happened,” said Helen. “Father
+was going to bring a friend home to dinner last night,
+and neither of them could get here after all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+There was also a large piece of cooked beefsteak,
+a head of lettuce, a dish of cooked peas and some beets.
+There were other things in the ice-box as well, but
+these were what the girls chose. They brought some
+apples up from down cellar, too, and stacked them in a
+row on the table with the other things.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, Nannie said that the game was to use as
+many leftovers as possible and do everything as inexpensively
+as we could and yet have everything taste
+good and not seem warmed over,” said Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s something a lot of grown-up women never
+do,” said Louise. “My aunt——”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87'></a>87</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan came from the living-room to say. “I’ll
+show you anything you don’t know about, girls, but
+you must do the actual work yourselves, or you won’t
+know how.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes!” said Louise. “Choose your poison, Ladies
+and Gentlemen!” She pulled her cooking-cap close
+down over her hair. “I’m going to do the potatoes.
+I think I know how to fix them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Cold baked potatoes?” said Helen. “There isn’t
+anything, except creaming them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re all right that way,” said Louise, “but
+that isn’t what I’m going to do.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I’ll take the cake,” said Helen. “I saw
+some sour milk in the ice-box, and spice-cake is the
+cheapest cake I know.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll take the meat,” said Winona. “There must
+be something I can do with a beautiful piece of steak
+like that, even if it is cooked.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide had not said anything.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That leaves the salad for you, Adelaide,” said
+Mrs. Bryan cheerfully. “Louise, you’d better see
+about some fruit for supper, for your potatoes won’t
+take you long.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Mrs. Bryan introduced them to the ways of
+the gas-range, and went back to lie in wait for her
+Blue Birds.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen collected spice and molasses and flour and
+shortening around her corner of the table, and went
+systematically to work on her spice-cake.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88'></a>88</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It looks like gingerbread,” said Winona, getting
+the bread-crumb jar.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is, really, only it hasn’t much ginger in,” explained
+Helen. “Lots of people don’t like ginger.
+What are you going to do with your steak, Winnie?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Frame it!” advised Louise frivolously. “They
+say they have a four-pound steak under glass at the
+Metropolitan Museum, as a relic of the days when
+each family had at least one in a lifetime.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you want to frame your share of it you may,”
+said Winona. “I’m going to eat mine.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re supposed to be eaten,” put in Helen
+mildly. “But really, Winnie, I think you have rather
+a hard job. There’s not nearly enough steak there for
+eight people. It was only intended for five in the first
+place.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the game, isn’t it?” said Winona placidly.
+“Besides, I’m going to send Florence home to supper.
+It’s all right for her to attach herself to the party for
+the afternoon, but I draw the line at her inviting
+herself to a meal—don’t you think so, Louise?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m wid yez,” called Louise back from the gas-range,
+where she was doing something with sugar and
+water. “Bessie goes back, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona got the chopping-machine, divided a big
+stalk of celery with Adelaide, made another excursion
+to the shelf over the ice-box for some peppers
+and onions, and began to grind her beefsteak.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Croquettes?” inquired Louise curiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, scalloped meat,” answered Winona. “The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89'></a>89</span>
+croquettes won’t go as far, and there’ll be the cream
+gravy extra, and we’ll need milk for the cocoa. Besides,
+the deep fat to fry them would be another horrible
+extravagance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She put in a layer of meat as she spoke, then the
+ground celery and peppers and seasoning, and a generous
+layer of bread-crumbs.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But aren’t celery and peppers an extravagance,
+too?” put in Adelaide, looking faintly interested. She
+was the only one of the four girls not busy. She had
+not started on her salad.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They would be if they weren’t in the house,” said
+Winona carelessly, “though I don’t think they are
+costly this time of year. But I’m using them for their
+bulk. Mother flavors with celery seed when celery’s
+too high.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She continued to build up her edifice of meat and
+crumbs and so forth, and finally drenched it with cold
+water and put it in the oven.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Be careful of my cake when you look at your
+meat,” reminded Helen, coming and tucking her spice-cake
+in beside the meat as she spoke. “How are you
+getting on, Adelaide?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not at all,” said Adelaide ashamedly. “I don’t
+believe I know how to make salads.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come help me set the table, then,” invited Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Adelaide, getting up slowly from
+her kitchen chair, and flinging her long, untidy braids
+back over her shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, Helen, please!” said Winona. “Let me
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90'></a>90</span>
+show Adelaide. I think we can make a perfectly lovely
+salad in a few minutes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, Winnie!” said Helen cheerfully, and
+vanished into the dining-room alone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t see how!” said Adelaide. “I thought
+you had to have chicken or lobster or such things for
+salad—and I’m sure I’d curdle the dressing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course you will if you expect to,” said Louise,
+setting her syrup on to boil, and beginning to pare and
+quarter apples and drop them in cold water so they
+wouldn’t brown. “Why don’t you make boiled
+dressing?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I didn’t know about it,” said Adelaide.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good gracious!” said Louise. “How on earth
+do you manage at your house?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, there’s just father and Lonny and France
+and I, and mostly father brings home things from the
+delicatessen. And sometimes we roast meat and just
+eat at it till it’s gone. I’m not old enough to know
+much about housekeeping, father says. But Lonny
+cooks sometimes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona and Louise both stared at her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’d go crazy,” said Louise frankly. “I should
+think you’d get so you never wanted to eat anything.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anyway, you can ‘try this on your piano’ when
+you go home,” Winona threw in hastily, giving Louise
+a furtive, if thorough, pinch as she passed her, for
+she had seen Adelaide color up. “Boiled dressing’s
+easy. You know how to make drawn butter, don’t you—white
+sauce?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91'></a>91</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes,” said Adelaide, rising.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well,” explained Winona, “when you melt the
+butter in the pan to mix with the flour, you add some
+mustard, just a pinch, and salt and pepper. Then when
+you’ve put in the flour, and the milk, and it’s just
+going to thicken, you put in the yolk of an egg. When
+it’s cold you thin it with vinegar. That isn’t hard,
+is it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide was swiftly following directions as
+Winona talked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thin the egg with milk, and beat it a little—that’s
+right,” said Winona. “There—now take it off. The
+egg only wants to cook a minute. Now all you have
+to do is wait till it cools and add the vinegar, and—there’s
+your dressing!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, it isn’t a bit hard!” said Adelaide wonderingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nor a bit expensive,” said Winona. “As for
+the salad, you can make salad out of any kind of
+vegetable that will cut up.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let me see if I can work it out alone,” said
+Adelaide.
+</p>
+<p>
+She washed the lettuce and set it on the individual
+salad plates Helen found for her. Then she began to
+combine peas and beets and celery quite as if she knew
+how.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona watched her for a minute, then went over
+to see what Louise was doing. While she had been
+helping Adelaide Louise’s syrup had cooked enough
+to have the quartered apples dropped into it, and now
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92'></a>92</span>
+it was bubbling on the back of the stove. Just as
+Winona came over Louise took off the apples, cooked
+through, but not to the point of losing their shape, and
+put them outdoors to cool. Then she turned her attention
+to the baked potatoes of yesterday.
+</p>
+<p>
+She had heated them through, and now she cut off
+the tops and scooped out the inside, and was mixing
+it with milk and butter and a little onion, and beating
+it till it was creamy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re harder to do than if they were fresh,”
+she said, pounding vigorously, “but I guess they’ll
+come out all right, when they’ve been browned a
+minute.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’ll be browned just about the time my scalloped
+meat’s done,” responded Winona, dropping to
+her knees before the oven. “Oh, Helen, come take
+out your cake! It’s all done—I’ve tried it with a
+straw.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, it isn’t burned, is it?” cried Helen, dashing in.
+</p>
+<p>
+It wasn’t. She put it on the shelf over the range,
+to keep warm, and headed a party bound upstairs to
+tidy up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You didn’t set places for those little taggers?”
+called Louise to Helen on the way up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not at our table,” said Helen.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93'></a>93</span>CHAPTER NINE</h2>
+<p>
+When the four girls came down and put on the
+supper they found a surprise waiting for them. Beside
+the large table the little sewing-table had been
+moved in, spread with a white cloth and set; and around
+it, very flushed and important, sat Florence, Bessie
+Lane, Frances Hughes, and Edith Hillis’s little sister
+Lucy. Before Frances, who was the oldest, sat a big
+dish of creamed potatoes, a platter of Hamburg steak,
+and in front of each girl steamed a bowl of tomato soup.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, where——” began everybody. All the
+small sisters answered at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We cooked ’em on the gas-stove in the back
+parlor!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All but the soup,” added conscientious little
+blonde Lucy. “We dumped that out of a can.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, we cooked it, too, didn’t we?” inquired
+Frances.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So that was what was in the package Puppums
+wanted!” said Winona. “Where <em>is</em> Puppums, anyway?”
+she added as she set down her scalloped meat.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I d’no,” said Florence carelessly.
+</p>
+<p>
+But just at that moment Puppums accounted for
+himself. He came in from the direction of the half-open
+back door, in his mouth a neatly done up package.
+</p>
+<p>
+“<em>Oh!</em>” cried Winona and Florence in one despairing
+voice, “he’s been stealing again! Drop it, you
+little wretch!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94'></a>94</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan went around to Puppums, who was
+proudly sitting up on his haunches over his spoils.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t ours,” she said, opening the bundle.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” asked Winona. “I might as well
+know the worst.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Chops,” answered Mrs. Bryan briefly. “Two
+pounds of very nice lamb chops, with nothing at all
+to tell where they belong!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Puppums!” said Winona and Florence together
+tragically. The rest were all laughing but to
+Puppums’s family it was far from a laughing matter.
+</p>
+<p>
+Puppums Merriam was a splendid watch-dog. He
+was sweet-tempered and intelligent and obedient and
+cheerful, and everything a family dog should be. But
+he had one fault. He would occasionally snoop around
+back porches in search of anything the butcher might
+have left. The fact that he got three good meals a
+day, and was losing his figure far too fast for such a
+young and sprightly dog did not matter to him at all.
+Neither did he mind the fact that he got a good whipping
+every time Tom caught him at it. Happy indeed
+was the week wherein the Merriams did not have to
+apologetically return roasts or steaks to furious
+owners; or—if the condition of the prey made it
+necessary—buy new ones. But this last did not happen
+very often, for Puppums rarely brought home the bills
+with him, and it is hard to trace anonymous meat.
+</p>
+<p>
+So when he proudly presented his contribution to
+the feast there was nothing to do but to pick up the
+chops and put them away.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95'></a>95</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t spoil the fun by whipping him, and he
+always thinks my whippings are fun anyway, and wags
+his tail!” mourned Winona. “And we’ll never know
+whose chops they were!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re Puppums’s chops now,” said Louise. “Go
+on, give ’em to him, Winnie. If you went out and
+gathered chops you wouldn’t want to be scolded.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I suppose he may as well have them,” said
+Winona still sadly. So, although it was very wrong,
+and as she explained to the dog, it didn’t create a precedent,
+soon the collector of chops was happily crunching
+them outside the back door, while the Camp Fire Girls
+ate made-over meat within.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about our camping out?” Louise demanded,
+after the first pangs of appetite were over.
+“What’s the use of being us if we can’t camp?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We <em>can</em> camp,” answered their Guardian as she
+helped Helen to some more salad. “This is lovely
+dressing, Adelaide. I didn’t know what good cooks
+all of you were. I have been looking things up, and
+I don’t see why we shouldn’t go in a short time now, if
+all of your parents are willing and can spare you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a great commotion over at the table
+where the Blue Birds sat, and then hurried whispers—
+</p>
+<p>
+“You ask, Lucy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, you ask, Frances!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Finally Florence spoke up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t the Blue Birds go camping, too?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, of course they can!” said Mrs. Bryan cordially.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96'></a>96</span>
+“That is, just as with the Camp Fire Girls,
+if their mothers are willing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, then I can go, if we take Frances,” said
+Adelaide relievedly. “Father and Lonny can get along
+all right by themselves, but Frances couldn’t. Oh, I’m
+so glad!” Which was quite a good deal for reserved
+Adelaide to say.
+</p>
+<p>
+“So are we glad,” said Helen heartily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder whether we couldn’t go to that place
+up on the Wampoag River. Have you thought of
+any place, Mrs. Bryan?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“None but there or thereabouts,” she said. “It’s
+the best camping-place for a long distance, and only
+about twelve miles off.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But won’t the boys want to camp there, too?”
+asked Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s plenty of room for everybody,” said her
+step-mother. “I’ve been talking it over with Mr.
+Gedney, the Scoutmaster, and he says their camp will
+be about two and a half miles from the place I’d thought
+of our going. Wampoag River is very long, you know,
+and there must be five miles of woodland along both
+sides. So we needn’t interfere with each other at all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then that’s all right,” said everybody.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And oh, let’s hike there!” cried Louise. “We
+can do it in two days as easily as anything. Please,
+dear, nice, kind Guardian, let us hike there!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think it would be a very good thing to do,”
+approved Mrs. Bryan. “But it isn’t for me to settle.
+You’ll have to have a business meeting to decide that,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97'></a>97</span>
+and to decide another thing that nobody’s thought of.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ways and means?” ventured Adelaide, perhaps
+because they had been in her mind, too.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Exactly,” said Mrs. Bryan. “We haven’t
+enough in the treasury to pay expenses, even if we
+only stay a little while. It’s for you all to decide
+whether you want to get the money from your parents
+for the provisions, or whether you will earn it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Earn it?” asked Winona, “How could we, in
+such a little while?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll have to work that out yourselves,” replied
+Mrs. Bryan, as she usually did.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I can’t ask dad for <em>much</em> money,” Louise
+frankly confessed. “Times are hard, and me poor
+father needs his gold for the lit-tul ones at home!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, of course it’s premature,” hesitated Helen,
+looking up, “because the rest aren’t here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Go on, anyway,” said the others eagerly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I don’t see why we shouldn’t have a bread
+and cake and preserve sale,” she went on. “I’m treasurer,
+you know, and I’m sure we have enough money
+on hand for materials. People will buy things to eat
+when they won’t buy anything else. I’m sure, too, that
+we could get Black’s drug-store to sell in.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’d need more than one cake-sale, wouldn’t
+we?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We could have two—or even four!” asserted
+Louise boldly. “We needn’t go for two weeks yet,
+anyway. It will only be the last of July then. We
+could have sales Wednesdays and Saturdays.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98'></a>98</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“And get orders beforehand, and make what people
+want!” said Louise, “Oh, I’d love to do that!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Will it cost much?” asked Adelaide.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The sale?” said Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, the trip.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a good deal,” said Mrs. Bryan. “We have
+the land free, of course. We shall have to buy tents—let
+me see, there are twelve in the Camp Fire, aren’t
+there? And there will be six or eight Blue Birds.
+We’ll need ten tents, and then there’ll be the provisions.
+What they cost will depend on how long you decide
+to stay. If you hike there and back there won’t
+be any railroad fare. As for clothes, you’ll need blouses
+and dark skirts or bloomers, and tennis shoes—but all
+that can wait till the business meeting. Marie is secretary—she
+and Edith and Dorothy and Anna Morris
+are going to be here getting luncheon to-morrow.
+There had better be a meeting here to-morrow afternoon.
+I’ll telephone Marie after supper.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Eight very happy girls of assorted sizes cleared
+away the supper and washed the dishes and made the
+kitchen shine. Even Puppums, bulging with contraband
+chops, was more amiable than usual, and slept
+placidly in all the places where he was most in the way.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m going to take my banjo,” planned Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I shall take pounds and pounds of modelling
+clay,” said Helen enthusiastically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Edith has a mandolin,” volunteered Lucy Hillis.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Everybody that has a musical instrument had
+better bring it,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99'></a>99</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll contribute a very fine dog with a stunning
+howl!” said Winona mischievously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That dog isn’t a musical instrument, he’s a
+famine-breeder!” said Louise; then paused, for Mrs.
+Bryan went into the dining-room to telephone Marie
+Hunter. Edith Hillis was at Marie’s, and both girls
+were as excited over the cake-sale idea as the rest.
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+Next afternoon the whole Camp Fire had a business
+meeting at Mrs. Bryan’s. Besides the girls who
+had originally belonged, five others had joined. It
+was a very pleasant meeting, helped out with afternoon
+cocoa and sandwiches that the lunch-getters had prepared.
+They discussed ways and means till they could
+scarcely hear themselves think. Never was there such
+an unanimous meeting. For everybody wanted to go
+camping, and to go camping money is needed. So
+three committees were appointed, one to buy materials,
+another to borrow an eligible drug-store for Saturday,
+and a third to attend to advertising. The girls were
+to meet Friday, and each take home what materials
+she needed. Saturday morning the materials were to
+be returned to the drug-store in the shape of salable
+things to eat. It even occurred to one genius to allot
+to each girl a certain thing to make.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a good thing to do,” she said modestly—it was
+Dorothy. “Once our Sunday-school class gave a sale,
+and every single girl brought chocolate cake.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I remember that,” said Marie. “But it turned
+out all right.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100'></a>100</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes,” said Dorothy laughing. “We hung
+a sign in the window, ‘Chocolate cake sale!’ and it all
+went. But it mightn’t have!”
+</p>
+<p>
+So Marie made out a careful list of what each
+girl was to make.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t see how we’ll ever sell all those!” she
+said, looking worried.
+</p>
+<p>
+But they did. People always will buy bread and
+cake and muffins. At the end of the first sale, on
+Saturday, Edith Hillis, who was on duty, put seventeen
+dollars in her hand-bag to take up to Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There are orders, too,” she reported. “We have
+eight dozen parkerhouse rolls and two dozen and a half
+biscuits promised for different lunches and suppers
+next week, beside jam orders. Here’s the list.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That ought to be five dollars more,” counted
+Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+Edith forgot for once to smooth her dress and
+pat her curls in the excitement of success.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Three more as good and we’ll have all the money
+we need!” she declared.
+</p>
+<p>
+And, as a matter of fact, the three following sales
+were better than the first. Adelaide developed a real
+talent for jelly-making, and the orders for that alone
+helped a good deal. At the crowning sale, the next
+one to the last, they made twenty-one dollars, and eighteen
+and nineteen at the other two.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan went off to the city to buy tents, and
+was understood to have come back with ten that were
+marvellous bargains. The Camp Fire darned all its
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101'></a>101</span>
+stockings, and tidied itself, and was collectively very
+good at home, so as to leave a pleasant last impression.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Merriam lamented that she was going to
+be very, very lonely, for Tom was going out camping
+with the Scouts only a day or so later than Winona
+and Florence were to go with Camp Karonya. As for
+Puppums, there were many arguments about him, for
+Tom thought he would make a fine mascot, and so did
+Winona and Florence. It was finally settled by the
+fact that another of the Scouts owned a collie and was
+going to take him; and Puppums, while he was a
+friendly dog in the main, and indeed had quite a social
+circle of his own, bit collies whenever he saw them. So
+there were bound to be fights if Puppums went with
+Tom, and it was decided that the girls should have him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nobody thought there were going to be any more
+members added to the Camp. But one afternoon,
+while Winona was out in her back garden with Louise
+and Helen and a medicine ball, Nataly Lee from next
+door came calling. The three girls were dusty and
+tousled; Helen’s braid was half-undone, the ribbon
+was off Winona’s curls, and Louise, who had just fallen
+full-length across the nasturtiums in a vain effort to
+get the ball, had a streak of mould and grass-stain
+from her shoulder to the hem of her skirt. Altogether,
+they were as badly mussed a trio as you could wish
+to see, when Tom came out the back door toward them.
+</p>
+<p>
+He said nothing whatever, but he bore high in his
+hand the very largest tray the house afforded, and in
+its black and banged centre reposed a small calling-card
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102'></a>102</span>
+which said “Miss Nataly Lee. The Cedars.” He
+made a low bow, and held the tray toward his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona took off the card, and the three girls
+looked at it together.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where do you suppose she keeps the cedars?”
+asked Louise in a stage whisper. “There aren’t any
+next door.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sh-h. That must be her ancestral estate,” surmised
+Helen respectfully. “Oh, dear, Winnie, I can’t
+go in this way, to a call that has a card and all that!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course you can,” said Winona cheerfully.
+“I did worse than that when I went calling on <em>her</em>.
+I didn’t take any card at all. To be frank with you,
+I haven’t any. Anyway, she received me with her
+wrapper on, and that’s no better than grass-stains.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on—be sports!” urged Tom, waving his
+tray. “I think she’s come to say that she’s willing
+to be welcomed in your midst.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How do you know?” asked all three girls at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know—I only think so, because Billy told
+me,” said Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We certainly look dreadful!” mourned Helen, but
+they all brushed each other off and straightened each
+other, and trotted into the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nataly did not look as if she had ever seen a
+negligee. She had on white gloves and a veil, and
+carried a card-case, and altogether, except that her hair
+was down and her skirt short, she might very well
+have been grown up.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103'></a>103</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a charming day,” she began when she had
+been introduced to Helen and Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly is,” agreed Louise, “and a lot too
+nice to stay in the house. Don’t you want to come on
+out in the back yard with us and play ball?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But Nataly declined. She said she didn’t think it
+would be good for her gloves.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then there was a pause, because nobody could think
+of anything to say. Finally Winona began:
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tom says you think you might like to join our
+Camp Fire, after all. Do you think you would?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Nataly looked as if she was about to take a dreadful
+plunge, but she said, “Yes, I believe I would like
+to. The doctor says I ought to be out in the open
+air, and you are, aren’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We certainly are!” said Louise. “That’s where
+we were when you came to call. Want to come?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise was visibly fretting at having to stay indoors,
+and finally Winona had to lead the way out to
+the back garden again. And, naturally, the first thing
+to meet their eyes was the big black tray, with Nataly’s
+own card fatally conspicuous in the very middle of it.
+Winona tried to steer her around it, but it was no use.
+Your own name is one thing you are sure to see or
+hear before anything else. Winona, talking sixteen
+to the dozen about everything she could think of, picked
+up the card furtively and put it in her pocket. Unfortunately
+it wasn’t possible to pocket the tray.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, they arranged with Nataly that she go
+camping with them. She could not join till the next
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104'></a>104</span>
+monthly ceremonial meeting, but there was to be one
+soon after camp was pitched. So it was settled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder who she’ll be friends with specially?”
+said Helen after she had gone. “She doesn’t seem to
+fit into us, somehow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll have to make her fit,” said Winona gayly.
+“To tell you the truth Helen, she reminds me of a
+kitten I knew once. It belonged to three old maiden
+ladies. It didn’t know how to be a kitten at all—the
+poor little thing thought it was a cat!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, perhaps Nataly’ll turn out a kitten, but I
+doubt it, even with you helping,” said Louise. “Come
+on, let’s finish our game.”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105'></a>105</span>CHAPTER TEN</h2>
+<p>
+As the clock struck eight-thirty Monday morning,
+on the last week in July, one Guardian, one dog, thirteen
+big girls and seven small ones lined up for their
+long-anticipated hike to Camp Karonya. They
+planned to walk half the distance that day, sleep at a
+farmhouse about half-way to the woods, and finish
+the next day at their destination. They were all in
+middies, with dark skirts, and the most comfortable
+slippers money could buy—it hurts to hike in tight
+shoes. They had hats, of course, but Edith Hillis, in
+addition, carried a parasol. Each girl carried her own
+night-things and drinking-cup and luncheon. The provisions,
+and the rest of the baggage, had gone over to
+the camping-place in Mr. Bryan’s automobile and
+Louise Lane’s father’s delivery-wagon.
+</p>
+<p>
+Early as it was, quite a lot of people were out to
+see the girls off, and even Puppums curvetted proudly
+as he noticed the attention he was getting, for he was
+a very vain dog. He might well be vain, because Louise
+had attached a large label to his collar which said
+“Camp Fire Dog,” and he was not allowed to chew
+it off.
+</p>
+<p>
+They walked slowly, and it felt very much like
+going to a picnic guaranteed to last forever. Presently
+someone started a marching song, and everyone joined
+in. They walked easily on, having a very good time as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106'></a>106</span>
+they went; and before they knew it noon had come,
+and it was time to have lunch.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were near a meadow by this time, a big green
+meadow with trees at its edge, and they all sat down
+under the trees and unpacked their sandwiches and
+ate. Some of the girls had thermos bottles with them,
+with hot cocoa, but most of them preferred the concentrated
+lemonade Mrs. Bryan had brought along,
+mixed with water from a nice little brook which had
+been kind enough to flow quite near them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If it’s all going to be like this, won’t it be lovely?”
+said Winona, her eyes shining, as she took a large bite
+of sandwich, and then fed a generous share of the
+rest to Puppums, who lay quiveringly near her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It is nice,” said Helen more quietly. “I hope
+we’ll have weather like this the whole time ...
+gracious, what’s that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That” was a distant squeal. Winona looked
+hastily around her to see what the Blue Birds were
+doing. But there were no Blue Birds there. The seven
+little girls were out of sight, but not out of hearing, for
+it was evidently one of them who had made the noise.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona and Adelaide jumped up and ran, but
+Louise and Edith sat placidly on.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They <em>will</em> howl,” said Louise. “There’s no use
+always chasing after them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+But when Winona and Adelaide arrived at the place
+the squeals had come from they were very glad they
+had done the “chasing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Florence, with little Lucy Hillis holding her, was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107'></a>107</span>
+sitting on the ground screaming steadily. The other
+girls were huddled together in a frightened group a
+little way off.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it? What is it, Lucy?” cried Winona,
+frightened. Florence was making such a noise that it
+was no use asking her. Lucy Hillis, who was one of
+those quiet, old-fashioned little girls who always keep
+their heads, looked up, still holding Florence’s wrist.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Florence’s cut herself,” she said. “I’m afraid
+it’s a bad cut. I don’t dare let go of it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona flung herself down by Florence and put
+her hands above Lucy’s shaking little ones, which then,
+and not till then, let go.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Get me a stick, Lucy, quick—a strong one!” she
+said.
+</p>
+<p>
+Lucy was back with the stick before Winona was
+through speaking. Winona pulled off her tie, that
+useful silk scarf of hers which had helped Edith out of
+the water, and bound it above Florence’s cut, twisting
+it tight with the stick. Then she asked Adelaide to
+tie Florence’s wrist again, below the cut. She did not
+want to take any chances, and she did not know yet
+whether it was a vein or an artery that Florence had
+hurt.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then she sent Lucy flying for Mrs. Bryan, while
+she and Adelaide made Florence keep still.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That Lucy child keeps her head,” said Adelaide
+approvingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It wasn’t <em>her</em> wrist that got cut!” said Florence
+indignantly, stopping her sobs.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108'></a>108</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“How did it happen, Florence?” asked her sister.
+“Tell us—but don’t stir. Nobody knows what will
+happen if your wrist starts bleeding again.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, we were being Indian chiefs,” began Florence,
+“an’—an’ I was out on the warpath, going to
+scalp Molly Green. And I ran, and Molly ran, an’
+I fell over a tree-root and the knife cut my wrist.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The knife!” said Winona, for nobody had mentioned
+a knife before. “Where did you get a knife?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Florence hung her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—I borrowed your penknife out of your knapsack
+when you laid it on the grass to get lunch out
+of it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The knife? I didn’t.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No; the knapsack,” said Florence meekly. “An’—an’
+oh, <em>dear</em> sister, I’m so sorry!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona could scarcely help laughing, worried as
+she was. When Florence had been naughty she always
+became suddenly very affectionate. At other times she
+wasn’t, especially.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m sorry, too,” she said gravely. “I don’t know
+what Mrs. Bryan will say to you, nor mother, when
+she hears about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let me see,” said Mrs. Bryan behind them. She
+had hurried over at Lucy’s summons.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, is it—is it an artery?” breathed Winona,
+as Mrs. Bryan bent over the wounded arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan laughed. “Nothing of the sort, you
+foolish child,” she said. “It’s only a deep cut. It
+didn’t even strike a large vein.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109'></a>109</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I’m <em>so</em> glad!” said Winona, drawing a long
+breath.
+</p>
+<p>
+She ran off to get her First Aid kit out of her knapsack,
+and, coming back, presently had Florence bandaged
+up scientifically, and much impressed with the
+importance of what she had done.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Will I have to be carried on a stretcher?” the
+little girl wanted to know.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a bit of it,” said Mrs. Bryan briskly. “You
+will have to walk on your own two feet, like any other
+naughty little girl.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, was I naughty?” said Florence cheerfully.
+“I forgot that!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” answered Mrs. Bryan, “you were very
+naughty. I think we shall have to confine you to camp
+for two days, when we get there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Florence complacently, “but now
+please can’t I be carried on a stretcher? I should think
+I might!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, let’s,” said Louise, who had come up
+along with the rest of the girls, in Mrs. Bryan’s wake.
+“Only remember, Florence Merriam, once you get up
+on that stretcher you have to stay there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course!” said Florence indignantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time all the girls were clustered about the
+interesting invalid, and the stretcher idea struck them
+all as a very fine one. It would help them to put the
+Wood Craft they had been learning into practice.
+Winona picked up her gory penknife, and began to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110'></a>110</span>
+wash it in the brook before she started to cut wood
+with it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh,” said Florence plaintively, “I thought you’d
+always keep it that way, to remember me by!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll have chance enough to remember you without
+that,” replied Winona feelingly, and went off to
+look for poles with the others. Edith Hillis pulled her
+embroidery out of her knapsack and mounted guard
+over the Blue Birds, who were, however, a rather
+subdued flock by now.
+</p>
+<p>
+Meanwhile the rest of the girls picked out four saplings
+which grew at the edge of the wood beyond the
+meadow, and nicked them at the bottom patiently till
+they fell. The next thing was to tie them together.
+But nobody had anything to do it with, till Mrs. Bryan
+remembered a bunch of leather thongs she carried.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I always have at least two along for extra shoe-laces,
+when I’m camping,” she explained, “and they
+always come in use for something else before the time
+is over. An old guide up in the Adirondacks told me
+to do that, and it’s always a good thing for campers
+to do.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The thongs bound the saplings into a frame, and
+Louise secured them to a knot that was newly learned,
+and the pride of her life.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That can’t come out,” she said, surveying it with
+pleasure, for learning to do it had earned her a much-valued
+bead.
+</p>
+<p>
+For the covering of the stretcher Adelaide produced
+an old gray shawl from her knapsack.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111'></a>111</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Father made me bring it,” she explained rather
+shamefacedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just the thing!” said Mrs. Bryan heartily.
+</p>
+<p>
+They wrapped it round the frame, and it went
+around three times, being large, so that a couple of
+pins held it fast. Then they lifted the gratified Florence
+on to it and started off down the road again. They
+had cleared up the fragments of their luncheon first,
+and buried neatly all the scraps and debris, so that
+there were no excursiony-looking boxes and crusts littering
+their resting-place.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls took turns carrying the stretcher, and
+as there were fourteen of them, counting Mrs. Bryan,
+many hands made light work. As Louise had prophesied
+would happen, after a little while Florence
+became restless. The other Blue Birds were having
+lovely times frolicking all over the road, chasing butterflies
+and picking flowers and playing with the dog.
+Florence found it rather stupid to sit in solitary grandeur
+on a stretcher, and listen to what Winona and
+Adelaide, before her, and Marie and Edith, behind
+her, were saying about their own affairs. So at the
+first stop to change bearers she wanted to get down.
+But Mrs. Bryan was firm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, indeed,” she said, “the first thing Blue Birds
+must learn is to obey orders and keep promises. You
+promised to stay up there till evening, Florence, and
+you must do it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Florence pouted, but she stayed. She really had
+lost quite a little blood in her adventure with her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112'></a>112</span>
+sister’s penknife, and, though Mrs. Bryan did not tell
+her so, the walk might have been too much for her. She
+wriggled and yawned, and once sat up straight, till her
+bearers requested her to lie still. But presently she
+had a companion in misery.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was nearly the end of the journey, and the farmhouse
+where the girls planned to stay the night was
+in sight. Winona, strolling on ahead, saw a small
+gray kitten prowling along the side of the road. It
+was a most unhappy kitten; it looked as if it hadn’t had
+a square meal since it could remember, and there was
+an ugly-looking place on its side as if something had
+worried it. It limped a little, too, poor little cat, and
+altogether a more forlorn animal would have been hard
+to find. But Winona pounced on it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, you poor little cat!” she cried. “Look,
+Helen, some horrid dog has hurt it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, don’t pick it up!” said Marie. “It may have
+something awful.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Smallpox, maybe?” inquired Winona sarcastically.
+“Nonsense, Marie, the poor little thing’s been
+worried by a dog, and it hasn’t had enough to eat, that’s
+all. I’m going to adopt it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+And in spite of Marie’s protests she picked it up
+and wrapped it in her handkerchief, and carried it back
+to Florence, who was wriggling on her stretcher, and
+wishing that she hadn’t demanded that evidence of
+invalidism.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here, Florence,” said Winona, “hold this kitty
+till we get to the farmhouse.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113'></a>113</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, a kitty! Poor little thing!” cried Florence,
+adopting the cat on the spot, and letting it cuddle down
+by her, which it was willing enough to do, for it
+seemed to be as tired as it was hungry.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are you sure——” began Marie again.
+</p>
+<p>
+Marie’s father was a professor in the high-school,
+and as a result she knew about more kinds of germs
+than the rest had ever heard of.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mother lets us bring in hurt animals, always, and
+look after them,” said Winona. “Germs can’t get you
+if you’re careful. We can wash our hands in disinfectant
+as soon as we get to the farmhouse. I have
+some in my first-aid kit.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And what are you going to do with the cat?”
+asked Louise, coming up to the other side of the
+stretcher and surveying the much-discussed animal
+without great affection.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Keep it, if Mrs. Bryan doesn’t mind, as it doesn’t
+belong to anyone,” said Winona coolly. “It ought to
+make a good camp mascot.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise eyed the kitten again—they were nearly at
+the farmhouse by this time.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t exactly my idea of a mascot,” she said
+candidly. “What about Puppums? I thought he was
+elected to the position.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, then, the kitty can be the under-mascot,”
+said Winona undauntedly. “Anyway, when I get
+through nursing her she’ll be a perfectly good cat—see
+if she isn’t!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114'></a>114</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I doubt it!” said Louise and Marie together, as
+if they had been practising a duet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait!” said Winona as they mounted the steps.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were plenty of rooms, for the farm people
+took boarders all August; but even so, there were not
+enough for nearly twenty people. However, Mrs.
+Norris, the farmer’s wife, had been prepared beforehand
+for the descent, and she had extra cots made up
+and ready in all the rooms, and unlimited hot water
+for baths.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona did not come in when the others did. She
+sat down on the porch floor, pulled out her first-aid
+kit for the second time that day, sent Florence in for a
+basin of warm water, and set about doctoring the kitten.
+She sponged off the torn place in its side, and
+the little hurt in one of its hind legs that had made it
+limp. This last was only a scratch, but it had stiffened.
+She rubbed salve in the hurt places. Then she bandaged
+the cat’s leg very successfully. But when it
+came to tying up the side—for the cat would certainly
+have licked the salve off if she could—it wasn’t so
+simple. There wasn’t anything to fasten the bandage
+to. Finally she wound it round and round the meek
+little animal, and sewed it up on top. The cat looked
+as if it had on a large and fashionable sash, but it did
+not object. Then Winona gave it some evaporated
+cream out of a can in her knapsack, watched it while it
+ate, which it did till the belt tightened dangerously,
+and took it into the house with her. Florence took the
+basin back to the place she had gotten it from.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115'></a>115</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Does this kitten belong to you?” Winona asked
+the landlady, who was hurrying about a long table in
+the dining-room, putting dishes full of steaming things
+on the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Bless my soul, no!” she answered, stopping with a
+pan of baked beans poised in mid-air. “Why, I do
+believe that’s the kitten that belonged to Medarys,
+down the road, and they moved away last week. Well,
+poor little thing, the dogs must have got after it. It’s
+a mercy it got away at all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“People who abandon cats that way ought to be
+left out in a wilderness themselves, without anything
+to eat,” said Mrs. Bryan warmly, as she came up behind
+them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ain’t it so?” said the landlady. “I’ll get somebody
+to drown the poor little thing to-morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no! I’ll keep it if it’s nobody’s,” Winona
+said eagerly. “You don’t mind, do you, Mrs. Bryan?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If it hasn’t mange,” said Mrs. Bryan prudently.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It hasn’t,” Winona and Florence assured her
+together. “It’s only hurt.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very well,” said the Guardian; and the Merriams
+ran off to wash their hands in disinfectant and
+straighten themselves generally for supper. They left
+the cat in their room.
+</p>
+<p>
+That certainly was a supper. When you have
+walked all day in the open you feel as if you could eat
+a house, if nothing tenderer offers itself. Even
+Nataly Lee, who was genuinely tired to death, was
+hungry. The girls stood behind their chairs for a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116'></a>116</span>
+moment, saying one of the Camp Fire graces softly in
+unison. Then they sat down, and ate as if lunch had
+been only a dream.
+</p>
+<p>
+After supper the hostess showed them her long
+parlor and invited them to make themselves at home.
+But they were all too sleepy to frolic. Louise, who
+was untirable, did indeed unsling her banjo from across
+her shoulder and try to sing, but she interrupted herself
+in the middle of “Nellie Gray” with a gigantic yawn.
+The Blue Birds were all asleep in their chairs, and had
+to be marched off to bed half conscious. It was only
+eight, but the elder sisters and cousins who took them
+up liked the looks of the white cots very much, and—well,
+it seemed so useless to go downstairs again, some
+way. So Winona and Adelaide and Louise and Elizabeth,
+and Marie, who was looking after such Blue
+Birds as had not sisters along, simply went to bed, too,
+when they had attended to their charges. The other
+girls sat sleepily downstairs for awhile, waiting for
+their friends to come back. And then they, too, came
+upstairs and went to bed—and by eight-thirty there was
+nothing to be heard of seven Blue Birds, thirteen Camp
+Fire Girls, a dog and a cat, but twenty even breathings
+from as many cots, an occasional snore from the back
+porch where Puppums was tied, and a loud, ecstatic
+purr from the corner of Winona’s cot, where the
+Medary’s late kitten was privately spending the night.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117'></a>117</span>CHAPTER ELEVEN</h2>
+<p>
+Next morning by eight Camp Karonya was up and
+eating a large breakfast. The girls sang a cheer to
+Mrs. Norris when they were done, and formed for
+their march again. Most of them had brought enough
+food for two lunches, but Mrs. Norris could not be
+brought to think so, and insisted on piling up provisions
+enough for a regiment. They compromised,
+on several slices of roast lamb apiece, and enough
+bread and butter to go around and leave some over.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona slipped into the little general store near
+the farmhouse, and bargained for some more cans of
+evaporated milk for her under-mascot, the kitten. It
+was travelling in Florence’s knapsack to-day, and
+Florence’s things were distributed between Winona
+and two of the other girls. It proved to be a very
+frisky kitten by nature, now that its fears of being
+hungry and homeless were gone. Winona had to sew
+its bandage on again at noon.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know how it is,” she said perplexedly.
+“It’s certainly a fatter kitten, and yet its bandage is
+too big!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor thing! Take it off altogether!” advised
+Helen. “Pussy will get well just as soon without it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So they ripped off the bandage, and the kitten
+seemed very grateful. Its hurt looked like scarcely
+more than a scratch now.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118'></a>118</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“If she’s going to be a camp mascot she ought to
+have a name,” suggested Florence.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona laughed. “I’m going to call her Hike,”
+she said. “She was hiking when we met her, poor
+pussy, and so were we.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So Hike the Camp Cat she became. And—to anticipate—when
+she had been living on evaporated cream
+and other luxuries a few days, she turned into a plump
+and handsome Maltese kitten with charming manners.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls arrived at their camping-place at about
+five that day. The big limousine that belonged to
+Helen’s father, and the big electric delivery wagon
+which Louise’s father had contributed, stood waiting
+for them on the road nearest the clearing in the woods,
+where they were to make their camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you mean to say we’re going to eat all that?”
+asked Edith Hillis helplessly, as she caught sight of
+the piled provisions in the delivery wagon.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, we shan’t have to eat the tents and cots
+in the limousine,” said Winona. “At least, I hope not.
+But I think we will manage the rest. I was on the committee
+that figured out how much we would want for
+three weeks of camping, and I’m sure there’s no more
+here than we ordered.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have the list,” said Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then check the things off, dear, as the men lift
+them out,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+So Helen read from her list as the barrels and
+boxes were carried away, and the girls listened in awe,
+for this is what she read:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119'></a>119</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;half&nbsp;&nbsp;barrels&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;flour.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fifteen&nbsp;&nbsp;pounds&nbsp;&nbsp;shortening.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+(“It’s a special kind,” explained Helen. “You
+can use it for cakes, as well as frying and other things.”)
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fifteen&nbsp;&nbsp;pounds&nbsp;&nbsp;rice.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fifteen&nbsp;&nbsp;pounds&nbsp;&nbsp;beans.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Five&nbsp;&nbsp;pounds&nbsp;&nbsp;baking-powder.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Three&nbsp;&nbsp;sides&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;bacon.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sixty-five&nbsp;&nbsp;pounds&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;sugar.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ten&nbsp;&nbsp;pounds&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;cocoa.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Case&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;half&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;evaporated&nbsp;&nbsp;milk.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+(“And the extra cans Winnie bought to support
+the cat on,” interrupted Louise. “We can steal those
+if the worst comes to the worst.”)
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two&nbsp;&nbsp;barrels&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;potatoes.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Six&nbsp;&nbsp;jugs&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;molasses.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One&nbsp;&nbsp;dozen&nbsp;&nbsp;cans&nbsp;&nbsp;each&nbsp;&nbsp;peas&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;corn.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Eight&nbsp;&nbsp;pounds&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;salt&nbsp;&nbsp;pork.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+“All present and accounted for,” said Mrs. Bryan,
+as the men who had been loaned with the wagon rolled
+the barrels and carried the boxes off to a little tarred
+shack near the spring. “We’ll have to buy butter and
+eggs and fresh fruit and vegetables as we go along.
+They’ll keep in the spring, for it seems to be ice-cold.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And did just things to eat for us cost all that
+beautiful eighty dollars we made at all the cake-sales?”
+asked Florence indignantly. She had helped make
+fudge for those sales, and she felt as if they had been
+her personal venture.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It came to about fifty-five dollars, wholesale,”
+said Helen, looking down at the itemized list she held.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120'></a>120</span>
+“We figured out that the other thirty dollars would
+just about keep us in the green things and dairy things
+we had to have. The corn and peas are in case we’re
+weatherbound and can’t get fresh vegetables.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And how long did you say we could live on that
+perfect mountain of food?” inquired Nataly Lee’s
+mournful voice from where she was lying on the grass
+with her knapsack under her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Three weeks, no more,” said Helen briskly. “If
+we want to stay we shall have to earn more money.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think we could,” mused Winona thoughtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But what about the tents?” asked Elizabeth
+curiously. She was a quiet, competent little thing.
+“I don’t see where the money for them comes in.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the most splendid thing of all,” smiled
+Mrs. Bryan, as the men began to slide ten dusty-looking
+tents out of the wagon. “Mr. Gedney, the
+Scoutmaster, called up Mr. Bryan just before I was
+going shopping for tents, and told me about these in
+case we wanted them. They belonged to the National
+Guard, and the State had condemned them, because
+they were shabbier than some politician or other liked
+them to be. So the Scouts were offered them at a
+ridiculously low price, if they would only take enough.
+Rather than let such a bargain go by the Scouts took
+them all, though there were more than they needed.
+And Mr. Gedney says we may use these, and needn’t
+pay for them till next winter.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls agreed that it certainly was luck, and
+followed on down to see the tents put up—ten little
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121'></a>121</span>
+brown tents in a row, with two cots and a box-dressing-table
+in each.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll have to stow your clothes underneath
+the cots,” explained Mrs. Bryan. “And I expect each
+of you to learn how to put up and take down her own
+tent.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Beads!” exploded Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Exactly,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We only have extra under-things,” said Marie,
+“and one dress-up frock apiece, besides our camp
+clothes and ceremonial dresses. We don’t need much
+room.”
+</p>
+<p>
+By the time the tents had been assigned and the cots
+made up, supper was ready, and Mrs. Bryan summoned
+them to it by blowing a clear little whistle she wore.
+The girls had expected to turn to and get their own
+supper. So they were very much surprised to find
+Mrs. Bryan’s black maid Grace, and Mrs. Hunter’s
+Jenny smiling behind the long trestles in the mess-tent,
+setting steaming dishes up and down the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is a special treat,” explained Mrs. Bryan.
+“We’re all tired to-night, and we hadn’t time to do any
+cooking ourselves anyway, so I let Grace and Jenny do
+it. But to-morrow morning camp life begins. We’ll
+draw lots for assignment to duties, after supper.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls stood up behind their seats for a moment
+and said grace, then sat down, and ate as if they had
+never seen food before. It was a very civilized meal,
+soup, roasts and dessert, all sent over by the mothers
+in the tonneau of the Bryan car, as the cooks and the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122'></a>122</span>
+provisions had been. It tasted good, but everyone
+looked forward with joy to real camp cooking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait till you see how I can broil venison steak,”
+threatened Louise, as she ate a very large helping of
+despised roast beef from a mere unromantic cow.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where’ll you get the venison? Pick it?” called
+back Winona from the other side of the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, she’s going to grow it!” said Elizabeth.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nothing of the kind!” said Louise cheerfully.
+“All you do is to go out with a gun, and stalk till you
+find a magnificent moose feeding peacefully among the
+underbrush.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Suppose there isn’t any underbrush?” inquired
+Edith’s languid voice from the table’s other end.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then you carry some out with you and scatter it
+around for the deer to eat out of,” said Louise undisturbed.
+“Don’t interrupt the lesson on natural history,
+please. You stand, moved by the beauty of the
+sight, for a long time. Then, recalled to yourself
+by the thought of the seven starving little Blue Birds
+at home, you draw your revolver to your shoulder and
+are about to fire.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure it’s a revolver?” asked Winona skeptically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, your pistol, then—they’re all the same thing.
+Just then the moose lifts his head and looks at you
+mournfully out of his large, deer-like eyes. You almost
+relent. But you nerve yourself and fire—one crashing
+shot between the eyes. Then you throw the moose
+across your shoulders and carry it home—and there’s
+your venison steak.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123'></a>123</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It sounds more like a venison mis-steak to me,”
+said Winona. “I suppose you’re going hunting to-morrow
+morning, Louise?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But Louise had just arrived at her dessert.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I scorn to reply,” was all she said as she retired
+into her ice-cream.
+</p>
+<p>
+After supper the girls lay about on the grass, while
+Winona and Marie and Mrs. Bryan put slips of paper
+in a double boiler. The girls drew lots to decide which
+should be camp cooks and camp orderlies for the first
+week: four for the cooking, four for buying provisions
+and policing the camp, and four for the dish-washing
+and preparing vegetables.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That leaves one girl over,” spoke up Adelaide,
+sitting up under a tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan shook her head. “No,” she said, “it
+doesn’t, because somebody has to look after the Blue
+Birds every week. I’m going to appoint Marie Hunter,
+because she hasn’t any small sisters, and it won’t be
+such an old story to her to look after little girls. So
+there are just enough people to go around. Rise up
+and draw lots out of the boiler, girls!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’d rather wash every dish in camp than chaperon
+the infants!” said Louise aside; and drew a slip marked
+“Dish-Washing” on the spot. “If I got all my
+wishes as quickly as that, how nice it would be!” she
+sighed, and lay down with her arm around little Bessie.
+Louise had not a passion for washing dishes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Adelaide drew a cooking slip. So did
+Winona and Elizabeth and Lilian Brown, one of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124'></a>124</span>
+girls who had joined later. Anna Morris, Dorothy
+Gray and Edith Hillis drew the other dish-washing slips
+and Helen Bryan, Nataly Lee, Gladys Williams and
+the other Brown sister, Gertrude, were assigned the
+police and provision duty. At the end of the week
+everybody was to shift to something else.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It seems to me the camp orderlies have the best of
+it,” said Helen, yawning. “What do we do, Nannie?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You see that everyone remembers to make up her
+bed in the morning, you sweep out the camp, carry
+water from the spring. You have to see, too, that the
+camp is kept in fruit and vegetables—in other words,
+walk to a farmhouse about a mile away every other
+day to buy provisions. We mustn’t break into our
+canned goods except in an emergency. You are really
+the people who are responsible for the camp’s running
+smoothly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Carry water!” said Nataly with a gasp. “Won’t
+we get our clothes wet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wear a waterproof, love,” said Louise. “I’m
+going to ask to have Nataly assigned to bring me all
+my water for dishes,” she whispered to Winona, beside
+her. “I’m sure it will have an elevating effect on her
+character.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, don’t, Louise!” whispered Winona back.
+“Suppose you’d spent your young life on a sofa,
+reading ‘Beautiful Coralie’s Doom,’ you wouldn’t feel
+able to carry water either!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I wouldn’t go Camp Firing,” said Louise
+conclusively.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125'></a>125</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Next morning the camp cooks were up at six.
+Breakfast was to be at seven-thirty, but the girls were
+so afraid of being too late that they devised an elaborate
+system of strings, whereby the earliest awake was
+to jerk her strings, and wake all the others. Winona,
+Lilian Brown and Elizabeth were on the ground by a
+quarter past six, but, although they had all jerked
+their strings faithfully, no Adelaide appeared. Finally
+they descended in a body on the tent which held
+Adelaide and her little sister Frances.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, would you look at that!” said Winona in
+an indignant whisper.
+</p>
+<p>
+The other girls cautiously lifted the tent-flap and
+stuck in their heads.
+</p>
+<p>
+Frances slept placidly on one cot, her little freckled
+face half buried in the pillow. On the other, quite
+as fast asleep, lay Adelaide—and there was not a string
+tied to her anywhere!
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, if that isn’t the <em>limit</em>!” said Elizabeth and
+Lilian in one breath, and Elizabeth reached down to
+the pail of water which the orderlies had faithfully
+set outside each tent door before they went to bed.
+She tilted the cold water on her handkerchief, and
+dropped it wetly on Adelaide’s face. It wasn’t a wet
+sponge, but it did nearly as well, as an awakener.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What—where—nonsense, Lonny, <em>don’t</em>!” said
+Adelaide, waving her arms, and finally sitting up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t Lonny; it’s us,” said Winona coldly,
+“and why on earth did you untie the strings, when all
+the rest of us had them to get up by?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126'></a>126</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide looked ashamed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I couldn’t sleep all tied up that way,” she confessed.
+“I felt like a spider or a fly or something.
+So I tied them on the cot. But I thought when you
+pulled them the cot would jar, and wake me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It might have,” said Winona, “if you’d tied
+them on your own cot!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide, looking in the direction of Winona’s
+pointing finger, found out why she had not wakened.
+In her sleepiness the night before, she had fastened
+her strings to a large twig that grew out of the ground
+beside her bed!
+</p>
+<p>
+“I ought to be drowned!” said Adelaide ashamedly.
+“But if you girls will wait till I get bathed and
+dressed, I’ll wash all the dishes to pay for this!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You won’t do any such thing,” said the others.
+</p>
+<p>
+So they sat sociably outside Adelaide’s tent till
+she was dressed and joined them. Then they started
+out valiantly for the cooking-place.
+</p>
+<p>
+When they reached it a very cheering surprise
+awaited them, for there was Mrs. Bryan seated on a
+pile of kindling, with a box of matches on her lap
+and a pleasant smile on her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thought you mightn’t know just where to
+begin,” she said, “so I thought I’d come help, this
+first morning. The first thing is the fire. Do any of
+you know how to make a cooking-fire in the open?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide didn’t, neither did Elizabeth. Winona
+thought she knew, but wasn’t sure, and Lilian had once
+seen it done, but had forgotten how.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127'></a>127</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’d better show you all, then,” said their Guardian
+briskly. “The first thing you do is to get together
+two big green logs that won’t burn. Roll them
+together so they form a big V.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Logs that <em>won’t</em> burn! What a queer beginning!”
+said Winona, whose idea of building a fire was
+heaping a bonfire up with sticks till it flamed high.
+</p>
+<p>
+But they tugged and pushed till they had a couple
+of newly-felled trees at angles to each other, in a
+hollow place protected from the wind.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, you build your fire inside that V,” explained
+Mrs. Bryan, “and, you see, you can put the cocoa-pan
+up at the beginning of the crotch, and the portable oven
+and the frying-pan down where the division is wider.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Simple as anything,” said Winona, “once you
+know how.”
+</p>
+<p>
+And they scattered to find wood. The sticks lay
+about in plenty—later they were hard to find without
+going into the woods which encircled the camping-place—and
+Mrs. Bryan showed them how to commence a fire
+by laying small pieces of brushwood criss-cross at the
+bottom, and piling on heavier wood till all was aflame.
+Presently they had a solid, roaring fire. They sat back
+and let it burn down to coals. By then they had the
+flour-barrel opened, the bacon sliced, and the water
+ready to put on the cocoa. Winona made biscuits, it
+seemed to her, in mountains, while Elizabeth got out
+the butter and knives and forks, and set the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You can’t cut out biscuits enough for twenty
+people with a cutter, child!” advised Mrs. Bryan.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128'></a>128</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just take the butcher-knife, and cut the whole mass
+of dough into squares, after you’ve laid it on the
+floured floors of the oven!”
+</p>
+<p>
+But the bacon had to be sliced, and this took longer;
+and Adelaide’s job, looking after the cocoa, proved
+nerve-racking, because cocoa will burn at the slightest
+chance. But everything came right, and by the time
+the other girls were astir their breakfast was awaiting
+them, piping hot; crispy bacon, hot biscuits and butter,
+with jam they had made themselves, and cocoa.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Jam’s an extra,” Mrs. Bryan warned them. “It
+happened to be left over from the sales, so I brought it.
+You’ll have to go to work and make some more out of
+berries you pick.”
+</p>
+<p>
+After breakfast, Marie, the keeper of the Blue
+Birds’ Nest, said that she was going to put two Blue
+Birds to work at each of the camp shifts, and leave
+the odd one to be Mrs. Bryan’s personal Bird and
+attendant. Mrs. Bryan was to choose her attendant,
+who was to run her errands for her and help her generally.
+But she refused to do it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I like them all so much,” she said, “that I can’t
+pick out a special one.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So they counted out for the honor, and the choice
+for the first week fell on little Lucy Hillis. The others,
+as far as it could be done, worked with their own sisters.
+</p>
+<p>
+After breakfast, while the dish-washing brigade
+wrestled with the cups, plates and spoons that twenty
+people leave behind them, the cooks held a council.
+They decided that it would be easier if two girls got
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129'></a>129</span>
+each meal in turn: Winona and Adelaide the dinner,
+Elizabeth and Lilian the supper, and so on. The camp
+police divided off the same way, and so, eventually, did
+the dish-washers. Helen, who had the Camp funds in
+her charge, talked with the girls who were going to
+market that day. There was twenty-five dollars for
+three weeks of camp, she explained, and she thought
+that the safest way would be to allow so much a day,
+which gave them about a dollar twenty a day to spend.
+They thought so, too, and presently Nataly and Helen
+went off in search of the farmhouse which had promised
+to keep them supplied with perishable provisions.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona and Adelaide, freed of any further duties
+till supper-time, went off exploring. It was a perfect
+day, bright and breezy and not too hot. Winona half-danced
+along, singing under her breath. The sun
+glinted on her pretty hair and lighted up her blue eyes.
+Adelaide looked at her wistfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do wish I were you!” she said abruptly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona looked at her in surprise. “Wish you were
+me? Why, on earth?” she asked. “Isn’t it just as
+nice to be you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide shook her head. “I don’t like it much!”
+she said rebelliously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why not?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide shrugged her shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona slipped her arm about her, and pulled her
+down on a comfortable looking log.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let’s sit down and talk about it,” said she cheerfully.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130'></a>130</span>CHAPTER TWELVE</h2>
+<p>
+Adelaide turned and faced Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, go ahead and talk,” she said. “It won’t
+make things any less so.” Then suddenly she burst
+out, “You don’t know what it’s like. You don’t know
+how it feels never to have anything extra. If I go to a
+party I’m likely to be the worst-dressed girl there.
+If I go to school and the girls treat I have to say I
+don’t want any because I can’t pay back. I can’t invite
+anybody to meals, because I can’t give them extra nice
+things to eat. And, anyway, the flat’s horrid—even the
+furniture and the carpets are shabby. Lonny and
+Frances are good, and help, but everything drags. And
+I just hate <em>everything</em>.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hate everything!” said Winona soothingly.
+“Why, of course you don’t—you just think you do!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s all right for you to talk,” murmured Adelaide
+miserably. “Everybody’s crazy over you—of course
+they would be. I am myself, and I don’t like people
+generally. You have something about you that would
+make people like you even if you weren’t sweet to
+them. Everything turns out right for you. I don’t
+see what you wanted to join the Camp Fire for—its
+rules stuck out all over you before you ever joined.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, <em>don’t</em>!” said Winona, blushing. “What
+rules do you mean? I never kept any rules.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You know the Law of the Camp Fire: ‘Seek
+beauty; give service; pursue knowledge; be trustworthy;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131'></a>131</span>
+hold on to health; glorify work; be happy.’”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t do all those things,” said Winona. “Wish
+I did! But anybody seeks beauty, and as long as you
+have to work the only way to get fun out of it is to
+glorify it. As for the rest, I think they’re only rules for
+getting all there is out of living. I’ll tell you, Adelaide,”—Winona
+sat upright, as if a new thought had struck
+her—“why don’t you see how many of the rules would
+apply to getting fun out of the things that worry you?
+When things go wrong at our house mother always
+says to Florence and Tommy and me, ‘Can’t you turn
+it into a game?’”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Turn shabby furniture and stews and no money
+into a game?” said Adelaide, as if she thought Winona
+was crazy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes!” said Winona undauntedly. “To begin with
+the stews—well, Adelaide, you don’t know one single
+thing about cooking. There’s any amount of things
+beside stew that you can make out of stewing meat.
+And don’t you remember the cold things we got out of
+Mrs. Bryan’s refrigerator? That was a good supper,
+wasn’t it? If you know how, cooking’s fun, or nearly
+anything.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If we have more cooking-classes I suppose I could
+learn how to do more things with the meats and vegetables,
+or maybe market better,” said Adelaide. “But
+that would only help that one thing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You can figure out keeping house just like anything
+else,” said Winona. “All you have to do’s to
+<em>think</em>!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132'></a>132</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide laughed. “Do you suppose I could think
+the furniture new?” she asked. “You ought to see it—horrid
+old brown rep, and a carpet that’s worn into
+white spots!”
+</p>
+<p>
+But though she laughed, she looked to Winona for
+the answer with real eagerness.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I’ll tell you what I’d do,” suggested Winona
+thoughtfully—“I don’t suppose you would, you’re such
+a haughty Lady Imogene—I’d make a furnishing bee of
+it, and have a party, and invite all the girls to help you
+do the flat over. Your father and Lonny would help,
+wouldn’t they?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I guess so,” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, then, the girls would help you cover the
+furniture and stain the floor, and even paper, maybe.
+And if your father or Lonny could paint the wood-work—or
+would the landlord?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” said Adelaide, “he won’t make repairs.
+It’s not in the lease. And where would I get money
+for the paint and paper and stain and covers?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Earn it!” said Winona. “There are lots of ways.
+That jam you made for the sales—you could get heaps
+of orders for that, I know. Oh, I should think it would
+be lovely to do. I tell you, Adelaide, you may think
+I’m crazy—but everything’s fun, if you’ll only remember
+that it <em>is</em> fun!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder!” said Adelaide. “But I believe I
+could make money with jams and preserves if I worked
+hard at it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ve all got to earn some more money soon if
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133'></a>133</span>
+we want to stay in the camp longer than three weeks,”
+said Winona, “unless Louise can feed us all on the
+venison steaks she was talking about last night. If you
+can make money for the camp you can for yourself!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide turned impulsively—they had risen and
+were going on through the wood—and threw her arms
+around Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You certainly are the most comforting girl!”
+she said. “I don’t wonder everybody does what you
+want them to.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona didn’t know what to say. It’s pleasant to
+have people say such things to you, but it is embarrassing,
+too.
+</p>
+<p>
+“People like you just as much as they do me,” said
+she. “Come on, let’s go see if we can find the river
+we’ve heard so much about.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They caught hands and ran on through the trees.
+</p>
+<p>
+The river was not hard to find. Above them it was
+a broad stream, but just here it wasn’t very wide, just
+a pretty, clear, clean-looking stream, with green banks
+and some sort of a dock to be seen a little way beyond
+them. On the dock, when they reached it, was seen
+to be an elderly native with a pipe, and beside him was
+moored a rowboat which looked as if it could be rowed.
+He looked up from his fishing as the girls appeared.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Morning,” he said sociably, “you little girls going
+down to the village?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good-morning,” said Winona. “No, we hadn’t
+thought of it. We might, though. Is there anything
+we could get for you if we went?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134'></a>134</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well,” said the old man, jerking in his line with
+a good-sized fish on it, “ye-es, there is. I want an ad
+put in the paper. I guess I could trust you with a
+quarter to do it with.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I guess you could,” said Winona, smiling. “Will
+this afternoon do? I don’t believe we’d have time now
+to get there and back before dinner-time.” She looked
+at her wrist-watch. “No, we won’t,” she said. “It’s
+eleven now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, this afternoon would do,” he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+So, while the girls looked at the rowboat wishfully,
+and wondered if they couldn’t get enough fish for supper
+if they had some tackle, the old man adjusted his
+spectacles, pulled an old envelope out of his pocket,
+and wrote on it laboriously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you mind if I read it?” asked Winona, when
+he was done and had handed it to her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Seein’s that’s what it’s for, I dunno’s I do,” he
+grunted, grinning pleasantly. Winona and Adelaide
+took each a corner, and read as follows:
+</p>
+<p style='margin-left: 2em;margin-right: 2em;'>
+For sale, one rowboat in good condition, with oars.
+No reasonable offer refused. Apply to John Sloane,
+R. F. D. 3, village.
+</p>
+<p>
+They looked at each other, then at the boat. Then
+both girls exclaimed with one impulse, “Is it this
+boat?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“This very rowboat,” said Mr. Sloane, eying it
+with affection. “I don’t use it no more. I’ve got a
+motor-boat, and them Boy Scouts up the river has got
+a fine young flock of canoes, so they ain’t likely to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135'></a>135</span>
+want to hire it. Anyway, she ain’t so young as she was.
+Good boat, though!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And what would you call a reasonable offer?”
+inquired Winona. “The reason I want to know is
+that I have just six dollars, and if I could buy a
+rowboat that way I would.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Six dollars, hey?” said Mr. Sloane slowly. “That
+ain’t much for a good boat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s all I have to spend on rowboats,” said Winona
+placidly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We-el,” decided Mr. Sloane, “guess I might’s well
+let you have it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+And he proceeded to make out a receipt on the spot,
+on the other half of the envelope he had used for the
+advertisement.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly pays to advertise!” he remarked, as
+he turned his attention again to his fishing-line.
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide and Winona jumped into their boat with
+delight, and rowed downstream for half a mile. There
+they were stopped by the beautiful sight of a lot of
+huckleberry bushes, full of fruit, along the edge of
+the stream. They both filled their hats, and when
+these would hold no more they pinned up Winona’s
+skirt in front and filled that—Winona sitting very still
+thereafter in order not to smash any berries. Then
+Adelaide rowed back and tied their newly-acquired
+property to the dock, the use of which was thrown in,
+and went back to camp with berries enough for dinner.
+Just before they came within hearing of the others,
+Adelaide whispered:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136'></a>136</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winona, I’m going to try to—to feel that way
+about things.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona squeezed her hand, but there was no time
+to say anything more, for a horde of small pirates
+descended on them and carried away the berries.
+</p>
+<p>
+After dinner the girls lay on the grass and made
+plans, more or less wild, for getting money to prolong
+their vacation.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We can’t have a cake-sale,” said Marie practically,
+“because the farmers’ wives in the village make all
+their own baked stuff, and the people at the summer-resort
+are mostly boarders.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, please don’t let’s have any more cake-sales,
+whether they’re profitable or not,” said Louise pathetically.
+“I sold eats for those sales till I used to go to
+sleep at night and dream I was a wedding-cake myself.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, then,” soothed Helen, “you shan’t ever
+have such dreadful dreams again, you poor little
+thing!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what shall we do, then?” asked Edith Hillis
+pulling her yellow curls over her shoulder and examining
+them as if she had never seen them before.
+</p>
+<p>
+“When you want money,” remarked Mrs. Bryan,
+“you have to sell something, either your services, or
+your manufactures, or your talents.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“In other words,” said Winona, “work for people,
+or make things to sell them, or have an entertainment.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Precisely,” said the Guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then let’s start at the beginning,” offered Winona,
+“and everybody try to think what she can do best in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137'></a>137</span>
+the way of work, and whether anybody’d want them
+to!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“One thing,” reminded Marie, “we can’t live by
+taking in each other’s washing, so to speak. We’ll have
+to scheme to get some of their hard-earned butter-and-egg
+money away from the farmers’ wives, or else prey
+on the summer-resorters.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We expect to give it right back to them for butter
+and eggs,” said Adelaide. “Whatever we do we might
+as well take it out in trade!”
+</p>
+<p>
+After that nobody seemed to have any more ideas.
+Everyone sat silently and thought very hard; till Louise
+jumped up with a yelp of impatience that woke Puppums
+from his after-dinner nap, and made even Hike
+the Camp Cat open one green eye.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t let’s waste this gorgeous day thinking!”
+she said. “My head isn’t used to it, and it hurts.
+Come on, anybody that wants to—I’m going to walk
+down to the village to buy something, I don’t care what.
+Who’ll come?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona, Helen and Nataly dropped into step beside
+Louise, and the four marched off singing “In the
+Land of the Sky-Blue Water,” which they were trying
+to learn.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That song really sounds better to Opeechee’s ceremonial
+drum than anything else,” remarked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Real Indian music always sounds better if you
+pound something while you sing it, even if it’s only a
+dish-pan,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Please don’t mention dish-pans,” begged Louise,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138'></a>138</span>
+“they’re a tender point. I just parted from mine half
+an hour ago.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Winona good-humoredly, “I have
+something else interesting to tell you. I bought a rowboat
+to-day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, good!” cried Helen. “Marie’s canoe and
+mine will be up in a day or so, but a canoe wiggles so
+when you try to fish from it. Now we can all go
+fishing. Elizabeth brought tackle, but we thought we
+couldn’t do much good, fishing from the bank.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And the Blue Birds can go out in it till they learn
+more about canoes, too,” said Winona. “I’m going
+exploring myself in it as soon as I can. What are you
+really going to the village for, Louise—or don’t you
+know?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Benzine for my burnt-wood outfit,” said Louise.
+“I had some thinks, and that was one. Little Louise
+is going to make some nice burnt-leather things for the
+neighborhood. Pillows and table-covers, and heaps of
+things for the farmers’ wives to buy. Lessons in the
+art if they want them. I brought my outfit, and some
+skins, and colors.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thought I’d model some vases and pots and
+bowls, and fire them,” said Helen. “They might sell,
+too. Have you thought of anything, Winona?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a blessed thing, for myself,” said Winona.
+“You know, I’m not particularly clever about doing
+things like that, except making baskets, and Florence
+does those better than I do. But I have thought of one
+thing—how to sell our wares after they are made.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139'></a>139</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s quite a useful thing to know,” said Louise.
+“About the most useful thing there is, in fact. Well,
+how?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll have to peddle them,” said Winona calmly.
+“The farmers’ wives won’t come out here to buy unless
+we advertise a lot, and we can’t afford that. The thing
+for us to do is to get some sort of a thing to carry the
+goods in, and make it look awfully arts-an-craftsy, and
+pull it round and sell things at the houses.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A soap-box on wheels is what I <em>think</em> you’re hinting
+at,” said Louise, “but I hope not.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Are you really in earnest?” asked Nataly, who
+had taken no share in the talk so far.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why not?” asked Winona. “It’s no worse than
+taking a horse and cart down through the Italian quarter
+and selling rummage things to the women there; and
+that’s what the Ladies’ Aid at our church did last
+winter.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s different,” insisted Nataly, and nothing could
+shake her in her ideas. So Louise poked Winona, as
+a hint not to argue any more. But when Nataly went
+into the little general store to buy some picture post-cards
+Louise whispered to the other girls, “I have a
+glorious improvement on your soap-box plan, Winnie.
+If you girls will help me put it through I’ll tell you all
+about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’d like to hear about it first,” said Helen doubtfully;
+for Louise’s plans were always original, but not
+always safe and sane. Before Louise could answer
+Nataly was back again, and Louise began to tell her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140'></a>140</span>
+the story of the reduced English gentlewoman who
+had to sell shrimps for a living, by calling them up and
+down the streets. “And she was such a perfect lady,”
+finished Louise, “that whenever she called out ‘Shrimps
+for sale!’ she’d add under her breath, ‘I hope to goodness
+nobody hears me!’”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And did they?” Nataly asked innocently, while
+Winona tried to keep her face straight.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, they didn’t,” said Louise sadly, “so she never
+sold any shrimps at all. And so she died of starvation.”
+</p>
+<p>
+But Nataly, instead of grasping the moral, said
+only, “Well, why didn’t she eat the shrimps, then?”
+</p>
+<p>
+At which Louise grunted disgustedly and went in
+to buy herself the benzine.
+</p>
+<p>
+After that day there was always a feeling in the
+village near Camp Sunrise that every Camp Fire Girl’s
+first object in life was cat-rescue. And it was Winona
+who was responsible. To begin with, the day the girls
+arrived at camp she had been seen by all the interested
+villagers, walking near the head of the dusty procession,
+leading a small, sash-bandaged gray kitten by a string.
+Hike had meowed for air and exercise just as the village
+had been neared, and Winona had taken that means of
+giving it to him, without risking his running off. The
+villagers might have let that, by itself, pass. But when
+it was coupled with Winona’s performance of this
+afternoon—well, you can judge for yourself.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was after the girls had bought everything they
+came for, and were on their way to camp. Out of a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141'></a>141</span>
+gate, across their road, bounded two small boys, each
+of whom held a wriggling black kitten.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Won’t you hurt the kitty if you hold it by just one
+leg?” inquired Winona of the nearest boy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It don’t matter if we do hurt ’em—they ain’t any
+good anyhow,” he explained. “We’re going to drown
+’em in a minute.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, <em>no</em>!” protested Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, will you take ’em?” asked the other boy.
+“Mother says she can’t keep any more cats.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona took the victims on the spot, and put them
+into the continuous pocket all around the bottom of her
+Balkan blouse. The small boys went back into their
+yard, where they were heard announcing, “Mother!
+A girl took the kitties!” And Winona stood still with
+a kitten at each hip.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’d better give them back,” said Nataly, who
+was afraid of cats.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I couldn’t!” said Winona. “It’s so nice to
+be alive, even if you’re a cat—and there isn’t really any
+Cat-Heaven, you know.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, advertise them for sale, then,” said Louise
+impatiently. “Good home and kind treatment wanted
+for two black kittens—salary no object.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She wasn’t in earnest, but Winona was.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will!” she said. “Not for sale, but to give away.
+Will one of you take this notice to the paper, while
+I take the kittens to camp for the night?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll take the kittens home!” volunteered Helen,
+Louise and Nataly with a touching oneness of feeling.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142'></a>142</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona grinned. “Why, you very obliging
+people!” she said. “Please put them in a box with netting,
+then, so they can’t get away. I’ll go and advertise.
+I’m perfectly sure such good kittens as these will
+have lots of applications!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise and Helen, each with a kitten, accompanied
+by Nataly, kittenless, went slowly campward in eloquent
+silence, while Winona sped back to the office of the
+village paper. So the next day an advertisement
+appeared in the <em>Press:</em>
+</p>
+<p style='margin-left: 2em;margin-right: 2em;'>
+Wanted, to find homes for two black kittens, nice
+purrers, good mousers. Can be separated. Apply Box 2,
+<em>Press</em> office, or at Camp Karonya, in person.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t care if they do laugh,” said Winona when
+she got back, to find Camp Karonya howling at her in
+rows. “If they laugh they’re more apt to remember,
+and come get the kittens. I’ll put them out of the way,
+poor little things, if nobody answers in a day or two.”
+</p>
+<p>
+But—whether it was that cats who were “nice purrers”
+were a novelty, whether it is true that there’s
+a place for everything in this world if we could only
+get in touch with it—the very next day there were five
+applicants for those two black kittens. Indeed, Winona
+had great difficulty in holding onto Hike the Camp Cat,
+who had grown by now into a very presentable, if fat,
+Maltese kitten. People seemed to think that it was
+Winona’s duty to distribute cats as long as cats held out.
+</p>
+<p>
+The only drawback was that for the rest of the time
+it was there the village with one accord used Camp
+Karonya as a clearing-house for its cats!
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143'></a>143</span>CHAPTER THIRTEEN</h2>
+<p>
+A couple of days later Winona took Florence and
+Puppums, and went exploring in the rowboat. Louise
+and Helen were very busy making a tree-house, but
+they promised to see that Hike the Camp Cat was looked
+after and no belated advertisement answerer got him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Merriams rowed about a mile along the river,
+in the direction away from the village, without finding
+anything more interesting than a muskrat, who disappeared
+when Puppums barked at him. But just a
+while after this thrilling incident they rounded a bend,
+and there in a red canoe, placidly catching fish, sat Tom!
+</p>
+<p>
+His back and that of the boy with him were turned
+to them, but there was no mistaking him, nor Billy Lee.
+Neither of them saw the rowboat till it was quite close,
+and Florence and Puppums howled together in greeting.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hello, kid! H’lo, Winnie—you’ve frightened the
+fish!” was his brotherly greeting: while Billy, not being
+a relation, took off his hat and said politely that
+he was glad to see them, and how was the camp?
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, never mind the fish!” said Winona, when
+she had answered Billy with equal politeness. “You
+can fish any day, but you haven’t seen your family since
+last week. How do you come to be up here so soon?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Captain Gedney worked it somehow—I don’t
+know how,” said Tom. “Anyhow, we’re here. Good
+fishing, too. See?” He held up a string of fair-sized
+fish in proof.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144'></a>144</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where’s your camp?” asked Florence, while
+Puppums almost had hysterics and had to be handed
+into the canoe so that he could love Tom properly.
+“Can I come see it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure you can,” said Tom. “No charge for the
+view. It’s those tents right over there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You know I don’t mean that,” said Florence,
+pouting. “I mean I want to get out and go over.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, wait a day or so, can’t you, Floss?” implored
+Tom, who plainly didn’t want to be detached from his
+fishing. “Wait and come over with the rest of the
+bunch, and we’ll give you a grand welcome, fifes and
+drums and things. I tell you, though, girls, why can’t
+you all come use our swimming pool? We’ve just
+finished damming off a little branch stream into a dandy
+pond—paved it and all. Started it last year. But you’d
+have to give us warning, so we wouldn’t be in it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, how lovely!” exclaimed Winona. “I know
+Mrs. Bryan will let us, and all of us brought our
+bathing-suits.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good enough!” said Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How was mother—was everything all right at
+home when you left?” asked his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, fine and dandy. But what do you think,
+Winnie, that Children’s Aid child has come. Mother
+says she’s glad it happened while we were out of the
+way, so she’d have a better opportunity to get him running
+smoothly without our help.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Him!” said Winona. “Do you mean they sent
+a boy, not a girl?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145'></a>145</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom laughed. “They certainly did—a darky about
+twelve, as black as your hat, and a regular Topsy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good gracious!” said Winona, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Merriam had written to the Children’s Aid
+Society a little while before for a girl of about fourteen—black
+preferred—who could help with the dishes
+out of school hours. She had heard nothing about it,
+and the family had completely forgotten it till now.
+</p>
+<p>
+“When did he get there?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The day before I came away,” said Tom. “It was
+wash-day, and that colored washerwoman mother has
+opened the door. First we knew she came back and
+said: ‘There’s a white woman and a young colored
+gemman to see Mrs. Merriam.’ So mother went out,
+and came back in a minute with the agent, an awfully
+nice sort of a girl, and the smallest, solemnest, black
+boy you ever saw. Mother didn’t want him at first,
+but the agent-girl swore he had all the virtues, and
+needed a good home and moral training. Then she
+walked off and left him sitting on a chair, staring
+straight ahead. I tell you, it got sort of embarrassing
+after awhile. So I asked him his name.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“He said, ‘Ah was christen’ Thomas!’” returned
+Tom, grinning. “So mother told him that I’d been
+christened Thomas, too, and asked him for his last
+name. And he said, ‘Ma las’ name’s Clay—but hit
+ain’ ma callin’ name. Ma callin’ name’s Thomas. But
+yo’-all kin call me Mistah Clay if yo’ want to!’”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did mother want to?” asked Winona.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146'></a>146</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“She nearly exploded,” said Tom, “but I think they
+came to some sort of a compromise. I don’t think he’ll
+leave her time to miss us, for a week or so anyway!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I’m glad of that,” said Winona. “Tommy,
+did you ever know of anything I could do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What on earth do you mean?” asked Tom, while
+Billy Lee, who had been silently fishing all this time,
+looked interested.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I mean something I could do that would earn
+money,” she explained. “We want to stay in camp
+longer than we have money for, so we must earn it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The thing you always were best at was darning
+my stockings,” said Tom cheerfully, and grinned.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, dear, I just knew you’d say that!” said
+Winona. “I can’t go round selling darns!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy Lee lifted up his head from a tangle in his
+fishing-line as he answered, “I don’t see why you
+couldn’t. I mean—why couldn’t you do mending for
+the Scouts? If you’d be willing to, I know we’d be
+glad. There’s an awful lot of holes in my clothes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And nobody to do them?” asked Winona,
+delighted.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a soul,” answered both boys at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, how perfectly splendid!” said Winona. “Mr.
+Gedney will know how much I ought to charge for
+them, won’t he?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, or Mrs. Bryan had better tell you,” said Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, can I have them now?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, bother!” said Tom. “Won’t to-morrow
+do?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147'></a>147</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll get ’em,” said Billy Lee, and made a flying
+leap out of the canoe to shore.
+</p>
+<p>
+He was gone a few minutes, and came back with a
+clothes-basket full of garments of various kinds: also
+with the Scoutmaster, Captain Gedney.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good-morning, girls!” said the Scoutmaster.
+“This is fine! Billy tells me we’re going to get our
+mending done!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, is it really all right?” quivered Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, indeed, it’s more than all right,” answered
+Mr. Gedney enthusiastically. “I was thinking of taking
+a trip to the village to see if we could find somebody
+we could put at it, but this is better. Now you
+get your Guardian to put a price on the work, either by
+the piece or by the hour. I can promise you spot-cash,
+and a great deal of gratitude into the bargain.”
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+So the end of it was that Florence and Winona
+rowed happily back down the river with what looked
+extremely like two weeks’ wash in their boat; also with
+the joyful certainty that Winona, at least, was going
+to be able to earn her share of the expenses for the extra
+weeks of camping.
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys promised to paddle down in a couple of
+days and get the mended clothes, and—most important—the
+bill for them. Billy Lee wanted to see his sister,
+anyway, he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Florence and Winona got back nearly every
+girl in camp was seated out in the open air, in a big
+circle, and nearly all of them were talking at once,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148'></a>148</span>
+planning the ceremonial meeting for that night. There
+was to be a ceremonial fire, a very high and beautiful
+one with a central pole—this last an innovation which
+Louise was introducing. And Winona and Marie
+Hunter were going to be made Fire Makers, Louise
+and several of the others were going to be Wood-gatherers,
+and Nataly Lee was going to join.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Winona joined the circle she found that a
+good deal of the excitement was being caused by the
+Book of the Count. Marie and Helen, with paints and
+pen and brushes, were making the record of the days
+they had spent in camp a very lively affair.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona sat down and looked on at what Marie was
+doing, and read on the page they had open:
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;second&nbsp;&nbsp;day,&nbsp;&nbsp;Winona,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ray-of-Light,&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Cat-Collector<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Made&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;way&nbsp;&nbsp;unto&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;village,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To&nbsp;&nbsp;buy&nbsp;&nbsp;post-cards&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;village.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;went&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;cheerful&nbsp;&nbsp;Comet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ishkoodah&nbsp;&nbsp;with&nbsp;&nbsp;flaming&nbsp;&nbsp;tresses;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;went&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Star&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Evening,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Helen,&nbsp;&nbsp;gentle&nbsp;&nbsp;Star&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Evening,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And&nbsp;&nbsp;Nokoma,&nbsp;&nbsp;flower-giver—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nataly&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;flower-giver.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Seeking&nbsp;&nbsp;post-cards,&nbsp;&nbsp;thus&nbsp;&nbsp;they&nbsp;&nbsp;wandered,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But&nbsp;&nbsp;alas,&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Cat-Collector<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Much&nbsp;&nbsp;preferred&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;bring&nbsp;&nbsp;home&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;advertise&nbsp;&nbsp;those&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All&nbsp;&nbsp;next&nbsp;&nbsp;day&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;ad-replyers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tracked&nbsp;&nbsp;our&nbsp;&nbsp;camp&nbsp;&nbsp;with&nbsp;&nbsp;questing&nbsp;&nbsp;footsteps,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Asked&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;us—“Where&nbsp;&nbsp;are&nbsp;&nbsp;those&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Give&nbsp;&nbsp;us&nbsp;&nbsp;several&nbsp;&nbsp;dozen&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens!”<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For,&nbsp;&nbsp;alas,&nbsp;&nbsp;those&nbsp;&nbsp;cats&nbsp;&nbsp;had&nbsp;&nbsp;vanished,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gone&nbsp;&nbsp;with&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;first&nbsp;&nbsp;two&nbsp;&nbsp;replyers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;ad&nbsp;&nbsp;Winona&nbsp;&nbsp;paid&nbsp;&nbsp;for.<br />
+&#160;<br/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Still&nbsp;&nbsp;about&nbsp;&nbsp;our&nbsp;&nbsp;Camp&nbsp;&nbsp;come&nbsp;&nbsp;wailing<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Folk&nbsp;&nbsp;who&nbsp;&nbsp;seek&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;cats&nbsp;&nbsp;they&nbsp;&nbsp;heard&nbsp;&nbsp;of,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Seeking&nbsp;&nbsp;several&nbsp;&nbsp;dozen&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Still&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Ray-of-Light,&nbsp;&nbsp;Winona,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cannot&nbsp;&nbsp;give&nbsp;&nbsp;them&nbsp;&nbsp;any&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cannot&nbsp;&nbsp;stop&nbsp;&nbsp;their&nbsp;&nbsp;wronged&nbsp;&nbsp;insistence<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On&nbsp;&nbsp;those&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens,&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;those&nbsp;&nbsp;kittens—<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, good gracious!” asked Winona, beginning
+to laugh before she read any further. “Who <em>did</em> make
+all that up?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I did,” said Marie proudly, “but we all helped.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you mean to tell me that any more people have
+come catting to-day?” demanded Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Only seven,” said Helen. “Winnie, you’ll never
+hear the last of this.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, Mrs. Bryan, I’ve found some work to do
+that will earn money,” said Winona, hastily changing
+the subject. “Florence and I went up to the Scouts’
+camp, and Mr. Gedney gave us the boys’ mending to do.
+He said you were to put a price on it for us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Twenty to twenty-five cents an hour,” supplied
+Mrs. Bryan promptly. “You’d better have some of
+the other girls help you, too, dear, for there’s enough
+work there to take up a good deal of your time for three
+or four days, and you don’t come camping to turn yourself
+into a sewing-girl, even for the good of the camp.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very well,” said Winona. “Who hasn’t picked
+out any special work to do yet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nataly Lee,” said someone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Neither have I,” said Elizabeth. “I’ll help, too.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149'></a>149</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+A half-dozen of them went off to a sunny spot, produced
+a large alarm-clock to time themselves by, and
+put in two hours of work immediately. That is, all but
+Nataly. She got tired at the end of one hour, and went
+off, she said, to lie down. The others got the mending
+almost done, for many hands make light work. Then
+they piled up the basket again, and went back to camp.
+It was Winona’s turn to get supper that night.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There ought to be about four dollars’ worth of
+work in that basket,” said Helen thoughtfully when
+they all met at supper.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s probably more than we’ll have next time,”
+said Winona. “But anyway, it’s a steady income.
+Let’s hope they’ll be kind, and wear big, awful holes
+in everything they have.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They will, unless they’ve had a change of heart
+since last week,” said Louise.
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+After supper was cleared away the girls set about
+collecting wood in the open space on the top of the little
+hill, for their ceremonial-fire. It was the most happy
+and successful meeting they had had, and also, as
+Louise expressed it, the most beadful. It ended in a
+ghost-dance around the fire. After it was through the
+girls lay still and told stories, which gradually became
+more ghostly than the dance. It was very pleasant
+till bedtime came. Then even the bravest of them made
+dashes for their tents; and Mrs. Bryan, making her
+rounds after the camp was asleep, found five lighted
+candles keeping ghosts out of five tents in a row!
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150'></a>150</span>CHAPTER FOURTEEN</h2>
+<p>
+There were bathing and boating and tree-climbing
+in the days that followed and there were hikes and
+folk-dances and various entertainments, by themselves,
+and occasionally with the Scouts for audience. The
+girls canoed all up and down the river, and borrowed the
+Scout swimming-pool with rapture, and learned all
+sorts of swimming and diving stunts. And everybody
+got brown and husky and cheerful. But in between the
+good times the girls worked on steadily, each at her
+appointed task, and in about ten days there was a
+promising collection of material to be sold, for the
+virtuous purpose of giving Camp Karonya some more
+weeks of life in the Wampoag woods.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen gave up modelling her beloved statuettes, and
+went soberly to work at bowls and vases, and other
+such things that people would be likely to find useful.
+She decorated them with motives she drew herself, and
+took them up to Wampoag, the summer-resort, where
+there was a kiln, and had them fired. Louise made
+burnt-leather pillows, which filled her hair with such
+a fearful smell that for awhile she washed it every day,
+till it occurred to her to wear a bathing-cap to work in.
+She also burned mats and table-covers and napkin-rings
+to the limit of her purchasing power; and when
+that failed she took to carving things out of wood she
+picked up. The Blue Birds wove raffia baskets and
+table-mats, and Marie and Edith crocheted bags and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151'></a>151</span>
+collars. Adelaide devoted herself to canning. The rest
+helped her sometimes, but more of the time she took
+pride in putting up the fruit all by herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were embroidered tea-cloths and runners, and
+there was hammered brass-work. The honor-counts
+rolled up like snowballs, for the girls made nearly
+everything a girl is capable of making or decorating.
+There was almost enough made to stop.
+</p>
+<p>
+But still Camp Karonya held nightly discussions,
+having made these various things, as to how to sell
+them. The plan most of them wanted to adopt was
+that of going from house to house with them. Having
+a fair meant hiring a room or store, or running the risk
+of having nobody come to buy—for the camp was two
+miles from the nearest point of civilization. The only
+alternative seemed putting them into some of the resort
+shops to be sold on commission, and there was a large
+risk there that the shops might not do properly by them.
+There was another alternative, sending them home to be
+sold, but that seemed inglorious, somehow.
+</p>
+<p>
+One night, after everything had been argued over
+until everybody had finished from sheer inability to
+think of anything more to say, and begun to discuss
+constellations instead, Winona, lying on her back, felt
+a pull at her sleeve. She rolled over, to see Louise
+stealthily working herself down the hill, out of the
+moonlight. Winona rolled as stealthily after her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” she asked, when they were at the
+bottom of the hill, where they couldn’t be seen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come hither, Little One, and I will tell you!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152'></a>152</span>
+responded Louise, like Kipling’s Crocodile. She led the
+way to the dock, where they sat down in the moored
+rowboat, and Louise began to hold forth.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ve got more than enough things to sell, and
+none of those plans are a bit of good. What we want
+to do is to take all that stuff up to Wampoag, in this
+old boat of yours, and peddle them at the big hotels.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think so, too,” agreed Winona, “but the girls
+haven’t gotten unanimous yet. You know Nataly Lee’s
+going to fight to the last ditch against selling things that
+way. I don’t know whether she thinks it’s too hard
+work or too undignified, but you can see she isn’t going
+to stand for it one little bit.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that girl makes me tired!” said Louise. “I’m
+not going to wait for their old unanimity. I tell you,
+Win, I have a plan!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, go ahead!” Winona encouraged.
+</p>
+<p>
+“To-morrow morning,” said Louise. “You and
+I will slide off early, like the Third Little Pig, and pack
+the boat with all the junk we have ready. It’s all in
+the boxes in the store-place. Then we’ll row to Wampoag,
+and just sell things all day!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How’ll we get them away without anybody seeing
+us?” objected Winona, who liked the plan very much.
+“It would be gorgeous if we could manage it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll have to go now and sneak the stuff into the
+boat before bedtime,” said Louise. “We can pile them
+on that amateur stretcher we used to carry Florence.
+I think nobody ever took it apart.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153'></a>153</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hurrah! Come on, then!” said Winona, and the
+two girls slid off into the shadows.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not such very hard work. They filled their
+two suitcases, and put what wouldn’t go in the suitcases
+on the stretcher; and had everything in the boat and
+covered up with a waterproof blanket before their
+absence had been noticed. Then they stole back into the
+circle as innocently as kittens, in time to sing “Mammy
+Moon” at the tops of their voices with the rest.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were both on the policing shift that week, so
+it was easy for them to arrange to get their share of
+camp-work over early. By half-past eight in the morning
+they were rowing gayly down the river in the direction
+of Wampoag. Florence wanted to come, but they
+had to repress her. She might have been in their way.
+</p>
+<p>
+When they were around the bend, safely out of
+sight of the camp, Winnie stopped rowing.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I had an idea, too!” she said. “Reach under the
+seat, Louise.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise pulled out, first, the luncheon she herself
+had poked under a little while before; next, a good-sized
+bundle that appeared to be clothes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s this for?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“For us,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise opened it, and eyed its contents puzzledly.
+There were a dressing-sack made of bandanna handkerchiefs,
+partly ripped up, two old skirts, an old shawl
+and a checked gingham apron.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re to dress up in,” explained Winona.
+“We’ll be poor little emigrant girls that want to sella
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154'></a>154</span>
+da nice-a goods, lady! The women who go around
+selling things out of suitcases always have a foreign
+look. So I fished these out of the box of stuff we had
+for theatricals. I knew just where it was, because
+we got some things out of it for ‘Everygirl’ last week.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, gorgeous!” cried Louise, finishing the ripping-up
+of the dressing-sack into its original red handkerchiefs.
+She dug through the pile again and picked
+out the shortest skirt, for she hadn’t her full growth
+yet. “Who gets the little checked shawl?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You do, if you want it,” answered Winona. “I’ll
+take the apron.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They both turned in the collars of their middy
+blouses, and rolled the cuffs under. Skirts over them,
+a bandanna apiece round their necks, and the checked
+shawl over Louise’s head and a handkerchief on
+Winona’s—and they were very convincing emigrants.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Our shoes are rather too good,” said Winona discontentedly,
+“but you mustn’t ask too much in this
+world. Pin your hair up, Louise. It’s too red for an
+Italian, or even a Syrian.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She managed to secure her own on top under her
+’kerchief as she spoke. They were both so brown that
+they looked like natives of somewhere else, and the
+dresses were very natural. The long skirts and
+fastened-up hair made them both look eighteen or
+twenty—for Winona was as tall as she would ever be,
+five feet six, and Louise, though shorter, was plump.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We can buy long earrings at the ten-cent store on
+our way up,” said Louise. “I always did want to.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155'></a>155</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And, for goodness sake, Win, see if you can’t
+get up some sort of an accent. Italian would be the
+easiest, I guess.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, kinda lady! Sella da fina things—real handa-made!”
+responded Winona, her white teeth flashing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then they came to the Boy Scouts’ camp, and they
+had to row very softly, and keep as far away from the
+bank as they could. But luck was still with them, and
+none of the Scouts happened to be fishing that morning.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If we’d remembered we might have brought back
+the mending,” said Louise, with a half-concealed desire
+to go tell the Scouts about her prospective lark.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Better not go in there!” said Winona. She had
+a brother in the camp, and she didn’t care to risk being
+stopped in mid-career of what promised to be a very
+fine time. So they rowed down the river till they
+reached Wampoag, and tied their boat to the dock.
+</p>
+<p>
+They took out the stretcher, put a suitcase on either
+end of it and piled the things that were too big for the
+suitcases in the middle. Then they each took an end
+and started bravely forth.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where da gooda hotel for sella da goods?” asked
+Louise, with a broad and friendly grin, of the interested
+dock-keeper.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Any at all,” he answered. “Just go straight down
+this road till you see a hotel. They’re all together.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you, mister,” Louise answered, and they
+trotted on.
+</p>
+<p>
+The sight of two young Italian girls carrying a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156'></a>156</span>
+stretcher full of goods proved to be a little more of a
+sensation than the girls had bargained for. They felt
+as if they had never been so much stared at in their
+lives, and they were both grateful when they reached
+the shelter of the first hotel porch.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a big hotel that they had come upon, and its
+wide porches were full of women, young and old, rocking,
+and talking and embroidering, and willing enough
+to look at the things the girls had. The arrangement
+was that Winona should take care of the smaller things,
+the painted and embroidered linens and so forth in the
+suitcases, while Louise attended to the pottery and
+larger art-craft things, and a row of Adelaide’s jellies.
+She didn’t expect to sell the jelly to people who already
+had three meals a day, but she was agreeably surprised.
+Evidently they liked to have things to eat in their rooms.
+</p>
+<p>
+The stretcher and suitcases were set on the porch and
+Louise, with an ingratiating grin under her shawl,
+went from woman to woman, holding up her wares.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look at da fine pot—native wares—very
+cheapa?” she asked. “You not have to buy. We lika
+show. Buy da fine pot cheapa? You nice lady—you
+take real Indian pillow—real pine pillow!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I believe I will,” said an energetic-looking old
+lady with white hair and a black silk dress. “How
+much is that pillow, my dear? And aren’t you pretty
+young to be out selling things this way? You don’t
+look more than seventeen.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise swelled with pride at being taken for as old
+as that, but she managed to answer, “One dollar for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157'></a>157</span>
+pillow—very cheap—real hand work!” and to the
+last question, “I lika sella da goods—four little poor
+ones younger as me home. I <em>very</em> old!”
+</p>
+<p>
+At which the elderly lady bought the pillow on the
+spot. Louise put the dollar in the pocket of her skirt,
+and went back to the stretcher after a big vase of
+Helen’s, which was the pride of her heart, and for
+which she meant to ask at least one-fifty.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Real pottery pot, lady!” she explained to the nearest
+woman to her. “Real hand-made—see? Real
+hand-painted—only two dollar!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise had spent a summer at a hotel herself, the
+year before, and she knew all the tricks and manners of
+the porch-peddlers. She let the woman who wanted the
+vase beat her down to one-sixty, and pocketed the extra
+dime that she hadn’t thought she’d get with a sense of
+duty well done. She frisked up and down the porch
+having a glorious time, while Winona, with her open
+suitcase, sat still by the top step. She did not need
+to move, for the women were as interested in her wares
+as they always are in table-linens. She sold a stencilled
+crash luncheon set of Marie’s, five pieces, for five
+dollars, while Louise was haggling over the price for
+Helen’s vase. Several of the bead bags and necklaces
+woven on the little looms went, too. The girls left that
+porch with nearly twelve dollars worth of goods sold.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next hotel did not do so well by them, for the
+people there only bought a few handkerchiefs and bead
+chains. Still it was better than nothing. They had
+covered six hotels by one o’clock and made twenty-five
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158'></a>158</span>
+dollars. The needle-work, much to the girls’ surprise,
+went more quickly than anything else.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It must be the wistful sweetness of your expression,
+or else they think I look too well-fed to be sorry
+for, Win,” said Louise as they munched their sandwiches
+on the dock. The dock-keeper had given them
+permission. “You just sit still and look pleasant,
+and the sales get made. I have to chase all over creation,
+and tease and joke and cheapen, to get them to
+buy mine.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m afraid to talk much, for fear my accent will
+break through,” explained Winona. “It’s the goods, I
+think. They all seem crazy over those stencilled things.
+I could sell a lot more if I had them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Haven’t you any more?” asked Louise between
+bites.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Only one, and I promised that to your kinda
+lady that you sold the pine pillow to, and told you were
+the oldest of five. But I’m taking orders,” finished
+Winona with a grin.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you suppose Marie will stand for going on
+with it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“For what—this bandanna party? She needn’t—I’ll
+deliver them myself,” stated Winona calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about the carved frames Elizabeth made?”
+asked Louise, as they rose and took up the burden of
+life in the shape of their much lightened stretcher.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Pretty well, but nothing like the way Florence’s
+and Frances’s little sweet-grass baskets went.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If we sell enough to run the camp another two
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159'></a>159</span>
+weeks, I don’t see why the girls shouldn’t keep any
+money over that they earn,” said Winona thoughtfully.
+“The proprietor of that little boarding-house we went
+to last but one says she wants more jelly. <em>That’s</em> all
+gone, thank goodness—oo, but it was heavy!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The little baskets at a quarter apiece are going off
+fast, too,” said Louise. “Hotel Abercrombie-by-the-Water.
+Don’t forget your dialect, angel-child.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“E pluribus unum! Panama mañana! Nux vomica!”
+answered Winona enthusiastically as they
+ascended the steps. “Buya da beada necklace, lady?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good!” said Louise under her breath, and herself
+tackled dialect again. “Buya da pot for poor woman,
+lady? Got thirteen children to keep—no money!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thirteen children—really?” asked the woman in
+horror.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thirteen—all girls!” answered Louise mournfully,
+while Winona bent very low over her suitcase,
+and tried not to laugh. “Unlucky number, huh?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very, for her!” said the woman. “Well, I really
+must buy something to help her.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona was going to stop her, for she thought it
+wasn’t fair; although Louise evidently took it as a
+lovely joke. But as the woman did not feel that her
+duty to the thirteen went beyond buying one fifteen-cent
+sweet-grass napkin-ring—and she only wanted to
+give ten cents for it—Winona did not intervene. She
+only whispered, “Don’t, Louise!” next time she passed
+her. And Louise, though she laughed, said no more
+about the thirteen poor little Camp Fire Girls starving
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160'></a>160</span>
+at home. Then towards evening it was Winona who
+got into trouble.
+</p>
+<p>
+They had sold about forty-five dollars’ worth of
+stuff in the course of the day, and were back at the first
+hotel, the one they had started from, to deliver the
+stencilled set Winona had promised to Louise’s white-haired
+lady. Winona, who felt very tired after her
+long day of tramping and selling, was sitting on the top
+of the hotel porch in the shade of a pillar, her hands
+crossed on her lap. Her pretty face was pale with the
+long, tiring day, and her eyelids drooped. She was
+figuring out that, what with the Scouts’ mending and
+this day’s work, and the orders they had taken, the camp
+could go on three weeks more. And she felt a touch
+on her shoulder.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My dear,” said the brisk voice of the lady who
+had bought the stencilled set, “you seem tired.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, not so very,” said Winona, coming out of
+her thinking-fit hastily, and forgetting her accent on the
+way.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And don’t you find this a hard life for so young
+a girl?” went on the lady. “Wouldn’t you rather do
+something else?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona smiled and shook her head. “I like it,”
+she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old lady sat down by her and took her hand.
+Louise, meanwhile, out of hearing, was trying to sell
+a very lopsided basket to an elderly gentleman.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My child,” she said, “I can’t help feeling that
+you’re too intelligent and too refined-looking for a life
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161'></a>161</span>
+like this. I am sure you are not an Italian. Is there
+nothing I could do to help you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona felt very uncomfortable. She hadn’t bargained
+for having people take a personal interest in her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Really there isn’t anything,” she answered truthfully.
+“I have a very good time. I can’t tell you all
+about it, but indeed, I have a very pleasant life.”
+</p>
+<p>
+But the old lady was not to be daunted.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My dear child, there is something very attractive
+about you,” she said. “I believe with the proper education
+you would become an unusually charming young
+girl. You are young enough still to be trained. Is that
+girl with you your sister?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no,” said Winona, wondering what next.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thought as much,” said the old lady. “You
+don’t look like sisters. You’re naturally of a better
+class than she is. Now, supposing that someone who
+could do a good deal for you took you and had you
+educated, do you think you would be a good girl and
+do them credit?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona did not know in the least what to say. It
+looked as if the old lady intended to adopt her before
+she could escape.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It would be awfully nice,” she said, uncomfortably,
+“and very kind. But—indeed, I couldn’t!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The old lady had begun to speak again, when a
+clatter of hasty feet on the steps behind them made
+her and Winona both turn around and look.
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i005' id='i005'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-162.jpg" alt="“WILLIAM!” SAID HIS AUNT, “DO YOU KNOW THIS—THIS YOUNG PERSON?”" title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>“WILLIAM!” SAID HIS AUNT, “DO YOU KNOW THIS—THIS YOUNG PERSON?”</span>
+</div>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162'></a>162</span>CHAPTER FIFTEEN</h2>
+<p>
+It was only a tall boy in the uniform of the Boy
+Scouts who was tearing up the steps. But both the old
+lady and Winona uttered a faint squeal, the old lady
+because he kissed her, and Winona because she recognized
+the newcomer. It was Billy Lee, and he was
+evidently a relative of Winona’s would-be benefactress.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How are you, auntie, and how’s everything?”
+he was inquiring genially, with an arm still about her.
+Winona gazed wildly around, meanwhile, for a hole
+to crawl into, but there was none. “You see, I’ve come
+to dinner,” went on Billy cheerfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time he had swung around, and seen
+Winona. He took in her whole get-up, earrings, ’kerchief,
+sagging skirt, checked apron; and, further off,
+Louise making change energetically in the same
+regalia. He began to laugh.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good for you, Winona!” he said. “Been selling
+Camp Fire stuff?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“William!” said his aunt before Winona could
+answer, “Do you know this—this young person?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy looked embarrassed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, say, Winnie, I’m afraid I’ve put my foot in
+it,” said he. But he went on telling the truth—Billy
+was unfortunately incapable of doing anything else.
+At least, it seemed unfortunate to Winona right then.
+“Why, yes, Aunt Lydia. This is Winona Merriam,
+who lives next door to us. She’s camping about a mile
+and a half down the river from us Scouts.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163'></a>163</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The old lady turned sharply on Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then what makes you masquerade as an Italian
+peddler?” she asked sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona took courage, for though the old lady was
+cross, she did not seem unforgivingly angry.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We thought if we dressed up perhaps people would
+buy things quicker,” she explained. “But we do really
+need the money very badly, don’t we, Billy?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re trying to make enough to stay in the
+woods all August, auntie,” explained Billy. “They’ve
+all been working like beavers, making things, to do it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t see yet why the bandanna handkerchiefs,”
+said the old lady tartly. “And you, miss”—to Louise,
+who had come up—“what did you mean by telling me
+that you were the eldest of five, and hadn’t slept under
+a roof for ten days?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Because it’s true,” said Louise. “I haven’t—we’re
+camping. And I <em>am</em> the eldest of five, worse
+luck! I have to spend my whole time at home setting
+an example. That’s why I go away to be naughty!”
+</p>
+<p>
+It was impossible to be angry long with Louise
+Lane, and the old lady did not seem to want to be angry
+with Winona. So things straightened themselves out,
+and actually ended in an invitation to stay to dinner!
+</p>
+<p>
+“But we’ve nothing but our middy blouses, under
+these awful things,” protested Winona, “and Mrs.
+Bryan will be worried if we don’t get home till late.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s all right,” said Billy’s aunt Lydia, whose
+name was Lawrence. She was Mrs. Lee’s sister. “I’ll
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164'></a>164</span>
+have them send a man down from the dock to tell your
+Guardian where you are.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, then thank you!” said Winona radiantly.
+But Louise still hesitated.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what is it?” asked the old lady.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise hung her shawl-draped head for a moment,
+then she flung it back and answered frankly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I may want to come peddling again, and if they
+see us in our camp uniform they’ll know who we are!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Great Scott!” cried Billy, beginning to laugh,
+“You <em>are</em> a queer girl! I say, Aunt Lydia, let her
+disguise herself some more, if that’s what she wants.
+Give her some of your clothes, or the chambermaid’s,
+or somebody’s. Would that be all right, Louise?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, yes indeed!” said Louise, grinning joyously.
+“Lead on, Desperate Desmond.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I never saw such girls!” said Miss Lawrence.
+“However, you may as well have your play out.
+William, get a bellboy to put these goods somewhere.
+I’ll take these objects of charity to get ready for dinner.
+Your room’s next suite twelve, the one I have.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She shepherded the two girls upstairs by the staircase,
+instead of the elevator, as if she wanted them to be
+conspicuous.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, remember,” explained she, “you’re two
+young foreign peddlers that I’m giving a dinner to out
+of the kindness of my heart. I’m loaning you clothes
+out of the same thing. So you can go right on peddling
+if you want to, you with the business instinct—Louise
+you said your name was? Very well, Louise, you can
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165'></a>165</span>
+go on selling your potteries and bead bags after dinner—if
+you want to. But I want to talk to Winona
+myself. I don’t know but I still want to adopt her!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Lawrence left the girls alone when she had
+shown them to a room, and went to prepare for dinner
+herself. There was a bathroom next to them, and they
+made for it—one after another, of course—with gurgles
+of joy. Winona went first, while Louise was
+doing her hair, which was so thick and long it took a
+great deal of time to arrange.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t hot water heavenly when you haven’t seen
+it in a tub for a week and a half?” said Winona,
+emerging in a borrowed kimono, which she presently
+passed on to Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll tell you when I’ve tried,” said Louise, disappearing
+in her turn into the bathroom. She turned
+around and poked out her head to say, “Now, remember,
+we’ve both got to keep on looking as old as we
+can. We have characters to keep up!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona began to investigate the clothes Miss Lawrence
+had laid out for them. She did not expect to
+find anything more exciting than a black silk with a
+fichu, or something else elderly of that sort. Instead,
+there lay on the bed two pretty frocks which had certainly
+been made for girls of their age.
+</p>
+<p>
+She held them both up against her. They were
+a little shorter than she usually wore her skirts, both
+of them, and a little loose. Evidently their owner was
+of a build somewhere between Winona and Louise.
+But Louise, when she emerged, was quite pleased at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166'></a>166</span>
+that, for what was short for Winona was long for her,
+naturally, and carried out the idea of age that she
+wished to convey. She chose the more elaborate of the
+two, a green silk, because the other dress was pink,
+which doesn’t match red hair. But it did match
+Winona’s brown hair and blue eyes beautifully, and the
+wide satin sash was very becoming to her. The girls
+gave their tennis shoes a liberal dose of whitening,
+and decided that they would have to do. There were
+stockings to go with the dresses.
+</p>
+<p>
+When they were done dressing they gazed at each
+other in admiration.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I never had as pretty a dress in my life!” said
+Winona delightedly, surveying the folds of rose-colored
+organdy that ruffled about her. She reached up as she
+spoke to fasten back her curls with the shell barrette
+that usually held them at the back of her neck.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Glad you like them!” said Miss Lawrence, appearing
+on the threshold of the next room. “They
+belong to my niece Nataly—I suppose you know Nataly
+if you live next door to her—but she hasn’t had them
+yet. I brought them to her from my trip abroad.
+Here, Winona, you haven’t any hair-ribbon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I haven’t been wearing any in camp,” said
+Winona, standing still, however, while Miss Lawrence
+unclasped the barrette and supplied its place with a
+rose-colored satin ribbon tied about her head, fillet-fashion.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the English fashion,” said Miss Lawrence,
+“wear your hair loose till you’re sixteen or seventeen,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167'></a>167</span>
+then do it all up at once, instead of pulling it up by degrees,
+as we do here. It’s very becoming, my dear.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona privately felt that it was a little youthful,
+but she said nothing, and indeed the effect of the shower
+of curls falling loose from under the ribbon was exceedingly
+becoming.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise, over by the mirror, continued to put pins
+into her hair, and Miss Lawrence did not try to super-intend
+<em>her</em> toilet at all, though Louise was getting
+herself up to look as near twenty as she could.
+</p>
+<p>
+A knock at the door of the sitting-room, where
+they went when they were dressed, made them all turn.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come in,” said Miss Lawrence.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s me, Billy,” said his voice ungrammatically
+inside. “I say! What stunning clothes!” he added
+frankly as he took in the splendor of the girls’ attire.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona looked at him rather shyly. The small bag
+he had carried must have been well packed, for Billy
+had blossomed out in a tuxedo and long trousers.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why,” she said, “I didn’t know you for a minute—you
+look so grown up!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve had long trousers for a year now,” explained
+Billy, “only I’ve always had on my uniform when
+you’ve seen me before.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course, that’s it,” admitted Winona. But she
+continued to stare, for this tall young gentleman looked
+about eighteen in his correctly cut clothes, and she felt
+like such a little girl, looking as Miss Lawrence had
+made her look. What she did not know was that she
+was looking her very prettiest, like a girl in a play
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168'></a>168</span>
+or a picture, with her flushed cheeks and falling curls
+and rosy draperies. Miss Lawrence, who seemed to
+have taken a fancy to her, slipped her arm through
+Winona’s, leaving Louise to follow with Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise was not impressed in the least by Billy’s
+grandeur. It took a good deal to impress Louise Lane,
+and one suit of evening clothes and a large hotel weren’t
+likely to do it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona did not look to the right or left as they
+entered the big dining-room, but she knew Louise had
+seen something, for she heard a little squeal of delight
+close behind her. They were scarcely seated when
+Louise burst out:
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you suppose they’ve done, Winnie? I
+don’t know whether it was you or Billy, Miss Lawrence,
+but thank you both, anyway. Winona, our things are
+all set out in that little sun-parlor sort of place where
+everybody can see them, and there’s a bellboy looking
+after them. I saw him selling a bead belt!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It wasn’t any trouble,” said Billy, looking embarrassed.
+“The management lets people use that room
+for displays, don’t they, Aunt Lydia?”
+</p>
+<p>
+He did not explain that he had tipped the head bellboy
+liberally to have the things looked after, and it
+never occurred to either of the girls till long after.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona secretly decided that Nataly couldn’t be
+as trying as the girls thought her, if this was the kind
+of a brother she had. So she smiled brilliantly at Miss
+Lawrence and Billy, and felt very happy indeed over
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169'></a>169</span>
+the bright lights and the elaborate dinner and the
+orchestra and pink dress.
+</p>
+<p>
+And then something occurred to her. This was
+Nataly’s dress, a brand-new present-dress, and so
+was the one Louise had on. And they were getting
+all the first wear out of them, would Nataly like it?
+</p>
+<p>
+She looked up, directly, and said what she thought.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Miss Lawrence, will Nataly mind our wearing
+her clothes?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise answered before Miss Lawrence had a
+chance. “You know perfectly well she will, Win.
+Why, she nearly had a fit when I climbed into a clean
+middy of hers day before yesterday. And these are
+uncommonly glad and happy rags we have on.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If she doesn’t like it,” explained Miss Lawrence
+with perfect clearness, “she knows just what she can
+do. My niece Nataly is a spoiled young person if ever
+there was one. But don’t worry, my dear”—for
+Winona was looking distressed at the idea of Nataly’s
+objection—“I’ll see that she’s perfectly satisfied.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So Winona did not worry. She talked instead, and
+told Miss Lawrence everything she wanted to know
+about Camp Karonya and what they did there.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a miniature community,” said Miss Lawrence
+approvingly. “I wish they’d had them when I was a
+girl. I suppose you’ll have a float at the lake carnival,
+since you’re such enterprising young persons!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, is there going to be a lake carnival?” asked
+both girls in a breath. Miss Lawrence nodded.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, didn’t you know?” asked Billy. “The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170'></a>170</span>
+people here in Wampoag have them every year. They
+give prizes for the best decorated float and canoe. I
+don’t know whether it’s a cash prize this year or a cup.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do hope it’s a cash prize!” breathed Louise
+fervently, while Winona’s mind began to work at the
+ways and means for making and decorating a Camp
+Fire float, and the best way to get it up the lake.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It would be lovely if we could do it,” she said.
+“When is it to be?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy pulled a little calendar out of the one small
+and concealed pocket that his clothes allowed him, and
+studied it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A week from to-morrow,” he said. “You have
+lots of time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I’m sure we can do it,” said Winona.
+“Marie has a canoe she’ll probably want to enter, and
+besides that surely we can get up a float among us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+And then something which Louise—so she said
+afterwards—had been expecting, happened. One of the
+women who had bought pottery from them that morning
+came up, and began to talk to Miss Lawrence, quite
+as if the girls were out of hearing.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good-morning,” she began, taking everything in
+as she talked. “Aren’t these the little Italian vendors
+that were around this morning? Why, how transformed
+they look! Really, the younger one looks quite
+refined. And what are you doing with them, dear Miss
+Lawrence?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Her tone added quite plainly, “And won’t they
+pocket the spoons?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171'></a>171</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise, the irrepressible, grinned above her salad.
+“Kinda lady loana da cloes,” she said glibly; and the
+waiter, who had heard her discoursing in rapid and
+fluent English of an unmistakably home-grown kind the
+moment before, got behind a palm. If he hadn’t he
+would have disgraced himself in a way no well-trained
+waiter should. Billy, too, dived into his napkin and
+seemed to have swallowed something down his Sunday
+throat. But Miss Lawrence remained quite calm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have taken quite a fancy to them,” she said.
+“They seem like good, industrious girls. I am glad
+to see you are so interested, too, Mrs. Gardner. The
+best way to help them—you were going to ask me
+that, were you not—is to buy their goods. You’ll
+find them on sale in the little rose-room.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh—ah, yes indeed!” said Mrs. Gardner, and
+fled, while the young people regarded Miss Lawrence
+with admiration.
+</p>
+<p>
+When the meal was over Miss Lawrence would not
+hear of their going back to the camp, or going on with
+their selling. The bellboy or a maid could go on looking
+after their things, she said, and sent Billy over to
+see about it. Then they went into one of the little
+dancing-rooms and showed each other steps for a long
+time; that is, Billy and Winona did, for Louise said
+she was tired, and sat thankfully still, listening to the
+orchestra that played in the dining-room. After that
+Miss Lawrence carried them all off to a band concert.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was ten-thirty by the time they had finished, and
+all had something more to eat—real, grown-up things
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172'></a>172</span>
+to eat in a most gorgeous café. Miss Lawrence wanted
+them to stay all night, and Winona was willing, but
+Louise insisted on going back.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If we’re here to-morrow morning,” she explained,
+“every blessed woman that we sold things to will want
+to know all about us and our past lives, and then the
+secret will come out. No, thank you, Miss Lawrence,
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“I&nbsp;&nbsp;see&nbsp;&nbsp;by&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;moonlight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;’Tis&nbsp;&nbsp;past&nbsp;&nbsp;midnight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Time&nbsp;&nbsp;pig&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;were&nbsp;&nbsp;home<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An&nbsp;&nbsp;hour&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;half&nbsp;&nbsp;ago!”<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+“I being the pig, I suppose!” added Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I won’t keep you against your will,” said
+Miss Lawrence, getting up from the café table. “So
+you’d better go back to the hotel. They can be packing
+up what’s left of your things for you, while you change.
+But what about rowing across the lake and down the
+river in the dark? Can you look after them, William?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should think I could!” said Billy. “Besides—I
+forgot to tell you, girls, or we might have had a grand
+reunion—Lonny Hughes and Tom are to meet me at the
+dock at about eleven, with one of the camp canoes.
+Tom’s Winona’s brother,” he explained to his aunt. “So
+we’ll take one of the girls in the canoe, and one of us
+will go in the boat, and get them home safe as anything.
+For the matter of that, you can’t get hurt on this lake
+unless the fish should jump up and bite you,” he added
+as they reached the hotel, and parted to dress.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls hurried off their finery, and got hastily
+into their serge skirts and white blouses.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173'></a>173</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I feel like Cinderella!” said Winona as they went
+down in the elevator again, only to find that, quick as
+they had been Billy had been quicker, and stood, familiar-looking
+in his khaki, to take them away. The pottery
+and linen that was left would all go into one suitcase
+now, so well had they and the bellboy prospered. Billy
+gave them, too, the money that had been taken in during
+the evening. They hurried off, after they had said
+good-bye to Miss Lawrence, and made her promise to
+come see them at Camp Karonya and stay a whole day.
+</p>
+<p>
+At the last moment she pushed a bundle into
+Winona’s hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here are your dresses, child,” she said. “You
+looked so sweet it would be a shame for you and Louise
+not to keep them. I’ll make it up to Nataly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona threw her arms around Miss Lawrence’s
+neck, and kissed her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you, dear fairy godmother!” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+A more astonished pair of boys than Lonny and
+Tom it would have been hard to find. It did not take
+long to explain matters. In a few moments they had
+Winona in the canoe between Tom and Billy, while
+Lonny rowed Louise in the boat. The girls held the
+boat and the canoe together. As they went Louise and
+Winona told the tale of their day’s work.
+</p>
+<p>
+When they were done Louise pulled out the money
+they had made, and began to count it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have some, too, Win,” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know,” said Winona, “I have what Billy gave
+me, that the bellboy made. But I don’t believe it’s a lot.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174'></a>174</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Better count it,” counselled Tom, and Winona
+did. When she was through she looked up with an
+awed expression.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nearly ten dollars more!” she announced. “Oh,
+Louise, there must be some mistake! Why, if we both
+really have made all that, there’s enough for another
+three weeks’ camping!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And orders ahead!” said Louise serenely. “It
+will take Marie and Adelaide more of their time than
+they’ll want to spare from fancy diving and telling the
+birds from the wild-flowers, to make jelly and runners.
+I tell you, folks, I’m going to be an Italian porch-worker
+from now on. It pays. Sella da fina crock—getta da
+bigga price—blowa it in!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys shouted. “Good for you, Louise!” they
+cried, and a startled bullfrog gave a deep emotional
+croak at the noise, and jumped into the water.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was moonlight, so the trip home was pleasanter
+than any they had had. They sang till they came close
+to Camp Karonya, where they quieted down for fear of
+disturbing the sleeping girls. But they need not have
+worried. Camp Karonya was improving the moonlight
+night by sitting around a watch-fire, singing and telling
+stories. They could hear Helen’s voice lifted up in
+“Old Uncle Ned,” with a mandolin accompanying her
+that probably belonged to Edith. The boys tied the
+boat and the canoe, and carried the suitcases and
+stretcher, so pleasingly empty, ashore. All five walked
+over to where the fire gleamed, and were in the midst
+of the girls before anyone had seen them come.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175'></a>175</span>CHAPTER SIXTEEN</h2>
+<p>
+The girls jumped up and surrounded them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where on earth have you been? What on earth
+have you been doing? Where in the name of common
+sense did you get that haughty black person who brought
+us news of you about six?” everybody wanted to know,
+while Adelaide and Nataly held brief reunions with
+their brothers, and six girls at once pressed refreshments
+on Lonny and Tom and Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ve sold most of your arts-and-crafts things,”
+announced Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And every stitch of embroidery,” added Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And we’ve been to a band concert and met a
+fairy godmother!” chanted Winona in her turn.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And we have heaps and <em>heaps</em> of money!” finished
+Louise jubilantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then all the girls cried out, “Oh, tell us about it!
+Tell us about it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+So Louise sat down at a discreet distance from the
+camp-fire, and assisted by Winona’s quieter voice, told
+the story. When she got to the part where they pretended
+to be Italian girls Nataly interrupted.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that was dreadful!” she said. “Surely you
+didn’t do that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Didn’t we, though?” grinned Louise cheerfully;
+“And your very own Aunt Lydia aided and abetted us,
+and gave us dinner and kind words besides!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Aunt Lydia!” exclaimed Nataly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176'></a>176</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“She’s over at one of the Wampoag hotels, Nataly,”
+explained her brother. “You knew she was going to be
+there, didn’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How could I when I haven’t heard from her?”
+asked Nataly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s so!” said Billy penitently. “I ought
+to have brought you down her last letter, but it was
+addressed to me, and I forgot to pass it on.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The fact was, as Winona learned later, Miss Lawrence
+had very strong likes and dislikes, and much
+preferred her nephew to her niece.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise turned round to Nataly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You made some things to sell, didn’t you?” she
+asked, “And yet you think it was shocking of us to sell
+them! I don’t think that’s fair.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I don’t care. I don’t think it’s nice or lady-like
+to peddle things from door to door,” said Nataly
+stubbornly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe it wasn’t,” said Louise cheerfully, “but it
+was certainly heaps of fun!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, we <em>did</em> have fun!” said Winona. “And
+we have orders for more of Marie’s stencilled runners,
+and Adelaide’s jelly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did nobody love my pots?” asked Helen sadly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes, indeed,” consoled Winona, “only you
+were so industrious, and made so many, that we have
+some left. The Blue Birds’ baskets went off very well,
+too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“How much did you make?” asked Mrs. Bryan.
+“I’m wild to know.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177'></a>177</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise pulled her bandanna handkerchief out of her
+deepest pocket, and Winona produced hers from the
+bottom of her blouse. They handed them over to the
+Guardian.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mine’s only what the bellboy took in while we
+were at dinner and out in the evening,” Winona explained.
+“Louise took care of all the rest.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan counted it silently, while the girls waited
+breathlessly for the result.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Fifty-three dollars and forty-six cents!” announced
+Mrs. Bryan at last. “You blessed angels,
+with what we’ll get for the mending, that means over
+three weeks more of camp!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“By the way,” suggested Tom here, “can’t you give
+us what’s done of the mending, please, Mrs. Bryan?
+It’s time we got back to camp.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She sent Florence and another Blue Bird to get
+it, and they ran off, swinging their lanterns.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll send down the bill by some of your sisters,
+with the rest of the work, by day after to-morrow at the
+furthest,” she promised, as the girls stood up to bid the
+three Scouts good-bye.
+</p>
+<p>
+They watched the canoe paddle off into the darkness,
+then settled down to hear the rest of the adventure.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But there’s something else we haven’t told you!”
+said Winona, when the whole story had been told and
+talked over for a long while. “There’s going to be a
+lake carnival.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, what fun! Let’s go!” said Adelaide, speaking
+more brightly than Winona had ever known her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178'></a>178</span>
+to. “We could hike as far as this side of the lake
+by land, couldn’t we, Opeechee?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly we could—if we had to,” said Mrs.
+Bryan, who was watching Winona. “Wait till Winona
+finishes. She looks as if she had a plan.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I was thinking,” said Winona, “that it would be
+very nice if we could decorate a float. The boys
+said they were sure the Scouts would loan us enough
+rowboats to build the float over, if we needed it. And
+we could have tents——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course we could!” said everybody enthusiastically,
+and all began to plan at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+Finally Mrs. Bryan rose, and suggested that it was
+twelve o’clock, and that all but the breakfast-getters
+had better sleep till eight next morning. So they put
+out the fire, and went to bed.
+</p>
+<p>
+About two o’clock a slim figure in a red kimono
+stole down the avenue of tents with a lantern. About
+two-thirds of the way there met her another, plumper
+figure, in a blue kimono, also with a lantern.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winona!” said the blue kimono.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, Louise!” said the red one.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then they both began to giggle in a subdued way.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What on earth are you prowling round for, at this
+time of night?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What are you?” returned Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona beckoned her friend over to a seat on a
+fallen log.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I—well, I’ve been worrying over our dressing up
+that way, and fooling people, to sell things,” she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179'></a>179</span>
+confessed. “I suppose you’ll think I’m a horrid little
+prig, but—Louise, I think we ought to go back and
+tell those hotellers that we were just plain Camp Fire
+Girls, not Italian or Dalmatian or anything like that.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thought a Dalmatian was a dog,” suggested
+Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe it is,” said Winona sadly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise sat closer to Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winnie,” she said, “that’s just what I climbed
+out of bed about myself. I was coming to look for
+you when I met you. I’ve been worrying about it, too.
+It was a lark, but I think it’s up to us to gambol over
+there, clothed and in our right minds—and own up.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I’m so glad!” said Winona. “We’ll tell
+Mrs. Bryan in the morning.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Louise, and she began to giggle.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And then, while they’re thinking how noble it is
+of us to confess, we’ll sell ’em more things—real Camp
+Fire Girls’ hand-crafts!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Louise,” said Winona with admiring conviction,
+“you certainly <em>are</em> the limit.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They both laughed, and felt better. Then they went
+back to bed and went to sleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+Next morning they rowed duly up the lake, and
+made a conscientious round of the hotels and cottages
+where they had sold their things the day before. But
+the way of the transgressor refused to be hard. They
+could wake very little excitement on the subject of their
+transformation in the minds of their patrons—who, it
+is to be feared, either regarded it all as a good joke, or
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180'></a>180</span>
+did not worry about it at all. Indeed, most of the
+people Louise could find to explain to were more
+wronged because she had no goods with her, than by
+anything else. So she took a number of orders.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s no use, Lou,” said Winona, as they met at
+noon by the hotel where Miss Lawrence stayed, “I
+can’t get a soul to care whether I’m a Canadian or a
+Hottentot. The only thing they’ll say is, ‘We’d like
+some more of the baskets,’ or ‘those runners,’ or whatever
+they didn’t get yesterday.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Same here,” said Louise. “But I landed some
+fine fat orders, and if you’re as clever as I think you
+are, you did, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I did,” said Winona. “And, anyway,” she
+added, brightening, “when we’ve done this hotel our
+consciences will be clear.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I only hope we don’t meet that horrid Mrs.
+Gardner,” said Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+So they marched up the steps, and tried to pick out
+the women they had sold to the day before, to explain
+to them. But Winona had scarcely begun, “You see,
+we really weren’t Italians at all,” when the people she
+was talking to began to laugh. Winona, bewildered
+and a little cross, looked around to see what they were
+laughing at. She saw Miss Lawrence behind her,
+laughing, too.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s no use explaining, my dear,” said that lady.
+“I did it myself. Everybody knows that you and
+Louise Lane disposed of your goods under false pretenses
+by tying up your heads in red handkerchiefs and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181'></a>181</span>
+letting your customers draw their own conclusions.
+I don’t know but some of us want our money back!
+Never mind, children, it was very clever of you!” she
+added, seeing that Winona was not sure whether she
+was in earnest.
+</p>
+<p>
+And the girls found themselves being questioned
+and laughed at and made much of by a group of women,
+who wanted to know all about the Camp Fire, and the
+things the girls made, and the ways they earned money,
+and what they did with it, till Winona and Louise
+were fairly tired with answering questions.
+</p>
+<p>
+They invited everybody to come out to the camp,
+and set a day. They took some more orders, and then
+they carried Miss Lawrence off across the lake and
+down the river, to see Camp Karonya. When she arrived
+they handed her over to Nataly, as was polite, and
+she and Mrs. Bryan showed her over the camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+She investigated everything with the same brisk,
+fairy godmother expression that she had had when she
+took Winona and Louise under her wing, stayed to
+luncheon, and then expressed a desire to be taken down
+to the Scouts’ camp, to see Billy. So two of the
+Blue Birds rowed her there.
+</p>
+<p>
+After they had seen Miss Lawrence off, the girls
+became busy a little way down the river. Winona got
+there a little late and found that much had happened
+while she and Louise had gone off that morning. At
+first the idea of making the float had been to found it
+on the rowboats the Boy Scouts were willing to lend.
+But when a deputation, headed by Mr. Gedney, paddled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182'></a>182</span>
+down, bringing the boats in question, it became painfully
+clear that four canoes would not support enough
+planks to hold twenty life-size girls. Neither would
+rowboats. At least, Mrs. Bryan and Mr. Gedney agreed
+that they wouldn’t—most of the girls and all the boys
+were willing to take a chance.
+</p>
+<p>
+When this turn of affairs arrived everyone felt very
+sad, and for a while it had looked as if Camp Karonya
+wasn’t going to have a float in the lake carnival.
+</p>
+<p>
+But just then along came that resourceful old gentleman,
+Mr. Sloane, with fishing-rod and a can of bait.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what’s all the trouble?” he inquired
+genially of everyone in general. So they told him.
+Mr. Sloane did not hesitate a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I got a friend that owns some good, water-tight
+scows,” said he most unexpectedly. “They ain’t doin’
+nobody any good, and I guess he’d loan ’em to you, or,
+if wust come to wust, he’d let you have the use of ’em
+for maybe seventy-five cents apiece. Two scows are all
+you’d need to put the plankin’ across.”
+</p>
+<p>
+He gave them directions as to where to go after
+the scows’ owner, and ambled on in search of a quieter
+fishing-place. An embassy was sent after the scows
+immediately, and returned with them in triumph. They
+proved perfectly seaworthy, and quite equal to supporting
+all they would have to. So when Winona
+arrived on the scene after luncheon the girls had
+reached the stage of nailing the planks across.
+</p>
+<p>
+They had bargained for the scows at seventy-five
+cents each, as Mr. Sloane had said they would be able
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183'></a>183</span>
+to, and promised to give them a coat of paint before
+they returned them. The boards, bought of the village
+carpenter, were more expensive. However, the girls
+thought they could venture to pay for them out of the
+treasury, on the strength of the orders ahead that they
+had taken. Marie and Edith were supervising things.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is there anything I can do to help?” Winona
+asked Marie, who was frowning thoughtfully over a
+hastily-drawn plan.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not unless you can help us with this design,”
+Marie answered. “See here. The idea is to make a
+miniature Indian village. How would you group the
+tents so as to take up the least room and show best?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why do you try to draw it?” asked Winona.
+“Why not do as generals do, make little paper tents
+and move them around till you get a tableau of the
+effect you want?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The idea was new to Marie, but she liked it, and
+the three girls fell to constructing little paper cones,
+and arranging them on a square space that represented
+the float.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently one of the girls who was nailing dropped
+out with a pounded thumb, and Winona took up her
+hammer and went to work. She discovered that the
+driving of a nail straight, and making boards lie side by
+side evenly, is more of an art than people know.
+</p>
+<p>
+They worked on the float most of that afternoon,
+except for a few of the girls who were told off to do
+the Scout mending, and they sat down near the carpenters
+and sewed sociably to the sound of the pounding.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184'></a>184</span>
+They worked till six, and went to bed unusually early.
+</p>
+<p>
+By the second day the platform was done, and
+proved to balance very well on the water, even with
+all the girls on it. Next Marie and her helpers went to
+making tents, for their own soldier tents were too unromantically
+shaped to be any good on a float. They
+wanted real Indian wigwams, or as near to them as
+they could get.
+</p>
+<p>
+Marie bought unbleached muslin, and they dyed it
+the correct dark brown. They made three wigwams
+of this, the story-book-picture kind, with the crossed
+poles tied at the top, for a foundation. In each tent a
+squaw was to sit—or rather, at its door, for the tepees,
+in order to fit on the limited space of the float, had to
+be made rather small, and would have been a tight fit
+for even the smallest squaw. Some of the girls were
+to dress as chiefs, and were working hard on war-bonnets
+and leggings. Even Puppums was to grace the
+occasion, guarding a pappoose—little Lilian Maynard,
+the smallest Blue Bird. There was some idea of including
+Hike the Camp Cat, now a cheerful and opulent-looking
+kitten, but it was thought better of, because he
+yowled so when they rehearsed him.
+</p>
+<p>
+When the tents and costumes were done, the brushwood
+heaps stacked, the floor covered with twigs and
+moss, the girls tried grouping themselves as they were
+to appear on the final night. And it proved that there
+was not room on the platform for three tents and nineteen
+girls, even if seven <em>were</em> small.
+</p>
+<p>
+Marie stepped off and looked it over.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185'></a>185</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“There are just two girls too many,” she said.
+“Three, if I were on board. I’ll eliminate Marie
+Hunter to begin with. I’m going to decorate my own
+canoe. You’d better draw lots for the other two to
+stay out.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Everyone on the float looked at everyone else. Nobody
+wanted to drop out, but nobody felt like being
+selfish.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll drop out!” said the whole of Camp Karonya
+in chorus, after a minute’s dead silence.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll go in your canoe, Marie—have you forgotten?”
+asked Edith. “The plans you made included me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So they did,” said Marie in a relieved voice.
+“Well, perhaps the rest could crowd a little closer.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m afraid not, and be sure that nobody’d tip into
+the water,” vetoed Mrs. Bryan. “I’m the one to stay
+ashore, girls. I’ll gaze at you with fond proprietorship
+while you get first prize.”
+</p>
+<p>
+But there rose up a storm of objections to that.
+“No you won’t, either! There won’t any of us be in
+it if you aren’t, Opeechee!” till she had to give up
+giving up.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona braced herself a little, and “I’m out, too,”
+she said gayly. “There’s no use asking me to stay—I
+don’t like your old float!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She sprang ashore, and went over and stood by
+Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls protested, and several more volunteered to
+drop out, but nobody meant it quite as hard as Winona
+did. So the Indian village went on being erected, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186'></a>186</span>
+the girls went on practising an Indian dance which
+should take up the least possible room. Meanwhile
+Winona rounded up the finished mending and rowed up
+the river to deliver the latest basket of mended socks and
+shirts. She had made her sacrifice in all good faith
+and earnestness, but she felt as if she didn’t want to
+see them going gayly on without her—at least, not
+right <em>now</em>.
+</p>
+<p>
+She wasn’t conscious of behaving any way but as
+she generally did, but she must have, for both Tom
+and Billy watched her uneasily, as she sat in the boat
+and talked to them after they had taken the mending,
+while she waited for the orderly to come with her
+money.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the matter, Win?” asked Tom bluntly in
+a minute. “You’re down and out—I can see that.
+Who’s been doing anything to you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona shook her head. “Nobody.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then what have <em>you</em> been doing?” asked Billy.
+They stood over her, both looking so worried that
+Winona felt like hugging them, or crying, or both.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t anything,” she said. “Except—well, I
+did it myself. Somebody had to stay off the float, because
+there wasn’t room for everyone, so I elected
+myself. And—and—oh, I <em>did</em> want to be in that
+carnival! But”—she straightened bravely, and smiled
+up into the two indignant faces—“I guess it’s all right,
+after all. If I could decorate my rowboat it would
+be all right, but I can’t, because they’re going to need
+it to carry properties in.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187'></a>187</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a confounded shame,” said Billy Lee, “and
+after you planned it, and all! You ought to have a float
+of your own. I’ll tell you, Winona, why don’t you
+decorate a canoe?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Only reason is, I haven’t a canoe,” laughed
+Winona—they were all three sitting in a row in the
+grass by this time.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have,” said Billy, “and you’re more than welcome
+to it, and to all the help I can give you on it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And I’ve got some change you’re welcome to for
+decorations,” added Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, how perfectly lovely!” said Winona, jumping
+up with her face aglow. “Indeed I will decorate it,
+and thank you both, ever and ever so much. I have
+ever so many lovely ideas for decorations. Billy!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She stopped short.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well?” said Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Would you mind being in the canoe with me?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure, I’d love to,” said Billy heartily, whether
+he really meant it or not.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thank you <em>so</em> much!” cried Winona again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the way to take it!” said Tom. “We’ll
+get you up a canoe, between us, that’ll make your old
+Camp Fire float look like a bad quarter and a plugged
+nickel—see if we don’t!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188'></a>188</span>CHAPTER SEVENTEEN</h2>
+<p>
+Winona and Florence paddled back to Camp
+Karonya with the latest bundle of mending, very, very
+happy. When they came ashore, they were met by a
+committee consisting of Adelaide, Louise, Helen and
+Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ve got a plan for your being in the picture,”
+said they very nearly in unison. “We can decorate
+the boat with the apparatus in it——”
+</p>
+<p>
+But Winona waved a lordly hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Boat me no boats,” said she. “I’m going to have
+Billy Lee’s canoe to decorate. We’re going out this
+afternoon, or maybe to-morrow afternoon, up to
+Wampoag where the shops are, and we’re going to
+buy out the shops with decorations. Going to get
+honorable mention, anyway!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, then you’d really rather!” said Helen. “I’m
+<em>so</em> glad. But it won’t seem natural not to have you on
+the float, Winnie!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just as natural as not having Marie,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” said Marie quietly, “not exactly. You’re
+like the spirit of the whole thing, Win, and I think
+they ought to have you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You can’t,” said Winona, sitting down on the
+grass and drawing her knees up to her chin.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We could if we canned Nataly,” said Louise the
+rebel, half under her breath.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, you can’t do that,” said the other girls
+in a breath.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189'></a>189</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The truth was, Nataly Lee was the one dark spot—the
+one cinder, as you might say—in the Camp Fire.
+She did not particularly like doing her share of the
+work, she could not be made to take an interested part
+in the work for honor beads, and she acted generally
+as if she was a caller who was much older and more
+languid than the others. It was, in short, very much
+as Louise had said when she offered to join—she was
+like a kitten who refused to be anything but a cat.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know what Nataly’s doing here, anyway,”
+Louise went on. “And we’d be a lot happier without
+her. I wish she’d go home and look after her complexion.
+She can’t do it properly here—anybody can see
+that!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t do what?” said a languid voice. It isn’t
+a good thing to discuss your friends too freely if they’re
+anywhere at all around, because they are exceedingly
+likely to overhear or partly hear. And this is just what
+happened now. Nataly herself walked out of the strip
+of woods that separated the camp from the river, and
+sat down by them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I thought I heard you talking about me,” she
+said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We were,” said Louise, quite unruffled. “At
+least I was. I was saying that you couldn’t look after
+your complexion properly here in the woods, and that
+I thought you’d be happier away from our rude young
+society!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Nataly did not see in the least that Louise was
+laughing at her, but Helen did, and gave Louise a severe
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190'></a>190</span>
+pinch. “Guying” was something that the camp spirit
+allowed only if the victim knew what was being done
+to her. But where Nataly was concerned it was hard
+to make Louise behave.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, you know,” said Nataly, “I am thinking of
+going home. It makes me nervous, the idea of Aunt
+Lydia being near enough to pounce down on me every
+minute. She is <em>so</em> energetic. And my nerves are nearly
+all right now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then you really think you will go back?” said
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I really do, as soon as the carnival is over,” said
+Nataly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, as I said,” said Winona hastily, for Louise
+looked as if she were going to suggest an earlier departure,
+“I’m going up to Wampoag this afternoon to
+buy things with the boys.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have a ’gagement to make baskets with Frances,”
+said Florence, “so I can’t go with you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I will if you want me,” offered Louise. “I have
+various things I want to say to you alone.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That sounds dark and dreadful!” said Helen
+good-naturedly. “I think we’d better not volunteer
+to go along, Marie!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We couldn’t, anyway,” Marie reminded her.
+“There’s a lot to do on those war-bonnets yet.”
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+So that afternoon Louise, Winona, Billy and Tom
+paddled up to the summer resort in quest of decorations.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191'></a>191</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have you any idea how you’re going to trim the
+canoe?” asked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve thought it all out,” said Winona. “I found
+the idea in an old book of ballads Marie brought along.
+It was called ‘The Ship o’ the Fiend.’”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Pretty name!” said Louise. “Who’s going to be
+the fiend? Please don’t all speak at once!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll be the goat,” said Billy. “Winnie told me a
+little about it. The ballad was about a girl who went off
+with an old fiance, and he turned out to be a real live
+demon.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Winona, “the tall topmast no taller
+was than he,” it says.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I draw the line at stilts,” said Billy sleepily.
+He was curled down in the bottom of the boat basking
+in the sunshine, for Louise had insisted on taking a
+paddle. “What do I have to do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The first thing,” said Winona, “is to wake up
+enough to sit up and be consulted. How much copper
+wire ...”
+</p>
+<p>
+The rest was inaudible, for Billy moved closer to
+Winona, who talked to him mysteriously under her
+breath. The others could hear scraps like “Japanese
+auctioneer ...” “fifty yards ...” “red paper
+muslin,” and such illuminating fragments.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How much money have you got for me to spend,
+Tommy?” Winona broke off to inquire.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Four whole dollars,” he said, “earned by splitting
+wood for a farmer.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192'></a>192</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I certainly am obliged,” she said, “and I’ll pay
+it back.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll do no such thing!” he said. “I should
+hope I could give my own sister a lone four dollars once
+in awhile!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right, you can,” said Winona soothingly. She
+pulled out the paper the boys had secured and given
+her, and began to read it aloud.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Cash prizes in the canoe class, first, twenty-five
+dollars, second, ten dollars, three third prizes, five
+dollars each. Now you see, if I get a third prize I’ll be
+a dollar in, and all the glory reflected on Camp Karonya
+besides!”
+</p>
+<p>
+They took a street-car when they got to Wampoag,
+because the shopping district was a long ways off, and
+it was a hot day anyway. Tom and Louise watched the
+other two with curiosity, as they went from store to
+store, buying things that it seemed impossible could fit
+into each other; copper wire, red tinsel by the box, paper
+muslin in what seemed unlimited quantities, though it
+was really only a little over a dollar’s worth. Then
+Winona went into one Japanese store alone, and came
+out with a bagful of paper lanterns and a knobby
+bundle which she refused to undo or show. They
+hunted all over three streets for Greek fire, before it
+occurred to Billy to go back to the hardware store where
+they had bought their copper wire. He came out with
+three boxes of it, labelled “Blue,” “Green” and
+“White,” and seemed rather sad because they had no
+lavender or gray fire in stock.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193'></a>193</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“‘They bought a pig and some ring-bo-ree, and
+no end of Stilton cheese!’” chanted Louise softly.
+“How on earth are you going to connect all that crazy
+stuff?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll know, all in good time, my dear,” said
+Winona sedately. “We can go home now. The worst
+is over.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We deserve a soda, at least, for all this,” said
+Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Marble-dust,” said Tom solemnly. “Some day,
+Bill, if you keep on drinking sodas, you’ll turn into a
+statue, and your sorrowing relatives will have to put
+you up in the hall for an ornament.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Glad I’m as lovely as all that comes to!” said
+Billy with a grin. “They couldn’t do it to you, old
+fellow—you aren’t pretty enough!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“He is pretty, too,” said Louise stoutly. “Somebody
+told me only yesterday that they thought Tom
+was so poetic-looking, and had a striking head.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy laughed out loud, and Tom wriggled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I take it all back, Louise,” he said. “He <em>is</em>
+beautiful.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom gave a sort of mournful growl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, cut it out, Billy!” he said. “If you really
+want that soda, here’s a drug-store.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A striking head,” mused his sister, cocking her
+own head on one side, to look at Tom from this new
+point of view. “I really think you have.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If ever I meet the fellow who said that, he’ll find
+out I have a striking fist,” muttered Thomas darkly,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194'></a>194</span>
+walking into the drug-store ahead of the rest, and sitting
+down at a table in the back. “Four walnut sundaes,
+please. No, I don’t want ’em all myself. The
+others are coming in the door now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+For the next few days Winona, at a point half-way
+between her camp and the Scout’s camp, worked steadily
+over the paper lanterns she had bought. She covered
+them all with white paper, and cut out holes in the paper
+after the fashion of eyes, nose and mouth, until, if you
+were not too critical, they looked like big oval skulls. If
+you <em>were</em> critical, they might remind you, it is true, of
+jack-o’-lanterns, but nobody was unkind enough to say
+so but Tom. There were forty of them altogether,
+and when they were all covered, and brought down to
+camp out of the danger of being rained on, and festooned
+about Winona’s tent, the effect was truly awful.
+Tom, who had been watching his sister’s performance
+with interest, came over one day with five little paper-mache
+lanterns which he presented to her, two in the
+shape of black cats, and three like owls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know yet what you’re going to do,” he
+said, “but if Bill’s going to wear horns and hoofs, and
+those things over the cot are meant for skulls, I should
+think these would come in handy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re just exactly what I wanted!” said
+Winona with rapture, hanging them with the rest.
+“Now I’ve nothing to do but my dress.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She showed him several yards of black paper muslin
+and a sheet of gilt paper. “It doesn’t look promising,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195'></a>195</span>
+I know,” she said, “but it will be quite nice, I think,
+when it’s done.”
+</p>
+<p>
+And it really was. Helen helped her to fit it, and
+they made it with the dull side out, close-fitting, and
+covered with the stars and crescents of the traditional
+witch-dress. She was done with it, even to the pointed
+hat and black half-mask, in very good time.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now,” she said to the boys, standing over Billy’s
+canoe where it had been pulled up in the grass, “now
+comes the tug of war. Tom, you said you would help
+me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I did,” said he. “What shall I do?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then please nail these poles to the end of the
+canoe. They’re about six feet high, aren’t they?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes. Do you want them sticking straight up into
+the air?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Straight up, please,” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Billy’s flying around in the town like a hen with
+its head cut off,” said Tom as he proceeded to do what
+his sister asked, “trying to buy something he won’t tell
+about. And I found Louise and Helen up at Camp
+Karonya, winding tinsel into balls like fury. Strikes
+me you ought to share that five you won’t get with the
+whole crowd of us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So I will when I get it,” said Winona serenely.
+“Now will you please brace those end-poles thoroughly,
+and nail cross-pieces on them about a foot from the
+top?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s easy to tell people how to do things,” said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196'></a>196</span>
+Tom; but he was clever at carpentering, and had it done
+in a very short time.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Winona took the copper wire she had bought,
+and strung it from end to end of the cross-pieces, till
+the effect was something like that of a half-done cat’s
+cradle. Then she stood off and looked at her work,
+walking round and round it, as a kitten looks at a
+mirror.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That wire ought to bear about twenty pounds,
+don’t you think?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t see why not,” said Tom, sitting down on
+the grass to watch her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now I’ll begin, then,” she said. “Thank you for
+making the foundation.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She took up the copper wire again, and strung more
+lines of it from end to end of the canoe, and one around
+the gunwale. She laced still more up and down in
+irregular points, up and down the side-wires, till the
+effect was that of an irregularly pointed fence, or
+crown, as high as the end pieces in some parts, and low
+enough, at the ends, to show the people seated in it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Looks like a cross-section of Alps,” said Tom
+critically. “Are you going to be the Blue Alsatian
+Mountains?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“There are two classes of people who should never
+see a thing half-done,” answered his sister, standing
+off again to get the effect.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” said Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Doesn’t it look like anything else at all?” she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197'></a>197</span>
+asked, abandoning her superior attitude, and throwing
+herself on his mercy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, something like a fever-chart,” said he.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona said no more—there didn’t seem to be any
+use. She picked up her ball of red tinsel, and began
+to wind it around and within, and across, every point
+of the “fever-chart,” till there was a solid network.
+It was not a bad imitation of a springing fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now do you see?” she said. “That’s a big, red
+blaze coming out of the canoe, and when we’ve lighted
+the Greek fire inside it ought to look real enough to
+burn you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not bad,” admitted Tom. “But I don’t see its
+connection with a black bonnet and forty jack-o’-lanterns.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You will by-and-bye,” said his sister, going on
+with her work. It went very smoothly after that,
+except that Puppums <em>would</em> jump inside, and then
+looked at her in a wronged way because the canoe did
+not float off. After the tinsel was on nothing remained
+to do but to wrap the end-pieces with black muslin,
+so they would not show at night, and to cover the canoe
+with the same material. The lanterns did not need to
+be hung till the last moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+The night of the carnival Camp Karonya, very much
+excited, sailed down the river in all the glory of its fleet,
+about six. The Indian village was a great success as
+far as looks went. Whether it would be as handsome
+a float as the ones it would have to compete with nobody
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198'></a>198</span>
+could tell yet. As a canoe takes less time to engineer
+than a float, and also as the boys hadn’t come yet,
+Winona stayed behind a little while. At about seven
+Tom and Billy came up the river in another of the
+Scouts’ canoes. Winona, in her witch costume, with
+her lanterns, was waiting for them by the decorated
+canoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy was most gorgeous. He had hired a red
+Mephisto costume, evidently from a real costumer—horns,
+hoofs and all. His full grandeur didn’t show
+till he sprang out on the grass, because he had modestly
+shrouded himself in a raincoat, and his mask was
+in its pocket. But he snapped the mask on, tossed
+the coat off, and struck an attitude, before he helped
+Tom to lay the canoe in the water.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You certainly are grand and gorgeous, Billy,”
+said Winona. “All you need is a spotlight running
+round after you to look just like the man in the opera.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I feel like a freak,” admitted Billy. “Got everything,
+Winona? We’d better be starting.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona veiled her own splendors with an evening
+wrap of Mrs. Bryan’s which had, fortunately, been
+brought along, and stepped in. Tom trailed behind.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I believe I’m frightened,” said Winona. “What
+about you, Billy?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s nothing to be afraid of,” he said. “We
+can’t very well upset, tied to a string of other craft,
+and maybe we’ll get a fourth prize—if they only have
+four entries in the canoe class.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll get one anyway!” declared Winona
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199'></a>199</span>
+proudly, throwing her head back and forgetting to be
+nervous.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were early at the dock. The Camp float was
+moored quite a little way from the place where they
+had to be, but they could see each other, and called
+across. After that Winona did not feel so lonely. The
+boys helped her to light and tie on the lanterns, all so
+realistically like skulls, and when she saw how very
+ghostly they looked she felt that she hadn’t lived in
+vain.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have you the skeleton, Billy?” she demanded
+anxiously of Mephisto, who was wrestling with a bundle
+in the back canoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here it is,” he said, finally producing it. “I had
+rather a time getting old Hiraoka to rent it, but an
+auctioneer will do anything for enough yen.”
+</p>
+<p>
+As he spoke he unwrapped a neat, papier-mache
+skeleton of nearly life-size, which was of Japanese
+origin, and which, as he said, he had rented from the
+Japanese store of Mr. Tashima Hiraoka for this night
+only.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Billy!” said Winona remorsefully, “how much
+did you pay for Mr. Bones?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No time to worry about that now,” said Billy.
+“Where do you want him put?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona saw that he was right, and put off insisting
+on paying for the skeleton till time should be less
+precious than now. They swung it above the tinsel
+flames, on wire loops prepared for it, so that it turned
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200'></a>200</span>
+gently, as if roasting. Tom looked on in respectful
+admiration.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here’s the last thing,” said Billy, producing the
+mysterious bundle that had excited Louise so the day
+they were shopping for decorations.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Those are Billy’s idea,” said Winona, pulling the
+objects out as she spoke. “They just put the finishing
+touch on, don’t they, Tom?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should say they did!” said Tom appreciatively.
+They were twenty small red demons rather like Billy,
+and the same number of tiny skeletons, all with waggle-some
+hands and feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Blessed forever be Japanese stores!” said
+Winona. “Just hang them around carelessly, boys, as if
+they were hovering over the fire, you know. Billy, do
+you think you can make the demons look pleased and
+the skeletons unhappy?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You never know what you can do till you try,”
+said Billy with his usual poise. He pulled some wire
+out of the back canoe, which, like the Mother’s Bag
+in the Swiss Family Robinson, seemed to have everything
+in the world in it. The boys set to work with
+such a will that the last demon was wriggling naturally
+as life, and there was ten minutes yet to spare, when
+they were done.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201'></a>201</span>CHAPTER EIGHTEEN</h2>
+<p>
+Billy helped Winona in, felt for the matches, and
+got in himself. Tom pushed them off from shore. It
+was all done with the solemnity of a funeral procession.
+Winona looked at the boys’ excited faces, and laughed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’re not being rowed off to execution,” she
+explained, though she felt a little excited herself. “I’m
+perfectly calm—O-oh! Gracious! What’s that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That” was a long, unearthly wail which seemed
+to come from the inside of the canoe itself. It increased
+and quavered and howled and died down again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s us,” said Billy placidly. “Tom and I
+borrowed Boots Morris’s father’s Gabriel horn and fastened
+it into the canoe this afternoon. Forgot to tell
+you. Don’t you like it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Lovely!” gasped Winona. “Only—only it was a
+little sudden, the first time. I thought Mr. Bones was
+expressing his feelings.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It adds to the effect all right,” said Billy proudly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly does!” said Winona. “Yes, we have
+a tow-rope, marshal. Tie us on, please.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, you do look like you came from somewhere
+else!” said the marshal—he was the dock owner by day—as
+he fastened the “Ship o’ the Fiend” into line. “I
+don’t want anything more like D. T.’s than you be!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s what I call a delicate compliment,” said
+Billy, lifting his mask so he could grin with freedom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“M’ yes, I suppose so,” said Winona doubtfully.
+“Are we going to start soon, marshal?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202'></a>202</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“In about ten minutes,” said the marshal, seeming
+to be still entranced with the canoe and its decorations.
+“They burnt one o’ my great-grandmothers, a couple
+o’ hundred years ago, for doin’ not much worse’n you
+be,” he added.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We ought to get something, then,” said Winona,
+thinking more of a possible prize than of the marshal’s
+family history.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You sure ought!” he said darkly, handing them
+a number and passing on to the next boat.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ten minutes seemed very long and tedious, but
+between eating some sandwiches which Winona had
+thoughtfully provided, exchanging compliments with
+the neighboring boats, and getting their Greek fire ready
+to set off, they passed somehow. The whistle blew,
+and the long trail of boats, canoes, and floats started
+on its slow and winding way. The float was tied far
+off, at the beginning of the procession, where they could
+not see it. Marie’s canoe was just in sight, but not
+near enough to talk to—a big silver cobweb spotted
+with lantern-flies, and Marie and Edith dressed as the
+Spider and the Fly, at either end of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Finally the whistle blew. Billy tucked a final piece
+of sandwich beneath his mask, and resigned himself to
+tending the Greek fire for the rest of the evening. As
+for Winona, finding nothing particular to do, she pulled
+a book out from under a cushion and began to read.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winona, would you kindly lay away that piece of
+literatuah and wo’k the Gabriel ho’n?” asked Billy in
+the softest and Kentuckiest of voices. Winona had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203'></a>203</span>
+observed that when Billy’s Southern accent reasserted
+itself he was generally in deadly earnest. She meekly
+put the book away and began to press the bulb of the
+horn at regular intervals.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I do wish we could see us, and be us, too!”
+she said in one of the intervals.
+</p>
+<p>
+“M’m! Don’t I?” said Billy. “I don’t know,
+though. Maybe we’d be disappointed.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know we wouldn’t,” said Winona confidently,
+and pressed the horn again, which put a stop to conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+Meanwhile Tom, on the grandstand, was seeing
+them, and being very proud of his relationship to the
+“Ship o’ the Fiend.” The black-covered canoe, with
+its belt of shivering fire and its weird occupants, showed
+up gloriously. The irregularly hung lanterns looked
+more like skulls than Winona had dared to hope in her
+wildest moments. All the little demons and skeletons
+danced realistically on their invisible wires in the air,
+and, crown of all, the nearly-life-size skeleton swung
+above, with the witch and the demon watching him
+from either end, as he roasted above the Greek fire.
+An occasional shriek from the Gabriel horn gave the
+final touch. The whole thing was like a vision out of
+a Poe story, or some German goblin-legend. The people
+took to clapping as they went by.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I believe they’re clapping for us!” said Winona
+awedly, as a burst of it came to their ears over the
+water.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure they are,” said Billy. “Shows their good
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204'></a>204</span>
+sense, too. It’s a mighty good looking canoe we have.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can we photograph you, please?” said a polite
+voice before Winona could answer—and lo, the
+reporter’s boat!
+</p>
+<p>
+“This <em>is</em> glory!” said Winona, snapping down her
+mask, and being frankly delighted. “Just think, Billy,
+we may be in the paper!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The reporter asked questions and fussed with his
+flashlight apparatus, and finally took two exposures.
+They kept very still while the flashlight was exploding,
+and answered the reporters in full.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The designer of your decorations certainly was
+very clever, and had a vivid imagination,” ended the
+smallest reporter as the press-boat went on its way.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona sat up straight, and looked very proud.
+</p>
+<p>
+“At last I’m appreciated!” she said. “Don’t you
+wish you had a vivid imagination, too, Billy?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you straighten up much more,” said Billy, leaning
+over to light fresh Greek fire, “you will certainly
+hit the decorations, and something will bust.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t care!” and Winona laughed excitedly.
+“It’s my first chance at being famous, and you can’t
+think how nice it is! Listen to that!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The applause along the banks was certainly continuous
+enough to make someone older and staider than
+Winona happy. The canoes were making the circuit of
+the upper part of the lake now. In the centre was the
+royal float, where the king and queen of the carnival sat.
+</p>
+<p>
+When the procession had gone down one side of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205'></a>205</span>
+the lake and up the other it would make a circle about
+this royal float, and the prizes would be awarded.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were almost through with this, only a little
+way from the royal float, when a small green canoe full
+of sightseers whirled against them, sent by some sudden
+twist of wind or water. And—neither Winona nor
+Billy could ever understand how it happened—the shock
+of the blow, or perhaps some mischievous person in
+the other boat, parted the ropes that held Winona’s
+canoe lightly to the canoes before and behind it, and
+sent them far to one side of the lake, out of the radius
+of the lights. The wind, naturally, took this particular
+time to blow hard. The decorations made the canoe
+top-heavy and hard to guide, and they dared not paddle fast
+for fear of upsetting. They could see from their
+outer darkness the canoes they had been between being
+hastily tied together.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona paddled frantically. “Do you think we can
+get back in time to be judged?” she panted.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll try,” said Billy, working his paddle more
+slowly, but with greater effect than Winona’s.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No—oh, Billy, Billy! There goes the signal—they’ve
+given the launch prize, and they are to give
+the float and rowboat prizes right afterwards, and
+then the canoes! There goes the gun again. Oh, <em>dear!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona had really been working harder than she
+should have over her canoe decorations, and helping
+with the float besides, as well as doing her routine camp-work.
+She had been “all keyed up” by the evening’s
+excitement, and her hopes of a prize, and this sudden
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206'></a>206</span>
+downfall of her hopes was too much for her self-control.
+Billy saw two large tears roll down her cheeks
+from under her mask.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor Winnie! It certainly is a shame!” he said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I suppose that horrid little gunboat canoe named
+‘Flossie’ will get our prize,” mourned Winona, casting
+fortitude to the wind—which must have carried it
+quite a way, for it was blowing more and more strongly.
+“I know we’d have had one of the fourth prizes, too!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have the glory, anyway,” he said. “Everybody
+applauded us more than they did anything else
+except that big Queen Elizabeth float.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But I wanted the money, and I wanted to have
+the Camp Fire have a prize! There, Billy, I won’t be a
+coward any more. I’m tired, I think, or I wouldn’t have
+acted like this kind of an idiot,” she said bravely, pushing
+up her mask to dry her eyes, and trying to smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ve worn yourself out over this decoration
+business, that’s what the matter is,” said Billy. “Do
+you mind telling me what you want the money for?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, certainly not. I wanted to get a pair of silk
+stockings apiece for Adelaide and me. I know she
+wants a pair dreadfully, because she never had them,
+and if I got a pair like them for myself she’d be more
+apt to take them—and—well, I wanted a pair, too!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy registered an inward vow that his Aunt Lydia
+should manage it just as soon as it was humanly possible.
+He knew that she would do more than that for
+Winona, for whom she had conceived a strong liking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor kid, she’s all worked up about it,” he murmured,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207'></a>207</span>
+forgetting his own disappointment, for he, too,
+had hoped that his canoe would get a prize.
+</p>
+<p>
+But help was in sight. About five minutes later
+(though Winona and Billy always swore it was a full
+half hour) they felt a violent rocking, and heard the
+insistent wuff-wuff-wuff of a steam launch.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here, catch a-hold and tie yourself on,” said the
+welcome voice of the marshal out of the darkness,
+without the least waste of words or time.
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as Billy’s excited fingers could do it they
+were fastened to the end of the marshal’s official launch,
+and bobbing off towards the royal float at a tremendous
+rate of speed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How did you come to come hunt for us?” Winona
+called to the marshal as they went.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You were knocked out o’ line an’ got blowed away,
+didn’t you?” answered the marshal.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then we’re going to be judged—we’re going to
+be judged!” she rejoiced. “Oh, do you think we may
+get a prize yet?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shouldn’t wonder but you got something,” said
+the laconic marshal. “Here we be.”
+</p>
+<p>
+He bent over and unfastened them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re late, you see,” he said, “and you’ll just
+have to paddle out an’ get your sentence alone.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona’s heart beat frantically, but she straightened
+up in the canoe, and she and Billy, standing up at
+front and back (it was risky work with the top-heavy
+decorations, but they never thought of that till afterwards),
+paddled out into the open space before the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208'></a>208</span>
+royal float. All the other entries had been judged.
+Over in the place where the prize-winners were Winona
+had time to see that the Camp Fire float and Marie’s
+canoe were herded with the others. So even if she got
+nothing the glory of Camp Karonya was safe. It was
+trying to wait there alone, with everyone staring, but
+it did not last long. The red-and-gold herald came
+forward very soon.
+</p>
+<p>
+“First prize, canoe class!” he said—and Winona
+almost lost her balance. “Awarded to Miss Winona
+Merriam of Camp Karonya, and Mr. William Lee, of
+Boy Scouts’ Patrol Number Six, for their entry ‘The
+Ship of the Fiend.’ Twenty-five dollars.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The clapping burst out again. When it was done
+Winona and Billy started to paddle back to the prize-winners’
+enclosure, but a gesture of the herald stopped
+them. They paused, a little puzzled.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do they want us to say thank you?” wondered
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before Billy could turn the canoe the left-hand
+red-and-gold herald walked forth.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Silver loving cup for greatest originality of conception
+also goes to Miss Merriam and Mr. Lee,” read
+the herald.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were clapped again—they could see Tom, on
+the grandstand, standing up and waving his hat—and
+then at last the marshal beckoned them to cross to the
+sparkling ring of other craft in the background. The
+winning launches, floats, rowboats and canoes were to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209'></a>209</span>
+act as a guard of honor to escort the royal float back to
+the grandstand, where the court carriages for the king
+and queen of the carnival waited.
+</p>
+<p>
+They went to this place at last, and paused by their
+friends, the Camp Fire float and Marie’s canoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We got a fourth prize!” called Marie gayly as
+Winona stopped by her. “Oh, Winona, you darling!
+You always were a mascot!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Marie always was an angel,” thought Winona to
+herself. Edith was not so selfless.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Congratulations, Win,” she said bravely, holding
+out a tinsel-wrapped wrist across the canoes. “I’m
+glad you got it—but I wish we could have had something
+better. I think we deserved it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You certainly did,” said Winona warmly. “But
+it doesn’t much matter, you know, Edith. The main
+thing people will notice is that Camp Karonya landed
+three prizes. And think of that loving-cup sitting up,
+with ‘Won by Camp Karonya,’ on it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Aren’t you going to have your name put on it?”
+asked Edith.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly not!” said Winona. “It’s a Camp
+trophy. I shall put my name on the back of the check
+for twenty-five dollars. That is pleasure enough.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think we’ve ‘done noble,’ all of us,” said Marie.
+The canoes were paddling off by now, but the going was
+slow, and they could still talk.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What did the float get?” asked Winona. “You
+know we were blown off in the dark, and lost track
+of events till the marshal came after us.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210'></a>210</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Second,” answered both girls together.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You were the belle of the ball,” added Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I don’t think we did so badly,” declared
+Edith. “A first, second and a fourth prize all to one
+camp. I hope nobody thinks we got more than our
+share.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We didn’t,” said Winona. “Oh, I’m so happy!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m rather pleased myself,” said Billy’s quiet voice
+from the other end of the canoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+But it was not until the royal float had been escorted
+home, and everything was broken up, and Tom and
+Billy were paddling Winona back to camp, that he said
+what he really thought.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m mighty glad you got that first prize,” he said.
+“You deserved it if anybody ever did, for being such
+a little sport about dropping out of the float. I’d blow
+a lot of that money in right away if I were you, to
+congratulate myself.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“After I’ve paid back what I owe certain people,”
+said Winona, “I shall divide with the Camp treasury.
+Even then I’ll have a lot more than I ever thought of
+getting.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anyway, you were a real sport, and you deserved
+everything that was coming to you,” repeated Billy, in
+which Tom agreed with him. And when your brother
+approves of you and says so you can generally be sure
+that you have done something remarkably right.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211'></a>211</span>CHAPTER NINETEEN</h2>
+<p>
+Next day was the “cold gray dawn of the morning
+after.” Not that it was particularly cold or gray, but
+there was all the unnailing of the float to do, and the
+dismantling of the two decorated canoes. The girls
+wound the tinsel off carefully for use on future Christmas
+trees, and packed away in a box what other decorations
+were not perishable, for you never know when
+you’re going to need things. Otherwise they sat around
+and gloated softly over Camp Karonya’s exceeding
+brilliancy in carrying off prizes in large quantities.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan would not let Winona divide her money
+with the Camp, because they had enough already to see
+them through the rest of the time they were to spend
+there; and then, too, the second prize that the float had
+won was fifteen dollars.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing else memorable happened that day, except
+that Nataly Lee left for home. She was thinner and
+in better condition than she had been when she came,
+but she frankly didn’t like the life. To her, carrying
+water, instead of being a lark, was a nuisance. She had
+no particular pride in working for beads, and it was
+thought she was hungry for paper novels. It worried
+her, too, that she was getting burned brown. So she
+went back to her mother. The girls saw her off, and
+sang her a cheer, and were as good as they could be.
+But it is not to be denied that Camp Karonya felt a
+little relief at her going.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212'></a>212</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+After that nothing happened but regular camp work
+for three days. And then Louise proceeded to distinguish
+herself. It was to be expected.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom and Billy had taken Winona and Louise off
+for a day’s fishing in the canoe. As usual, Winona and
+Louise provided the lunch, the boys the fishing-tackle
+and the canoe, and the fish were to be divided at the end
+of the day. They had fished most of the lazy, sunny
+morning, and it was noon. They climbed out of the
+canoe by a spring, washed their hands, and set out the
+lunch; the canoe was too fishy to be used as a dining-hall.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you think that four of us can possibly eat
+all that?” inquired Billy, eying the piles of sandwiches,
+the veal loaf, the whole cake and the can of pears which
+graced the paper napkins on the grass.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well,” explained Winona, “the truth is, Louise
+and I rather doubled up on this lunch. We were both
+afraid there wouldn’t be enough, and each went separately
+and brought half a chocolate cake. You see it’s
+cut down the middle. I merely joined the twin halves
+for the sake of looks. But do you think that’s too many
+sandwiches for four people with real appetites?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t,” said Tom decidedly. “I’ll attend to
+anything that’s left over. A very nice amount of lunch—just
+right. Watch me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+But they did not watch him because they were
+otherwise engaged. None of them had small appetites,
+and they all did good work. Just the same when they
+were through there were a generous piece of cake, a fat
+slice of veal loaf, and seven sandwiches left.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213'></a>213</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I told you so,” said Billy. “Here, Tommy, it is
+up to you. Have these seven nice sandwiches.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t be done,” said Tom regretfully. “I’ve had
+that many. I had three pieces of cake, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Doesn’t matter!” said Billy. “A gentleman’s
+word of honor——”
+</p>
+<p>
+He prepared to jump on Tom and hold him, while
+Louise held a sandwich ready to insert.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ow!” said Tom. “Help! This is cruelty to
+animals. Pry him off, Winnie!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, let up, please!” said Winona. “You know,
+he might explode, and mother’d feel badly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy took one knee off, and Tom wriggled more
+vigorously. Louise relented, and the two girls were
+trying to pull Billy off Tom. They had almost succeeded,
+when a little rustle behind them made Winona,
+whose senses were the most alert, let go and turn. The
+others followed her eyes. They sat up and looked, and
+Tom jumped to his feet and began to dust himself off.
+</p>
+<p>
+The newcomer, who was a most forlorn and bedraggled
+little girl, spoke very welcome words.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Me’s very hundry!” she said pathetically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You poor little thing!” said Louise. “Come
+here, dear; there’s lots for you to eat.” The little girl
+made straight for her. Louise got out a fresh paper
+napkin, and piled sandwiches, loaf, cake and all on it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait a minute,” said Billy. “Is all that good for so
+little a girl—hadn’t you better give her one at a time?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise held the veal loaf poised in air on her fork.
+“Will your mother let you eat this?” she asked.
+</p>
+<div class='figcenter' style='padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='i006' id='i006'></a>
+<img src="images/illus-214.jpg" alt="THE CHILD BEGAN TO EAT EVERYTHING AT ONCE" title=""/><br />
+<span class='caption'>THE CHILD BEGAN TO EAT EVERYTHING AT ONCE</span>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214'></a>214</span></div>
+<p>
+The bedraggled small child sat down on the grass,
+as if the words were an invitation. She was a pretty,
+dirty child of perhaps five, dressed only in a soiled and
+ragged underwaist and petticoat, and with a mane of
+very long and heavy hair, all tangles and elf-locks.
+Her hair was yellow and her eyes big and blue, and she
+would have been pretty had she been cared-for looking.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ain’t got any mother,” she said, “just Vicky.
+She lets me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor little thing!” said Louise again, and handed
+her the veal loaf. The child began to eat everything at
+once, with an eagerness which made it certain she had
+told the truth, at least, about being hungry.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s your name, kiddie? You’ll tell me, won’t
+you?” asked Billy, when she seemed to have taken the
+edge off her appetite. He bent down to her with a
+sympathetic expression which he possessed at times,
+and which—or something about him—won the hearts of
+most small children he had dealings with.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sandy,” she said through large mouthfuls.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sandy what?” inquired Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sandy Mitchell. Gimme more cake?”
+</p>
+<p>
+As she had had two large slices, it was thought best
+not to give her any more.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mercy, no!” said Winona, as Louise was cutting
+it, in spite of prudence. “Not another bit. We don’t
+want her to die on our hands. You’d better come over
+here by the spring, dear, and let me wash your hands.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Sandy got up immediately, with the placid remark,
+“It might-a given me a pain, anyway,” and allowed her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215'></a>215</span>
+hands to be washed, and dried on a fresh paper napkin.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor little cowed thing!” exclaimed Louise at
+this instant obedience. “Sandy, dear, won’t your people
+be worried about you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nope,” said Sandy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And where do you live?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Way, way off,” she said. “We just comed. I’ll
+show you to-morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor little dear thing!” said Louise. “How
+pretty she is! Winnie, I’ve a good mind to adopt her.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Having only five at home,” murmured Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“From the way she talks her people wouldn’t care,”
+said Louise. “Maybe Camp Karonya could take care
+of her. We will till we go back, anyway.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She must belong to one of those poor families
+along the west branch,” said Tom. “Three miles
+away, and we can’t possibly get there by canoeing, because
+we’d have to paddle back seven miles before we
+could paddle over the three. Who’s going to walk
+three miles and a half by the thermometer to take the
+lady home? Don’t all speak at once.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you live up there?” Louise asked her. “And
+does your father drink?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yep,” said Sandy. “Favver? Course he dwinks.
+Evvybody dwinks.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Think of being brought up to think things like
+that,” said Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t you think,” suggested Winona, “that we’d
+better take her back to camp? I don’t know the way
+to the place Tom talks about, and maybe it would be best
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216'></a>216</span>
+for Mrs. Bryan to take her anyway, if they do drink.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good idea,” said everybody. Sandy herself
+seemed pleased, and attached herself to them as readily
+as a stray puppy would have done. They cleared up
+leisurely, then got back into the canoe, taking the child
+in, too. It was rather a close fit, though it was an
+eighteen-foot canoe, but they managed it. She was no
+more trouble than Puppums would have been—Puppums,
+fortunately, had been left with Florence. They
+had a good day with the fishing, and trailed into Camp
+Karonya at six with fish for breakfast; and Sandy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good luck!” were Tom’s parting words. “We’ll
+come to-morrow and help you take her back, if you
+like.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You needn’t bother,” said his sister. “We’ll take
+the faithful rowboat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We aren’t going to take her back!” insisted
+Louise. “I’m going to adopt her. Sandy, wouldn’t
+you like to live with me? <em>I’d</em> dress you in nice clothes
+and give you a dolly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“An’ five cents?” demanded Sandy, “An’ things
+to eat?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, the poor baby!” said Louise. “She’s had
+to think about money and food and grown-up things
+like the poor little children you read about in the pamphlets.
+Yes, indeed, you shall, Sandy.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She looks well-fed,” said Tom. “Well, good
+luck. Don’t get a reputation for collecting them—you
+mayn’t be able to dispose of orphans as easily as you
+can kittens.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217'></a>217</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+They parted, and Louise carried Sandy into camp.
+They arrived as supper was about ready. The Blue
+Birds carried the fish off to the ice-box (it was literally
+a box, a very ingenious arrangement of sawdust and
+wood which had meant a bead for Elizabeth) and the
+rest clustered about Louise’s treasure-trove.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Better find out if she really needs adopting,” advised
+Marie as they sat around the long table, and Sandy
+exercised an appetite as large as her noon one.
+</p>
+<p>
+“With a drunken father, and no mother, and looking
+like that?” fired up Louise. “I’m going to wash
+her after supper.”
+</p>
+<p>
+There seemed no connection between washing her
+and adopting her, but there evidently was to Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Want me to help?” offered Winona. “It ought
+to be more fun than washing Puppums.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I hope she won’t howl and try to climb over the
+side of the tub, the way he does,” said Louise. “Yes,
+thank you, I’d love to be helped.”
+</p>
+<p>
+A warm bath in a foot-tub, following directly on a
+large meal of corn fritters, baked potatoes and huckle-berries,
+ought nearly to have killed Sandy, but it didn’t.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I never dreamed you meant to do more than wash
+her face and hands,” protested Marie, who, as the
+guardian of the Blue Birds, had ideas about such things.
+But it was too late. Anyway, there was no visible
+effect. Sandy awakened next morning, well, happy, and
+still hungry. They had given her Nataly’s bunk with
+Mrs. Bryan. Helen bunked with Elizabeth, because
+Nataly said the girls tossed, and Mrs. Bryan didn’t.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218'></a>218</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+While Sandy slept Louise and Winona were busy.
+Louise woke Winona at five, and they heated water,
+filled the charcoal-iron, and washed and ironed and
+mended Sandy’s underclothes. While Louise darned
+Sandy’s socks, Winona ironed the garments dry. Then
+they foraged about the store-shed, which was a warm
+place at that time of year even in the early morning,
+and found a white dress of Florence’s which Winona
+thought she had remembered bringing.
+</p>
+<p>
+When found it proved much too large for Sandy,
+but Louise was still enthusiastic, and took it up with
+such good will that two of the tucks she put in had to
+be ripped out again when they came to dress Sandy in it.
+They polished the small strapped shoes the child had
+taken off, sewed the button of each on more firmly,
+and decided that they looked almost new.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Winona went back to awaken her own little
+sister. When she returned to Louise’s tent she found
+her friend had finished giving Sandy another bath.
+She was just dressing her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t believe this poor little thing knows what
+a thorough bath is,” she greeted Winona over the child’s
+head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I do, too,” said Sandy. “But I had one last
+night, an’ you’ve been an’ given me anuvver now!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think I’ll box her hair, too,” went on Louise.
+“It is getting rather common now, but she has so much,
+and it’s so untidy, that it would really be the best thing
+even if I didn’t keep her.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wouldn’t do her hair till you’re sure we’re going
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219'></a>219</span>
+to keep her,” objected Winona. “Her people mightn’t
+like it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“A dissipated father and a poor little overworked
+elder sister—Vicky is your sister, isn’t she, Sandy?—and
+a home where they don’t even wash or feed her?
+Poor people haven’t time to take care of hair like this.
+Anyway, they haven’t done it, for it was tangled
+awfully,” she finished conclusively.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But it’s so pretty!” protested Winona. “Just
+look at it, nearly to her waist, and thick and curly,
+and such a lovely gold color!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So much the worse for her health,” said Louise
+as promptly as Red-Riding-Hood’s wolf. “Sandy,
+wouldn’t you like your hair cut nice and short, so it
+wouldn’t get tangled any more?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“An’ twousers?” demanded Sandy hopefully.
+“Gee, zat’s gweat!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll have to stop her using slang,” said Louise.
+“No, dear, not exactly twousers, but—I could get her
+some overalls, couldn’t I, Win?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I suppose so,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I will,” said Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re gweat, too,” said Sandy, turning around
+where she sat on Louise’s lap, and throwing both little
+bare arms around her neck and kissing her. Louise
+kissed her back warmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t she a dear?” she said. “Winnie, will you
+please hand me the scissors?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” said Winona, “I won’t. It’s wicked to spoil
+pretty hair like that.” And she walked out of the tent.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220'></a>220</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll det ’em,” said Sandy, slipping down and bringing
+them to Louise from the table at the end of the tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here’s a piece of ribbon to tie it with, if you won’t
+cut it off,” said Winona, reappearing with a wide length
+of blue taffeta.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, thank you,” said Louise, cutting industriously
+and very neatly. “It would just be in her eyes all the
+time. I’m going to cut it straight across her eyebrows,
+like a little boy’s.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I did it to all my dolls once,” said Winona. She
+sat down, though, and watched Louise till she was done.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise had washed the little girl’s hair when she
+gave her the second bath, and when it was even and
+short enough to suit her she finished dressing the child
+in her white frock, and set her on the grass outside, to
+dry in the sunshine. She gave her a picture book to look
+at to keep her amused. The bobbed locks, thick and
+curly, fluffed out charmingly in a yellow bush around
+the sweet little face.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s becoming,” admitted Winona. “She looks
+like a cherub, or a choir-boy on a Christmas card.
+There is the signal for breakfast. You just got her dry
+in time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Breakfast?” said Sandy, brightening.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor little darling!” said Louise, catching and
+kissing her. “I don’t believe she ever had anything
+to eat before she came here!”
+</p>
+<p>
+They went to breakfast in state, and Sandy’s golden
+aureole and clean white frock made quite a sensation
+at the table. They piled things up for her to sit on, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221'></a>221</span>
+she was put where Mrs. Bryan could reach her, and
+argue with her easily if she misbehaved. But she acted
+very well indeed. Her table-manners were good, considering,
+she talked without the least shyness, and managed
+to eat a very large breakfast. Louise beamed with
+pride over the impression her protegee was making.
+</p>
+<p>
+When breakfast was over, and Sandy turned loose
+again to play with Puppums and Florence, to whom
+she had taken a violent fancy, Louise packed a market-basket
+with everything a starving family might need.
+Then she found her purse, summoned Winona, and
+they took the rowboat and went forth, Sandy and
+Puppums in the bottom of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+They rowed along the west branch, a narrow stream
+that doubled at right angles from the branch the camps
+were on. It was lined with pretty summer cottages for
+a part of the way, then after that, at the very end, came
+a part that was filled with poor people who had squatted
+there. But long before they came to the poorest part
+Sandy desired to land.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here we is!” she said cheerfully, at a prosperous-looking
+dock about a third of the way up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not here, dearie,” said Louise. “It’s probably
+some place where the poor child’s been fed,” she added
+aside to Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We may as well get out, though, mayn’t we?”
+suggested Winona. “Maybe they can tell us where
+she comes from.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They tied the boat and got out, and walked down a
+deep lane for a while. Presently they came to a large
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222'></a>222</span>
+white house in the middle of a couple of acres of half-yard,
+half-lawn looking land.
+</p>
+<p>
+The doors and windows were all wide open, but
+there was no one to be seen. Sandy walked into the hall
+with an assured tread, took a long breath, and called
+at the top of her lungs, “Vicky! Vick-ee!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls stood at the door and waited, ready to
+apologize for their charge’s rudeness whenever somebody
+might appear. In about five minutes, during
+which Sandy continued to shout, they heard a light,
+slow step along the upper hall. Presently a slim, dark,
+rather pretty little girl of about eleven scuffed down the
+stairs. She had on a kimono over her nightgown,
+though it was quite late in the morning.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That you, Sand?” she called as she came. “Goodness,
+you’re up early!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is Vicky,” Sandy explained to the girls over
+her shoulder. “Vicky! I’ve had two baths!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise stood, for once, speechless. She hung
+mechanically to the handle of the basketful of provisions,
+but she was too surprised to move. It was Winona
+who finally took courage to come forward and explain.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m Winona Merriam,” she said, “and this is my
+friend, Louise Lane. We are over at Camp Karonya,
+the Camp Fire, you know. We found this little girl
+yesterday, and we came over to-day to bring her home.
+Does she—does she belong here?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, of course she does,” said Vicky. “Thank
+you for bringing her. She’s always trailing off that
+way, aren’t you, Sand? How long you been gone?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223'></a>223</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is she your sister?” asked Louise, who had her
+breath by this time.
+</p>
+<p>
+“M’hm,” nodded Vicky. “Why—why, Alexandra
+Mitchell, where’s your hair?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It got boxed!” exclaimed Sandy gleefully.
+“Isn’t it nice?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m afraid we’ll have to explain about that,” said
+Winona bravely. “Your little sister strayed into a
+little fishing-trip four of us were having yesterday, very
+hungry and rather dirty, and without all her clothes on.
+And from the way she talked we thought she was—well,
+we washed her and dressed her, and—I’m sorry—shortened
+her hair, it was so tangled. I’m ever so
+sorry. I think it will grow——”
+</p>
+<p>
+Vicky stared a minute at Alexandra, very proud
+of herself, neat, clean, dressed and bobbed. Then instead
+of being angry she sat down on the floor, where
+she was, and burst into a fit of laughter.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You thought—you thought—oh, my <em>goodness!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Winona. She sat down, too, and finally
+went off herself. “Yes—we <em>did!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And you brought food for the hungry family——”
+Vicky’s eye fell on the large basket which
+Louise still held stiffly before her. “Oh, oh, oh! And
+Uncle Will’s pride, Sandy’s hair, that he made a picture
+of that sold for ever so much money—oh, my goodness
+<em>gracious!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+She and Winona both began to laugh again. Louise
+didn’t. She stood against the wall like a wax statue.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly is funny,” said Vicky at last, mopping
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224'></a>224</span>
+her eyes, “but I’m good and glad about Sandy’s hair.
+It was an awful nuisance to take care of, and Uncle Will
+<em>would</em> keep it that way so he could paint pictures of it.
+Won’t you stay and have some breakfast? We have a
+cook.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, thank you,” said Louise hurriedly, “we’ve
+had our breakfast.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What an awful noise, children!” said a voice; and
+a rather rumpled man appeared. He had an absent
+look, and also gave an impression of not having been
+to bed all night. He had a paint-brush in his hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+Vicky and Sandy sprang for him, hanging to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Uncle Will, this is two Camp Fire girls,”
+said Sandy. “They cutted my hair when I was lost.
+Ain’t it cute?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“<em>Oh!</em>” said Uncle Will, and looked as aghast as
+Louise had. “How did this accident happen?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It wasn’t an accident,” said Sandy. “Louise
+boxed my head, an’ gived me two baths!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Uncle Will—so far as the girls learned that was all
+the name he had—uttered another faint exclamation.
+Then he dived back into his room as if he wanted to
+bear the shock alone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m so sorry!” said Winona, who found she had
+all the talking to do. “I’m afraid your uncle doesn’t
+like it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, he’s only got an artistic temp’rament,” said
+Vicky, as if it were a disease uncles could not help.
+“I think Sandy’s goin’ to, too. Do stay to breakfast.
+We’ll have things out o’ your basket if you will.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225'></a>225</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, thank you,” said Winona. “I think Louise is
+in a hurry to go home. Come over and see us. It isn’t
+far if you have a boat.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll get somebody to bring us,” said Vicky.
+“I’d come now if I was dressed.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It wouldn’t be a bad plan if you dressed a little
+earlier,” said Winona frankly. “Are there just you
+two?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nope,” said Vicky, “there’s Lancy, too. He’s
+eight. Uncle Will tries to bring us up, but he don’t
+know how so very well.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, when you come down to camp we can tell
+you a lot of things if you’d like us to,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe,” said Vicky indifferently. “But it’s all
+right this way. You can try telling us, though.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, good-bye,” said Louise—it was all she had
+contributed to the conversation, but she seemed to
+contribute it gladly.
+</p>
+<p>
+So they went, still carrying the basket.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait!” called Sandy’s voice behind them when
+they had gone a little way. “I’m goin’ back wiv you!
+You said you’d ’dopted me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But we didn’t know your uncle wasn’t poor then,”
+said Louise. “We can’t take you away from him.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You ’dopted me,” said Sandy doggedly, “an’ I’m
+goin’ wiv you—so there!” And she thrust her wet
+little hand into Louise’s and trotted along beside them.
+“Louise—wasn’t there cake in the basket?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have cake at home, dear,” said Louise. But
+she looked as if she felt a little better. After all, even
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226'></a>226</span>
+if an orphan didn’t need adopting, it was a pleasure to
+find that she liked it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Like you best,” insisted Sandy. “Goin’ to stay
+wiv you. They don’t care!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, let’s let her, just for to-day, anyhow!” said
+Winona. “I don’t believe anybody’ll mind.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Louise rather as if she wanted
+to. They got into the boat again, and rowed to camp.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sandy,” asked Louise, “what did you mean by
+saying your father drank? You haven’t any father.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I did have,” said Sandy. “And of sourse
+he did dwink when there was a him. Evvybody does.
+Little flowers do. My governess said so.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Your <em>governess!</em>” said Louise. “Is your uncle
+rich enough for you to have a governess—and you go
+trailing round in your underwaist and petticoat!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“When he draws pictures an’ sells ’em he is. When
+he don’t he don’t. Gimme some cake?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Sandy was evidently quite calm about her way of
+living.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She mayn’t need adopting, but she certainly needs
+reforming,” said Louise vigorously.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were paddling past the Scouts’ camp by now.
+Louise was quite willing to go past softly, but Sandy
+yelled, for she saw Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hello, girls!” he called. “Back already? Got
+all the papers signed?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I haven’t,” said Louise. “And, Billy, if you
+ask me any more questions, I’ll jump over and drown!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227'></a>227</span>CHAPTER TWENTY</h2>
+<p>
+The Camp Fire might all grin broadly whenever it
+spoke of Louise’s adoption—even more broadly than
+it had at Winona’s cat-collection: but the adoptee herself
+was quite serious about it. Adopted she was by
+the Camp Fire in general and Louise in particular, and
+adopted she meant to stay. She went home once in
+awhile—there was nobody to worry about her, it
+seemed, when she stayed away—but as a rule she considered
+herself a Camp Fire Girl. She was too young
+to be a Blue Bird, but that didn’t make any difference.
+Finally she was given the official position of third sub-mascot,
+ranking after Puppums and Hike the Camp
+Cat. Unofficially, she got better training than she
+appeared to have had for some time, for she knew that
+to stay in Camp she had to obey rules. Vicky never
+did come over. Once in awhile they would return
+Sandy to her home, just for politeness, but it didn’t seem
+to be specially required of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We ought to have a grand entertainment,” declared
+Marie one day, “and invite all the summer people
+who bought our things.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” Louise approved, “and then, perhaps, if
+we made them happy, they’d buy some more.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I was thinking of charging for the entertainment,”
+demurred Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But wouldn’t it be piling things up just a wee
+bit too much?” asked Louise.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228'></a>228</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Perhaps,” admitted Marie.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What were you thinking of having?” asked
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was at the end of a weekly Council Fire, and the
+girls were lying about, as usual, on the hill.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I was wondering”—from Marie a little doubtfully—“if
+we could have some tableaux from Maeterlinck,
+with readings. I could do the readings.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s Maeterlinck?” asked Louise cheerfully.
+“Something good to eat?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, you goose!” instructed Marie. “He wrote
+the ‘Blue Bird,’ and—oh, a lot of plays.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nice ones?” asked Louise. “Lots of people running
+around doing exciting things?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” admitted Marie. “Nothing much happens.
+But it’s very elevating.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t feel as if I wanted to be elevated, somehow,”
+said Louise firmly, “and I’m sure those summer
+people don’t; they come here to relax and enjoy themselves,
+and when they want something really high-brow
+they go to the movies and see bears and lions eating
+each other. They can do that right in the place itself.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t believe they’d come to a Maeterlinck show,
+either, Marie,” so said Mrs. Bryan. “We can take
+him up to read this winter, if the girls want to know
+more about him. But he isn’t exactly the author for a
+summer entertainment—especially if we want to make
+money.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We do,” said Marie who had a strictly practical
+side to her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229'></a>229</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Does it have to be an author?” Helen wanted to
+know.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It seems to,” said Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have an idea!” exclaimed Winona, sitting up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is it an author?” asked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes!” said Winona, “it is!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well?” from everybody.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Samantha Allen!” cried Winona eagerly. “My
+plan’s this. Have somebody dress like Samantha—you
+know the pictures—and tell all about herself to begin
+with. Then we could make a big, wooden frame—we
+have those boards left from the float—and Samantha
+could turn over the leaves of the album, and describe the
+characters in her books one by one, as they were shown
+in the frame. We could call it ‘Samantha’s Picter-Album,’
+or something like that.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I saw an entertainment that was something of that
+sort once,” said Adelaide. “But it was just a frame
+with old-fashioned pictures, like daguerrotypes. There
+wasn’t any Samantha, or any talking. I should think
+this would be lots better. But would it last a whole
+evening, and make the Wampoag people think they’d
+had their money’s worth?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think so,” said Louise. “And anyway, if it
+wasn’t so very long we could amuse the visitors by
+showing them over the camp, and telling them all about
+our customs and habits. Maybe we could do a folk-dance
+for them afterwards.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes, of course we could!” said Edith, whose
+specialty it was. “We could give them an Indian
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230'></a>230</span>
+dance as easy as anything, and that Russian one I
+learned before I came. I can teach it to eight of us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know how to dance the minuet,” suggested
+Helen. “How many had it in that Washington’s Birthday
+thing Miss Green’s class had last year?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Five had, it seemed. As a minuet only needs ten
+performers it was very simple to polish that up. And
+all of them knew Indian dances already. So a committee
+was appointed to get up the costumes. The Indian
+dresses were there already. For the Russian dance
+Edith thought head-dresses of paper muslin would do
+and aprons of colored scrim, over white skirts and
+turned-under, slipped-under-the-skirt middy blouses.
+For the minuet—well, there was cheese-cloth in red
+and yellow that Marie had had on her canoe; everyone
+could powder her hair and contrive a ’kerchief. The
+pannier draperies could be pinned into place, and broad
+bodices of Winona’s black paper muslin from the canoe-trimming
+could be cut and pinned into place with very
+little trouble. Helen and Edith and Adelaide were told
+off to see about the costuming; Edith, as she had to train
+the others in dancing, had nothing but supervision to do.
+Helen and Adelaide did what little actual work was
+needed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The main thing this entertainment needs seems to
+be pins,” said Helen the third day after they had decided
+to have it. It was a Thursday, and they planned
+the affair for the next Monday night. “We’re nearly
+out of them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So eight papers of pins were bought, not to speak
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231'></a>231</span>
+of a good deal of white paper muslin. The girls were
+assigned their different characters in the Album, and
+each left to her own cleverness in getting up the costume.
+About midway in the preparations it suddenly
+dawned on the girls, who had gotten all the Samantha
+books from the Wampoag library, and had their families
+send them on the ones they owned, that boys were
+needed.
+</p>
+<p>
+So a committee consisting of all the sisters was sent
+up the lake to borrow Boy Scouts. It wasn’t the easiest
+thing in the world, for boys seem to dislike “dressing
+up” as much as girls like it; but Mr. Gedney was Camp
+Karonya’s friend, and they went back with all the boys
+they needed promised them—if they would look after
+the costumes and not expect the Scouts to rehearse.
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise was appointed a Committee of Tickets, with
+Elizabeth to help her. Louise was a born ticket-seller.
+She loved it. She and Elizabeth put in most of their
+waking hours exchanging bits of ecru cardboard with
+small red things on them (meant for Camp Fires) for
+thirty-five cents. And they did very well. They got
+permission of all the drug-stores and many other stores,
+to put up posters, which were camp-made, also, of
+course. So by the time the fateful night arrived quite
+a goodly crowd was ferried over to Camp Karonya by
+the Scouts’ canoes.
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+At eight precisely the audience, accommodated on
+long planks which reached from box to box, saw a
+curtain pulled away from between two trees. Nothing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232'></a>232</span>
+was to be seen in its place but a plump red album standing
+out against a background which represented every
+sheet in the camp. They had used Marie’s red cheese-cloth
+after all, instead of Winona’s black paper muslin.
+As for the framework, that was a work of art for which
+several of the girls were responsible. It had taken all
+the manual training they knew, and a little bit more—they
+had had to call Tom Merriam, whose hobby was
+carpentry, before they got it all right—but the general
+effect was gorgeous. The audience was given a fair
+amount of time to appreciate the beauty of the album,
+which was about eight feet high. Then Marie stepped
+out. She had been elected to the very responsible part
+of Samantha because her memory was good, rather than
+because she looked it. But she had done excellently
+with what means she had. Two small pillows for a
+foundation, a pink wrapper with large black spots,
+sent on from home, an elderly bonnet borrowed from a
+friendly farmer’s wife, a substantial gingham apron,
+spectacles, a Paisley shawl, and a large palm-leaf fan,
+completed a get-up that would have disguised Marie
+Hunter effectually from her own best friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+When she thought she had waited long enough to
+give the audience a chance to appreciate her she curtsied,
+and reaching over, pulled at the album cover with the
+crock of a green-handled umbrella. The inside page
+of the album was imitated by a frame with white muslin
+tightly stretched over it, and an oval hole in the middle
+for the picture. In the hole just now was a meek,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233'></a>233</span>
+chin-whiskered face surrounded by a high collar—Mr. Gedney,
+normally. Samantha pointed to this proudly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Brethren and sisteren,” began Samantha, after she
+had introduced herself, “this here is my lawful, though
+sometimes wayward, pardner Josiah Allen. I was married
+to him in a brand-new green silk gown, made
+pollynay, and Mother Jones’s parlor, come twenty year
+ago. Our mutual affection has been a beakin ever since,
+though I can’t deny it has sputtered some once in awhile,
+and burned purty low, tryin’ times like house-cleanin’
+an’ wash-days.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She went on with the famous tale of “How the
+Bamberses borrowed Josiah,” cutting it short when she
+heard the tiny bell behind the scene tinkle, as a signal
+that another picture was ready. Then she jerked the
+cover to with her umbrella-handle, and operated it
+again. This time the inside leaf had been fastened back
+with the lid, for this was a full-sized picture. The
+audience, by this time, was laughing at nearly everything
+she said, for Marie was a capital mimic, and she
+had picked out and strung together all the funniest
+things she could find in the Samantha Allen books.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This here,” announced Samantha, “is my step-children,
+Thomas Jefferson and Tirzah Ann. They
+ain’t bad children, if I do say it as shouldn’t, and I
+have brung ’em up like they wuz my own.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona was Tirzah. She sat stiffly in a high-backed
+chair (the back was pasteboard, covered with black muslin,
+cut in a Chippendale sort of way) and she wore a
+full, flowered gown, with her hair looped over her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234'></a>234</span>
+ears and fastened in the back to a “chignon” with two
+fat curls hanging from it. They had put Tom with her,
+with a view to mutual support. He, too, had a preposterous
+collar (collars may be made by the dozen if
+you have scissors and patience, and the Camp Fire Girls
+had both) and a flowered vest. His baggy clothes and
+a tall hat at his feet completed a picture that was so
+much like the ones you do see in old albums that the
+audience began to clap before Marie was through her
+introduction.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Woof!” said Tom when he got out of the frame.
+“Never again for me!” He turned to grin at Billy, who
+had still to go on. Billy was supposed to be ‘Submit
+Tewksbury’s beau, a dashin’ city feller,’ and he was trying
+to get an appropriate amount of dash into his
+mustaches.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Every time I go up against Camp Karonya,” responded
+Billy sadly, “I have to do something that needs
+a lot of stiffening. I had to work two hours over that
+fiend tail of mine, and these whiskers are just as bad.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’ll be worse when you have real ones,” remarked
+Louise consolingly. She was acting as putter-on-of-finishing-touches.
+There was a dressing-tent apiece for
+the girls and boys, and Billy was on the outside of his,
+trying to arrange the mustache to his liking by means
+of a small mirror pinned to the canvas.
+</p>
+<p>
+“At least I won’t have to worry about their sticking
+on,” was his reply.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There,” said Louise, “they’ll do now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Billy and Adelaide wanted!” called Edith.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235'></a>235</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide, on account of a mournful expression that
+still appeared at times, had been selected for “Submit
+Tewksbury,” who had a broken heart and was good to
+one relative after another for thirty years or more.
+She had been told to look as sad as she possibly could,
+and she was posed with a medicine bottle and spoon,
+with which she had just—so Samantha explained—been
+nursing her relatives. Billy, behind her, looked
+very cheerful and debonair with his jaunty mustache
+and a very gaudy shirt which—so he said afterwards—he
+had bought especially for the occasion, for thirty-nine
+cents marked down from fifty. It had a large,
+spotty pattern on it, and it looked <em>very</em> festive.
+</p>
+<p>
+The tableaux went smoothly on. Marie remembered
+all her lines, the audience appeared to enjoy it
+all very much, when suddenly in the midst of a speech
+she remembered something, and halted, secretly referring
+to the list of pictures which was pinned inside her
+palm-leaf fan. Widder Doodle, Submit Tewksbury,
+Elder Minkley, Maggie Snow—yes, they were four
+past Betsy Bobbet, the crowning glory of the evening,
+and no Betsy Bobbet had there been! Marie pulled
+herself together and thought a minute, talking on
+meanwhile.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Brethren and sisteren,” she said, “I hope you’ll
+excuse me for a minute. My wind’s a gittin’ low, and
+my new congress gaiters pinch me some. I’m goin’ to
+ask you to wait a bit, till I fetch me a drink of water.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The audience laughed, and clapped, as it had been
+doing most of the evening, and Samantha scuttled distractedly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236'></a>236</span>
+behind the scenes, where she clutched the nearest
+person to her. It happened to be Mrs. Bryan, who
+was making up one of the boys under a light.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where’s Betsy Bobbet—I mean Lilian Green?”
+she asked hurriedly. “It’s way past her turn, and she’s
+never been in at all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, my dear, didn’t anyone tell you?” said Mrs.
+Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They couldn’t,” said Marie. “I’ve been out front
+all this time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m awfully sorry,” said Mrs. Bryan. “Can’t
+you do without her? She slipped and tore her costume
+so badly that it wasn’t fit to appear in. She could pose,
+of course, but the tears would show.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I went right down over a tent-pole,” explained
+Lilian, appearing to speak for herself. She was indeed
+badly torn, not to speak of the fact that she was limping
+a little. Her bonnet and veil—a green mosquito-netting
+veil—were wrecked—and she had managed to muddy
+herself thoroughly, too.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You certainly made a thorough job of it!” exclaimed
+Marie. “But oh, Mrs. Bryan, what shall I
+do? I’ve been talking about her all the evening—leading
+up to her. She’s the keystone of the whole performance.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It would be a case of Hamlet with Hamlet left
+out without her, then, would it?” queried Mrs. Bryan.
+“My dear, I don’t know what to say. If Lilian were
+damaged somebody else could supply her place, but we
+haven’t any understudy for Lilian’s clothes!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237'></a>237</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“There’s only one thing to do,” offered Winona,
+coming over from a group of girls. “Have her go on
+anyway, Marie, and make up something to explain why
+she looks so funny. Explain why she’s so torn and
+crumpled—make a joke of it, so they’ll think it was all
+on purpose.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winnie, you’re the pride of my life!” vowed
+Marie. “I’ll have to do just that. It will be hard,”
+she added doubtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no, it won’t,” and Winona laughed reassuringly,
+“you’re the cleverest one of us, and if you can’t
+make up some reason why Betsy Bobbet looks mussed,
+nobody can. Now go on out and do it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She gave her a little push.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ray-of-Light, you’re a dear!” Marie said affectionately
+as she turned and went out. “Put Lilian in
+the frame just as she is, please,” she said. “I think
+I can manage it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Lilian laughed a little at the idea of displaying herself
+to two hundred summer people looking as if she
+had come out of a subway accident, but she got into
+position like the good-natured girl she was, and Marie
+heard the little bell and began to make her impromptu
+explanation.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My friend, Betsy Bobbet, she’s a considerable kind
+of a curis person,” she said. “She’s sorter sentimental,
+an’ sometimes she’s too impulsive. Now, just before
+she had this daguerrotype took that I’m goin’ to show
+you, she was writin’ a pome to the Muse. This is how
+it went:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238'></a>238</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Muse&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Poetry<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;would&nbsp;&nbsp;do&nbsp;&nbsp;much&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;thee<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;am&nbsp;&nbsp;full&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;tears<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;have&nbsp;&nbsp;been&nbsp;&nbsp;writin’&nbsp;&nbsp;so&nbsp;&nbsp;many&nbsp;&nbsp;years<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And&nbsp;&nbsp;still&nbsp;&nbsp;unappreciated&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;be—<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+“Betsy can write pomes like that any time,” explained
+Marie, and the audience giggled. “But I always
+tell Betsy,” Marie went on, “that walkin’ cross-lots ain’t
+any place to compose poetry to Muses. Well, she was
+walkin’ ’cross-lots in a brown study an’ a red-striped
+morey waist, speakin’ this out loud as she went. An’
+she got to gesturin’ before she thought. An’ Farmer
+Peedick, him that married Jane Ann Allen, had jest let
+his best bull out in the field. An’ whether it was the
+red morey waist or the pome Betsy never did know,
+but she thinks it was the pome. She says she thinks
+the bull, not bein’ used to fust-class poetry, was excited.
+So he just up an’ ran after her. Well, she stopped
+recitin’, an’ ran, too. She jest got over the barb-wire
+fence in time. But I tell you, Betsy Bobbet is a wonderful
+woman! When she was safe she fixed that bull
+with her eye (it was a poet’s eye, she says to me), an’
+recited the remainder of that ode to him. An’, ladies
+an’ gentlemen, you mayn’t believe it, but that bull was
+cowed! Yes, sir. He looked at her, Betsy says to me,
+as if he was sayin’ ‘I can’t stand that!’ an’ he ran.
+Yes, sir, he just ran!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She pulled aside the frame, and there smirked
+Betsy, very stiff and proper, with her bonnet and veil
+still a wreck and her red morey waist very much
+askew, and with a jagged rent down the front of her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239'></a>239</span>
+skirt. But her corkscrew curls twisted gracefully down
+either side of her face, her eyes were rolled up, and
+her mitted hand clutched a roll of paper. The audience
+howled.
+</p>
+<p>
+Marie closed the cover, bowed, and went on to the
+end of the pictures.
+</p>
+<p>
+The dances—the Indian dance, the minuet and the
+Russian dance—were beautiful and everyone applauded
+them, though they liked the Indian dance best. When
+they had finished some of the guests, to Louise’s great
+delight, demanded Camp Fire work, and bought it,
+too. After that the girls distributed coffee and sandwiches
+free, and then the Scouts took the audience, in
+relays, up the river to Wampoag.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before they went somebody said to Marie:
+</p>
+<p>
+“My dear, you were splendid. I’m going to give
+that entertainment for our church this winter, and write
+to you for help. But the most convincing and amusing
+picture of the lot was ‘Betsy Bobbet.’ Do tell me how
+you ever managed to make the thing so life-like?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But Marie merely looked modest.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We did the best we could,” she said. “It was
+quite simple, after all.”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240'></a>240</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE</h2>
+<p>
+The next time Billy and Tom and Winona and
+Louise went off in Billy’s canoe for the day, they did
+not take Sandy. She happened to be making one of
+her brief visits home. They took, instead, a shot-gun
+apiece (that is, the boys did), a book apiece (that was
+for the girls), a bagful of socks from the Scouts’
+mending-basket, and the usual amount of lunch.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We look like an Italian moving,” Tom observed
+critically, looking over their joint baggage. “Three
+fishing-rods, two baskets, two paddles, two guns, two
+sunbonnets. Whew! Louise, I’ll trade with you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t much at all,” said Louise indignantly. “I
+could carry my share, and yours, too, if I had to.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You may,” he returned promptly. “Here’s my
+rifle. It won’t go off unless you hit the trigger by
+accident.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Heap big chief!” said she, not offering to take
+it. “If I’d remembered how you hated carrying innocent
+little things like this around with you”—she
+pointed to the imposing pile of baskets, books and work
+in the bottom of the canoe—“I’d have telephoned for
+an expressman.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have you a telephone?” asked Tom. “When
+did you put it in, and what did you tie it to?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” said Louise, “but we could have borrowed
+yours.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The Scouts had just finished installing a telephone
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241'></a>241</span>
+from Wampoag to their headquarters. They had done
+nearly everything themselves in the way of connecting
+and so forth. They were very proud of it, and the
+Camp Fire girls were wildly envious, for all <em>they</em> had
+was a system of baking-powder-box-and-wire telephone,
+worked out from the American Girl’s Handy
+Book by two young geniuses. It was all right as far as
+it went, but naturally it wouldn’t connect them with the
+telephones at home, or at Wampoag.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, of course you could,” consented Tom. “In
+fact, you can. Shall I paddle you that way?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You needn’t mind,” she smiled. “Do look at
+Winona!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona had one of Marie’s books, and she was sitting
+on the bottom reading it, forgetful of the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What does this mean, Billy?” as she looked up
+suddenly. “Marie has a note here in pencil ‘But
+Raleigh was not exclusively Elizabethan!’ and two exclamation
+points after it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know,” Billy answered frankly. “I don’t
+see why Marie wants to worry about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Raleigh was Gothic with Queen Anne chimneys,”
+interrupted Tom. “If you want information just come
+to me, little one. Here, Winnie, put down that book.
+It looks too full of useful information for a nice day
+like this. Remember, this is a pleasure exertion.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” and Winona laid down the book.
+“Only I do wish I knew as much as Marie does.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And yet she never seems to study hard,” remarked
+Louise, to whom lessons were a painful grind. “I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242'></a>242</span>
+believe she’s like Billy Wiggs of the Cabbage-Patch—she
+‘inherited her education from her paw!’”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She could!” put in Tom mournfully. “Professor
+Hunter has enough and too much. Just wait till you
+get under him, Louise!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I can wait. I’m in no hurry at all. He’s
+awfully nice out of school hours, but——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But why talk about school in vacation?” broke in
+Billy impatiently. “Isn’t it a lovely day?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls were curled on the bottom of the canoe, in
+the middle, and the boys were paddling at the ends.
+The morning breeze, cool and fresh, struck their faces,
+whipping Louise’s red hair about her face in little curls,
+and blowing Winona’s blue tie straight back over her
+shoulder in the sunshine.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is something like living!” Tom declared,
+spatting the water with his paddle because he was so
+happy. “Pass me about three bananas, will you, whoever’s
+nearest the lunch? I feel hungry.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You aren’t,” said Louise swiftly. “You just
+want those bananas because you know they’re there.
+Have some poetry instead. I brought a bookful.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poetry!” snorted Tom, as she hoped he would.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Cæsar! There’s a snipe!” cried Billy, dropping
+his paddle, reaching for a rifle, and taking hasty aim.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never touched it,” mocked Tom as the report
+died, and the snipe appeared not to have done so at all.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How do you come to be carrying all these shooting-irons
+around?” asked Louise suspiciously. “I
+thought Mr. Gedney was pretty strict about it.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243'></a>243</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Special permission,” explained Tom. “We’ve
+both always known how to shoot, and old Billy here is
+supposed to be the most careful thing that ever was.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That wasn’t a snipe,” said Billy disgustedly.
+“That was a mosquito, a nice tame old Jersey mosquito.
+I always heard they grew to that size, but I
+never believed it before.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t cast any asparagus,” said Louise. “The
+advertisements say there are no mosquitoes here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy eyed the now almost gone snipe.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, he may have been a plain fly,” he conceded....
+“Let’s go on hunting. Perhaps we’ll find a
+real snipe next time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They paddled along lazily for the next three-quarters
+of an hour, talking a little now and then. For
+the most part, though, they went on in silence, except
+when Louise giggled over “Fables in Slang,” which
+she had pulled out of her blouse-pocket, or when someone
+saw what might be game, or especially good scenery.
+They went, presently, down an arm of the river
+that was scarcely more than a creek, and stopped there
+till afternoon for rest and refreshment. It seemed a
+charming spot, and almost deserted. Only in the distance
+one red-roofed farmhouse could be seen, adding
+to the picturesqueness of the landscape.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were three small sandwiches left, and the
+girls, with the aid of paper and pencil, had just worked
+it out that each person present was entitled to three-quarters
+of a sandwich. They were trying to decide
+who should get the three quarters that were cut out of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244'></a>244</span>
+the three sandwiches—it was more a point of honor
+than necessity, for nobody much wanted any of them—when
+there was a subdued howl from Tom, who had
+been lying on his back in the canoe, gazing up at the sky.
+</p>
+<p>
+Six stately geese were flying in an arrow-shape across
+the creek, above the canoe. Both boys fired.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, what a shame to kill them!” mourned
+Winona; but Tom said hurriedly again that they had
+special permission from Mr. Gedney, and sat up to
+see if he had done anything.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We each got one!” said Billy in a tense whisper.
+“They’ve dropped on the farther shore—there by the
+farmhouse!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The boys pushed the canoe up close and sprang out.
+They were dashing excitedly across country after their
+prey. Suddenly the waiting girls heard wild howls,
+and the tall, angry form of a wild-eyed man in overalls
+suddenly appeared from nowhere with a pitchfork.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, he’s chasing the boys!” exclaimed Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“He certainly is!” seconded Louise, and began to
+giggle. “Listen to him!”
+</p>
+<p>
+It was really impossible to do anything else.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My geese! My prize geese!” shouted the overalled
+man, adding what he thought of Tom’s and Billy’s
+intelligence. “My pedigreed geese, you young idiots!
+I’ll teach you!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You ought to have made ’em wear their pedigrees
+around their necks,” Tom shouted back at the man.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, can they get away?” cried Louise. “Look!”
+</p>
+<p>
+And Winona, looking, saw that their way back to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245'></a>245</span>
+the canoe was cut off by a dog—the traditional farmer’s
+dog of the comic papers. He was stationed on the
+bank, eying the canoe and the girls in it in a very
+threatening way, and most plainly only waiting till
+the boys came back to bite them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona gave the canoe a determined push which
+landed it in midstream, and both girls began to paddle
+back by the way they had come, Winona because she had
+a plan, Louise because she was following Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ll meet them around this point, on the other
+side,” she explained to Louise. “I saw a glimpse of
+water on the other side, and I think the point of land
+the farm is on is like a peninsula.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Sure enough, they discovered the criminals crouched
+romantically behind a clump of trees at the other side
+of the point of land. They were so well hidden that the
+girls would never have seen them if Billy had not
+stealthily waved a red handkerchief which he always
+carried for wigwagging. The girls paddled up as
+softly as they could, and the boys crawled out and
+waded to the canoe, crouching low. Nobody dared say
+anything till the canoe and its crew was well out and
+downstream again, far from farmers with dogs and
+pitchforks and no desire to listen to explanations.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And we never even got those geese!” mourned
+Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Got those geese!” said Louise severely. “You
+oughtn’t to want to get pedigreed geese that belonged
+to a farmer—especially a farmer with that kind of a
+disposition.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246'></a>246</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“He hasn’t any business to let tame geese go prowling
+around the country that way,” growled Billy, “the
+first day a fellow has leave to go shooting food for the
+Scouts at home! How were we to know they had a
+coat-of-arms and a family tree? They ought to have
+been kept at home, in their ancestral barnyard.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And we never even got the confounded things!”
+lamented Tom again. “And we might just as well
+have, too, because we’ll have to go up and pay for
+them, of course, when Mr. Overalls has calmed down
+enough not to bite us on sight. They may be worth
+a thousand dollars apiece, for all we know. We were
+the pedigreed geese, I think!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind,” said Louise soothingly, “be glad
+Father Goose didn’t get you, instead of sorry you didn’t
+get his pets. They probably would have been tough,
+anyway.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And we can fish,” suggested Winona. “Nobody’s
+going to jump out of the river and tell us that these are
+his pedigreed perch.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The game-warden may, if the river’s been stocked
+lately,” said Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It hasn’t,” asserted Tom. “Don’t you remember?
+We found out all about that before any of us came up
+here last year. All these fish are old enough to die.
+Pass me the bait, please, Winnie.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here you are,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+She baited a line for herself, dropped it in, and
+everyone else did the same thing. After that nobody
+said anything for quite a little while, unless an occasional
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247'></a>247</span>
+“Confound those geese!” from Tom could count
+as conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Got something!” announced Louise at length,
+jerking in her line.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” asked Tom with interest.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Feels like a perch—or a trout,” said Louise pulling
+in her line rapidly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It doesn’t <em>look</em> like one,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“M’m, not exactly,” said her brother. “You ought
+to be interested in it, though, Win—it’s a catfish.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You can eat catfish,” said Louise, quite calmly.
+“In fact, I believe they’re considered very good eating.
+I don’t know but I’d rather have them than trout.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Especially if you can’t get the trout,” added Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If you can’t get what you want, you must want
+what you can get.” So she baited her line again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what is it this time?” inquired Tom next
+time she pulled her line in. The rest had had fair luck.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Probably another pussy-fish,” said Louise resignedly.
+But this time it was a real perch, and after that
+it was a sunfish, and then two more catfish. And presently
+there was enough for supper, and by the time they
+got back they knew it would be supper-getting time.
+Winona was cooking supper that week. So they put the
+fish in the empty lunch-basket and paddled for home.
+Louise took Billy’s paddle, and Billy trolled all the
+way. He didn’t get anything, but he enjoyed himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who’s that on the dock?” asked Tom as they
+neared the Camp Karonya landing. “Are they waiting
+for us?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248'></a>248</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tom’s afraid the farmer with the ducks has come
+around the other way,” said Louise. “No, Tommy,
+my dear, that’s only Mr. Sloane, who is a sort of
+unofficial uncle to Camp Karonya. We’re supposed to
+have rented that dock from him, but he comes there
+and fishes just as much as if we hadn’t.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sort of a fourth sub-mascot?” said Billy. “Yes,
+I remember—the old man who helped you out about
+the scows when you were building the float.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“He’s the one,” said Winona. “He’s fishing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And there’s Puppums, too,” said Louise. “Oh,
+the dear old doggie! He’s come down to the dock to
+wait for you, Winnie!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So he has,” agreed Winona. “I wonder if he’s
+been there long.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Puppums liked canoeing very much, and when he
+thought Winona ought to have taken him and hadn’t,
+he would go down to the dock, trailing her by scent,
+and sit there hours and hours—merely for the sake of
+looking reproachfully at her when she did get in, it was
+thought. Winona always hugged him, and apologized,
+and took him for a row if possible, and he knew it.
+</p>
+<p>
+When he caught sight of the canoe (like most dogs,
+he was short-sighted) he began to bark excitedly and
+run up and down the dock, and jump wildly about.
+He did everything but swim out to the canoe. Puppums
+hated water—which gave rise to a theory that there
+was a little pug in his ancestry.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Sloane, too, rose as the canoe came near the
+landing-place. He did not jump up and down, because
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249'></a>249</span>
+he had not been waiting for the canoeing party. He
+had evidently taken their return as a signal that it was
+time he went home himself, for he was collecting his
+rod and bait-can, and his coat, and the other things he
+had strewn about the dock. Puppums still careered
+wildly around and around. As Winona stepped ashore
+his excitement grew so intense that he ran full tilt into
+Mr. Sloane, who was bending over picking something
+up, and nearly knocked him over.
+</p>
+<p>
+“W-u-ugh!” said Mr. Sloane, and began to hunt
+frantically about the dock.
+</p>
+<p>
+And as the boys and girls gained the shore it became
+painfully evident that the little dog had jarred
+out the old gentleman’s false teeth.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Sloane had never made any secret of the fact
+that he wore “bought teeth”—indeed, he had told
+Winona and Adelaide, who were his especial favorites,
+just where he got them and how much they cost, and
+where others like them could be gotten. But still, when
+your friend’s teeth are knocked out all at once by your
+family dog, well, you <em>do</em> feel a little embarrassment.
+With one accord the four looked in the other direction,
+as Mr. Sloane, with a “Drat that pup!” continued to
+hunt for his teeth. The boys fussed with the canoe,
+and Winona and Louise began to hunt for a nonexistent
+something in the box they used for a locker.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Puppums was going to be polite at all costs. He
+trotted over, his tail wagging wildly at the prospect of
+being able to do something for his mistress, picked up
+the teeth, and carried them proudly to Winona!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250'></a>250</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Puppums—you <em>naughty</em> dog!” she said, trying
+to take the teeth away from him as unostentatiously
+as possible.
+</p>
+<p>
+But Puppums, realizing from her voice that something
+was wrong, looked up at her depreciatingly,
+wagged his tail again, suddenly put his tail between his
+legs and started for the camp!
+</p>
+<p>
+It was no use to try to ignore things any longer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Mr. Sloane,” Winona cried. “I’m so sorry!
+He’s a bad dog. I’ll go straight after him and get
+them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, never mind,” said Mr. Sloane, kindly if
+rather indistinctly. He began to laugh. “That dog
+o’ yours certainly is a rip-snorter!” he said. “Knock
+a man down an’ carry off his teeth!”
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time the boys had stopped trying not to
+laugh, and were howling in unison in the background.
+And little Frances, Adelaide’s sister, came up with a
+nice birch-bark box. She handed it to Mr. Sloane,
+dropped a pretty courtesy, and ran. And so did the
+others. The only unembarrassed members of the party
+were Puppums, who wasn’t there, to be Irish, and Mr.
+Sloane himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Talk about banner days!” sighed Louise. “I
+was the only one of us that didn’t get into trouble——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Louise!” called somebody, from outside the tent
+where Louise was washing and getting ready for supper.
+“Did you know that you left the store-shed door
+open this morning when you came in for supplies, and
+somebody’s carried off every bit of bacon!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251'></a>251</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO</h2>
+<p>
+And in the opulent days which followed the winning
+of the carnival prizes, and the selling of lovely amounts
+of Camp Fire goods, Camp Karonya decided that it
+ought to own a phonograph. The treasury, which was
+a suitcase under Helen’s bed, had money in it, and the
+girls badly needed something to dance by. To be
+sure, the camp boasted a mandolin, two guitars, a
+mouth-organ and a banjo, to say nothing of Mrs.
+Bryan’s Iroquois drum. But all these had to be worked
+by hand, and the orchestra, after performing for several
+long evenings while their friends practised folk-dances
+with abandon, struck.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We want to get a chance at the folk-dances, too,”
+they remonstrated, very reasonably. Indeed, Louise
+got up and made a moving speech, alluding to her pressing
+need of folk-dances, and her slender chance of being
+able to do them while she played her instrument.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here I am,” she said pathetically, “twice as
+plump as anybody else in camp. I need folk-dances
+more than anybody here does. And I’ve spent this
+whole blessed evening plunking a banjo while other
+people got thin, people that were thin already! It may
+be good for my moral character, but, girls”—Louise’s
+voice dropped tragically—“it’s <em>ruining</em> yours!”
+</p>
+<p>
+They all agreed that something should be done.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan was entirely willing to go on pounding
+her Indian drum indefinitely, but the girls did not think
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252'></a>252</span>
+it would be good for their moral characters to let her,
+either. So they held a business meeting on the spot,
+which happened to be the large level place they used for
+dancing ground; and decided to buy a phonograph.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think we have catalogues of them at home,” said
+Dorothy Gray. “Shall I write and have them sent on?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls considered that for awhile, but they finally
+decided not to. Everyone wanted a voice in choosing
+the phonograph, or at least in deciding on what kind
+of a phonograph they were to have.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But we don’t want to pay the full price for it,”
+said Helen wisely. “What we ought to do is to advertise
+in the <em>Press</em> in the village. It’s the country paper.
+Look at the market Win created for kittens——”
+</p>
+<p>
+But here Winona sprang for her, and they rolled
+over on the leaves, and the meeting ended in a frolic.
+</p>
+<p>
+However, they all liked Helen’s idea, and two Blue
+Birds were sent off to the <em>Press</em> with an advertisement
+for a second-hand phonograph or victrola in good condition.
+Next day two other Blue Birds went after the
+answers. There were three.
+</p>
+<p>
+One offered a fine music-box in good condition,
+which had never been used since the owner’s wife died
+twenty years ago. He lived on the Northtown Pike
+(which nobody present had ever heard of), about seventeen
+miles from the village. The music-box played six
+tunes and was an heirloom, having belonged to his
+mother, but the farmer on the Northtown Pike would
+part with it for twenty-five dollars for he wanted
+another Holstein cow and this would pay for part of her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253'></a>253</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Horrid old thing!” said Winona when Marie
+was done reading the answers aloud. “If it’s an heirloom
+he hasn’t any business parting with it to buy a section
+of any kind of cow—or even a whole one.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, Marie, go on to the next,” said Mrs. Bryan.
+But the next was even more hopeless. What this man
+had was, from his description, a very cheap phonograph
+which was almost as old as the farmer’s music-box;
+but he, too, thought he would like to have twenty-five
+dollars for it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“He doubtless wants to buy a section of cow, too,”
+suggested Mrs. Bryan.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe they’re buying her together,” said Louise
+brilliantly; and Marie read the last letter. This was the
+only one at all promising. The writer, who was a
+woman with a good handwriting and correct spelling,
+said that she had a two-year-old victrola in good condition,
+and that she would gladly sell it for twenty-five
+dollars, because she was going to be given a new one.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That sounds better,” said Mrs. Bryan. “I would
+advise a committee of you to go and look it over.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But how badly they all want twenty-five dollars!”
+groaned Marie. “Do you notice it? They all ask for
+exactly the same amount.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Probably buying the cow on shares,” repeated
+Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I vote we make Louise one of the committee to
+see the two-year-old victrola,” said Winona. “She has
+business instinct, and the rest of us haven’t such a lot.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s more to the point, I also have a victrola
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254'></a>254</span>
+at home, or Dad has,” said Louise, “and I know what
+it ought to be like to be good.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So it was moved and seconded that Louise, Winona
+and Helen be appointed a committee of three to investigate
+the victrola.
+</p>
+<p>
+As early as they could in the afternoon after they
+had received their replies they started out. It was a
+gorgeous day, not too warm for comfort, and they
+chased each other about the road as if they were kittens,
+instead of responsible Camp Fire Girls out on a very
+business-like errand. After they had gone about a
+mile, which led them nearly to the village, it occurred
+to some brilliant person that it might be a good plan
+to ask somebody how to get to the address of the woman
+with the two-year-old victrola. It was The Willows,
+Lowlane, near Gray’s Road, and so far as the girls
+knew that might have been nearly anywhere. So they
+did ask at the post-office, where they had quite made
+friends with the old postmaster.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s three miles down the pike,” said he. “Strike
+off on the left to Gray’s Road—you’ll see a signpost, I
+guess—and then turn down the first little lane you come
+to. They call it Lowlane now, the folks that own the
+house, but it was never anything but Low’s Lane till
+they came there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The first little lane we come to?” repeated
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+The postmaster looked thoughtful. “Now, I don’t
+want to be too sure,” he said. “The first, or maybe
+the second. Elmer, do you recollect whether Low’s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255'></a>255</span>
+Lane is the first or second turning on the Gray’s Road
+way?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Second,” said Elmer the clerk readily.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There now!” said the postmaster. “I might a’
+told you wrong. I certainly had it fixed in my mind
+that it was the first.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” said the girls. “It won’t be hard to
+find.”
+</p>
+<p>
+It seemed, indeed, plain enough sailing, and the girls
+went on. The road was bordered with trees, and there
+were flowers they wanted to pick, and occasionally
+rabbits for Puppums to chase. He was not a swift
+enough runner to ever catch any of the rabbits he ran
+after, and the rabbits did not seem to mind, so Winona
+let him go on chasing.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’ve gone quite three miles, I know,” said Louise
+dismally when they had been walking some time. “And
+there’s no Lowlane—not even any Gray’s Road.”
+Louise had trained a good deal since she had been in
+camp, but she still felt long walks more than the other
+two did, who were slim. “I ‘don’t believe there’s no
+sich animal’ as Mrs. Martin, or a victrola. There
+aren’t any victrolas or any lanes, high or low, on earth.
+Woof—I’m tired!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She fanned herself with her handkerchief, and the
+dog tried to jump at it, under the impression that she
+was playing a game with him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It does seem a long way,” said Helen sympathetically,
+“but there is a Gray’s Road, for I’m sure I see
+a signpost a little ahead of us.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256'></a>256</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s probably one of those automobile directions
+that says ‘Three miles back to the village—seventeen
+miles forward to Jonesville. Use Smith’s Lubricating
+Oil and Robinson Tires!’” and Louise shrugged her
+shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nevertheless, when they came up to the signpost,
+although it did advise automobiles about several kinds
+of supplies they ought to have, it also said that this
+was Gray’s Road. They turned as they had been told,
+and went down it, in search of their second landmark,
+Low’s Lane. This, unfortunately, wasn’t in sight.
+“Let’s ask,” said Winona as they passed a little old
+house by the side of the road, and steered the others
+up the path that led to the porch. It was a ramshackle,
+unpainted packing-box of a place, with an old, old lady,
+heavily shawled, curled up in a rocker, for inhabitant.
+Helen was pushed forward to speak to her. “Can you
+tell us if we are near Low’s Lane?” she asked, politely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hey?” said the old lady. “I’m a little deaf.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen said it over again as loudly as she could.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Rain?” said the old lady. “No, no—it ain’t
+goin’ to rain!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Low’s Lane!” screamed Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What?” said the old lady.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ask her about the victrola,” suggested Winona.
+“Sometimes deaf people can hear one word when they
+can’t another. Perhaps she’d know by that where we
+wanted to go.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We want a place where they’re selling a victrola!”
+shouted Helen.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257'></a>257</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+This time the old lady seemed to hear.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Victrola, hey? You go right on a piece till you
+turn to your left. It’s the first house.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” yelled Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+They were offered, and took, drinks of water, and
+went on again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think one of you might have asked some of the
+questions,” said Helen indignantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll ask one now!” defied Louise. “Far be it
+from me not to do my duty.” She turned and ran back
+to where the old dame still rocked on her porch.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is it a good victrola?” she shouted.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old lady shook her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wouldn’t go so far’s to say <em>that</em>,” she answered.
+“Smart, though—awful smart and clever!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise ran back to the others without asking any
+more questions.
+</p>
+<p>
+“She says the talking machine isn’t good, but awful
+smart and clever,” she panted. “What <em>do</em> you suppose
+she means?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I can’t imagine,” said Helen. “Anyway, we
+know how to get there.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The first lane, sure enough, led to a house, but
+there seemed to be no willows anywhere about it. Still
+houses often have names that have nothing to do with
+the facts, so the girls pressed on. The place had a
+vaguely familiar look to Winona and Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m sure I’ve come here before, by another way,”
+said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I haven’t,” said Helen. “You must have come
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258'></a>258</span>
+by water. I think the river’s somewhere back of us.
+If you ask me, I think one way’s enough to come.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They lined up before the door and rang. But the
+bell, they discovered finally, was badly out of order.
+A “please knock” sign was blowing about the porch,
+they discovered still a little later. They knocked vigorously,
+and the door was finally unfastened by a draggled
+little girl of about eleven.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why—why, how do you do, Vicky!” said Louise
+in surprise. “Why, of course, Helen, this is Sandy’s
+house. Only this isn’t the same door, is it, that we
+came in by last time, Vicky?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Vicky, who was as tousled as usual, shook her head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the matter?” she asked stolidly. “Has
+Sandy been naughty?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, indeed,” said Louise, “she’s as good as gold.
+Can’t we come in?” for Vicky didn’t seem to feel
+specially hospitable—she was holding the door on a
+crack, and was not her usual sunny self. “Sandy’s
+around here somewhere—at least she’s not in camp.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes,” she said, and opened it wider. The
+girls filed in and sat down in the square hall, which
+was as littered as usual with clothes and paper bags and
+everything else that places are usually littered with.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look at that hole!” whispered Louise, forgetting
+her politeness as Vicky stood near them, not intending,
+evidently, to sit down and entertain them if she could
+help it. “There’s more hole than stocking!”
+</p>
+<p>
+It was quite true, but unfortunately Vicky had
+sharp ears.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259'></a>259</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re my own stockings,” she said crossly,
+“and I like ’em with holes in.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, all right!” said Louise dryly. “Only they
+aren’t usually worn that way.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can we speak to your uncle?” interposed Helen,
+for the air was becoming stormy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t home,” announced Vicky. “He had a cross
+fit and went out walking.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is anybody home?” asked Winona. “We came
+on business.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You can do it with me, whatever it is,” said Vicky,
+sitting down with the torn-stockinged leg under her.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen plunged straight into the business at hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The old lady down the road said that this was
+the house where they had a victrola——” she started
+to say—and stopped in dismay over the effect of her
+words; Vicky flew into a temper and began to cry.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I want you to go away from here—coming to
+make fun of me!” she sobbed, stamping her foot at
+them. Before they could answer she ran out of the
+room, leaving them staring at each other in surprise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what on earth?” Winona slowly ejaculated.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Goodness only knows,” said Louise. “Anyway,
+I seem to feel that she doesn’t want to sell it to us.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, no,” assented Helen, and the three of them
+thoughtfully and slowly let themselves out at the door
+they had come in by.
+</p>
+<p>
+They had gone only a little way back when they
+heard flying feet behind them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait a minute,” panted Vicky, catching up to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260'></a>260</span>
+them. “I guess—perhaps—I’d better explain. I’m
+sorry I got mad. But—but my <em>name’s</em> Victrola!” She
+flushed painfully. Evidently it was hard for her to tell.
+“I thought you were just making fun of me, but I
+thought about it, and I guess you weren’t. I know the
+place you want—it’s a little further, up the next lane.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She started to run back, but Winona caught her
+hand and held her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, you poor dear!” she said. “I don’t see
+why you mind. It’s a very pretty name. But we
+weren’t trying to make fun of you. We really want
+to buy a phonograph for the camp.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They laugh at me—everybody does,” faltered
+Vicky. “They were this morning—the boys down by
+the landing. That’s why I was so cross. They pretend
+to wind me up, and—and I <em>hate</em> it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So would I,” comforted Louise. “But you
+mustn’t mind, Vicky. All my life the boys have called
+me ‘Carrots,’ and ‘Reddy,’ and things like that.
+There’s no use caring. Look here, honey, I’ll tell you
+what to do. See if you haven’t got a middle name you
+can use, or even one you ought to have had. Ask
+your uncle if there wasn’t a middle name somebody
+almost gave you once, and if there was use it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I wonder if I could!” said Vicky, brightening.
+She reached down and pulled up one of her stockings,
+as if the prospect of a better name made her want to
+be tidy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anyhow it’s a pretty name,” said Louise cheerfully.
+“I wouldn’t worry about it.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261'></a>261</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, you would,” said Vicky, as she turned back.
+“There down this lane’s the place you can get—it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+It was Louise’s turn to detain her this time.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Vicky! Vicky!” she called. “Won’t you and
+Sandy come down to Camp Karonya and stay overnight,
+to-morrow night? We’re going to do some
+stunts—just to celebrate. The Scouts are coming over,
+and one or two of our pet particular friends.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know the way,” said Vicky.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sandy does,” said Louise and Winona together.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” said Vicky sedately. “We’ll come.
+And—please don’t tell the others my name. I’ll have
+the real one thought out by that time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course we won’t,” they promised.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It <em>was</em> mean to name her that,” Helen declared as
+they went down the lane.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe it was before there were machine victrolas,
+and her mother just thought it was pretty,” suggested
+Louise. “The other children have fancy names,
+too; Alexandra and Lance. Remember Vicky told us
+there was a boy named Lancelot, the day we went up?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“To return your orphan?” said Winona. “Oh,
+yes—we all remember. Never mind, Ishkoodah dear,
+perhaps next time you’ll find a real one.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wouldn’t it be fine if Camp Karonya <em>could</em> look
+after some little girl—one of the Children’s Aid children,
+for instance?” said Helen thoughtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It would take a good deal of money,” spoke practical
+Louise, “if we didn’t one of us have it in the
+family.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262'></a>262</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not such a lot,” said Winona. “Oh, it would
+be lovely! A nice little orphan with blue eyes and
+curly hair, and we’d name her ourselves——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’d call her Gramophone!” suggested Louise;
+and, tired as they were, they all began to laugh. But
+by this time they were nearly at the house the machine’s
+namesake had directed them to, and it was the right one.
+</p>
+<p>
+The owner had a fairly good victrola and six double-faced
+records, and she finally consented to let it go
+for twenty dollars. The girls paid down the money
+on the spot, and constructed a carrier for it out of two
+pieces of board which the machine’s owner threw in.
+</p>
+<p>
+There were no adventures whatever connected with
+this end of the happening. Helen took the front end
+and Louise the back, and Winona steadied it. Then
+they set it down, after they had walked awhile, and
+changed places. It seemed rather a long way home, and
+they were exceedingly glad when they reached camp—that
+was all. Their sympathetic comrades attended to
+their routine duties for them, and all the adventurers
+had to do was to lie on the grass and tell about their
+travels—everything, that is, but Victrola’s name and
+her grief over it.
+</p>
+<p>
+After supper the whole camp assembled to enjoy
+the machine, and danced to everything on its disc,
+even the sextette from Lucia, given as a vocal selection.
+But Louise did not do any folk-dances that night.
+She was so tired that she curled up on a soft spot and
+fed the machine till it was time to go to bed.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263'></a>263</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE</h2>
+<p>
+“Did you dye that old petticoat and underwaist
+pink?” demanded Winona, sticking her head into
+Marie’s tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I did,” said Marie promptly, “and it’s
+starched, and ironed with the charcoal-iron.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And did Adelaide borrow her brother’s bathrobe
+for Louise?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, she didn’t, but I did—at least, I sent Frances
+over for it,” said Marie. “It’s here, and safe.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And did Louise sew the hood on it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“She did,” said Marie resignedly. “Every single
+property for ‘Gentle Alice Brown’ and the ‘Oysterman’
+is in a mound in the dressing-tent. Go look, for
+goodness’ sake, or you’ll have nervous prostration.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona, property-woman and general manager of
+the performance, pulled back her head with a sigh of
+relief, and went to find the girl who had promised to
+straighten out the fishing-tackle necessary to the Ballad
+of the Oysterman—for they were to present that classic
+of Holmes’s in a very few hours.
+</p>
+<p>
+The performance was to be at eight, and it was a
+strictly complimentary one. The Scouts were invited,
+and various special friends from Wampoag, most of
+them made over dealings in Camp merchandise. A
+committee had been appointed to see about illuminations,
+and another to attend to the refreshments. They
+were amassing honor beads by doing it. Marie’s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264'></a>264</span>
+Blue Birds were busy everywhere. Camp Karonya was
+dazzlingly clean, and everyone was getting out the
+one dress-up frock she had brought along, and giving
+it attention. There was to be an exhibit, also, as the
+flaring posters Helen had prepared said, of “potteries,
+embroideries, jellies, hand-carvings, pickles and other
+objects.” It had been going to be “other objects of
+art,” but Winona pointed out that jellies and pickles
+<em>weren’t</em>, no matter what the rest might be. So the
+poster stopped abruptly at “objects,” and the space
+was filled up by a life-like portrait of a jelly-glass.
+</p>
+<p>
+Camp Karonya took a very brief meal of bread and
+milk and cookies, and the dish-washers hurried through
+their tasks. For eight o’clock has a way of coming
+long before you expect it. About seven-thirty the paddles
+and oars and motor-boats of the audience began
+to be heard, and the reception committee scurried down
+to the dock to meet their guests. First came their
+friends the Scouts from down the river, about thirty
+strong. After them, in little groups, came the summer
+people, including Billy’s Aunt Lydia, who never missed
+a Camp Fire function if she could help it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The audience was seated, as usual, on planks laid
+from box to box and nailed. They did not have to sit
+there long. After a great deal of giggling and rustling
+behind the big green curtain that had been made of
+sacks, pieced together and dyed, Winona came out to
+announce the beginning of the entertainment.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ladies and gentlemen,” she commenced, “to-night
+we are going to have, beside several musical selections,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265'></a>265</span>
+some moving pictures with explanatory recitations—some
+<em>very</em> moving pictures. After the opening
+song we will have the first one, ‘Gentle Alice Brown.’”
+</p>
+<p>
+The audience applauded, and then the girls sang a
+Camp Fire song in chorus. After that Louise and
+Edith played a conscientious mandolin-banjo duet.
+Then Marie, who was the reader of the evening, came
+out with a copy of Gilbert’s Bab Ballads and very
+slowly began to read “Gentle Alice Brown.”
+</p>
+<p>
+At the first line the curtain was pulled back, revealing
+Winona alone against a sheet background. She
+was in an 1860 costume made from an old, full petticoat
+and tight underwaist, dyed pink, and helped out
+with small puffed sleeves and a sash. Her curls were
+bound with a wreath of artificial roses from the ten-cent
+store, slightly over one ear. She sat on a chair
+with her head on her hand, and she was looking mournfully
+over the chair-back. Marie began,
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;robber’s&nbsp;&nbsp;daughter,&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;name&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;Alice&nbsp;&nbsp;Brown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her&nbsp;&nbsp;father&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;terror&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;small&nbsp;&nbsp;Italian&nbsp;&nbsp;town;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her&nbsp;&nbsp;mother&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;foolish,&nbsp;&nbsp;weak,&nbsp;&nbsp;but&nbsp;&nbsp;amiable&nbsp;&nbsp;old&nbsp;&nbsp;thing,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But&nbsp;&nbsp;it&nbsp;&nbsp;isn’t&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;parents&nbsp;&nbsp;that&nbsp;&nbsp;I’m&nbsp;&nbsp;going&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;sing.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+As Marie went on, across the stage galloped ferociously
+Helen, who had been given the role of Robber
+Brown because she was one of the tallest of the girls.
+A red flannel shirt of Tom Merriam’s, topped by a
+fishing hat and black mustachio, were most convincing.
+Her short kilt, which gave her rather the look of a
+Greek than an Italian bandit, was met by a pair of fishing-boots,
+and she wore three carving-knives and a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266'></a>266</span>
+cartridge belt. She strode ferociously across the stage,
+looking neither to right nor left.
+</p>
+<p>
+Edith Hillis, trotting meekly behind her as Mrs.
+Brown, wore a baggy old long skirt, a bandanna tied
+around her waist, one around her neck and another
+on her head. She only had one carving-knife. But the
+lovely Alice did not deign to look at her parents. She
+gazed sadly out over the audience, while Marie went
+on to tell how—
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As&nbsp;&nbsp;Alice&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;sitting&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;window-sill&nbsp;&nbsp;one&nbsp;&nbsp;day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A&nbsp;&nbsp;beautiful&nbsp;&nbsp;young&nbsp;&nbsp;gentleman&nbsp;&nbsp;he&nbsp;&nbsp;chanced&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;pass&nbsp;&nbsp;that&nbsp;&nbsp;way,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A&nbsp;&nbsp;sorter&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;Custom-house,&nbsp;&nbsp;it&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;his&nbsp;&nbsp;daily&nbsp;&nbsp;road—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(The&nbsp;&nbsp;Custom-house&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;fifteen&nbsp;&nbsp;minutes&nbsp;&nbsp;walk&nbsp;&nbsp;from&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;abode).<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+At this point the hero crossed the stage dashingly,
+with a cane under his arm. It was Adelaide, in a plaid
+cap, a waxed mustache, and a very precise duster which
+reached her heels. A pipe (she said afterwards it had
+a dreadful taste) stuck from one corner of her mouth.
+</p>
+<p>
+Gentle Alice sighed deeply, and so did her lover,
+who became aware of her presence with a tragic start.
+He halted, waved to her, sighed with his hand on his
+heart, and looked altogether very lovelorn. Gentle
+Alice did not notice him at first, but she gradually
+seemed to yield, and finally languished softly at him—and
+winked. So did he. Then he kissed his hands at
+her and went off reluctantly to work, while Alice
+wiped away her tears with a large bandanna such as
+her parents had worn. (They were the historic bandannas
+which had served Winona and Louise so well
+on their peddling trip.)
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267'></a>267</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The ballad went on to relate how presently Alice’s
+conscience bothered her. So she asked the Brown’s
+family confessor about it,
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;priest&nbsp;&nbsp;by&nbsp;&nbsp;whom&nbsp;&nbsp;their&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;crimes&nbsp;&nbsp;were&nbsp;&nbsp;carefully&nbsp;&nbsp;assessed.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Here Louise appeared, in the brown bathrobe, with
+its hood pulled up over her head, and sandals on. Alice
+threw herself at his feet, and waved her hands in grief.
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Oh,&nbsp;&nbsp;father,”&nbsp;&nbsp;Gentle&nbsp;&nbsp;Alice&nbsp;&nbsp;said,&nbsp;&nbsp;“’Twould&nbsp;&nbsp;grieve&nbsp;&nbsp;you,&nbsp;&nbsp;would&nbsp;&nbsp;it&nbsp;&nbsp;not,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To&nbsp;&nbsp;find&nbsp;&nbsp;that&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;have&nbsp;&nbsp;been&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;most&nbsp;&nbsp;disreputable&nbsp;&nbsp;lot?”<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise assumed a benign expression and listened
+while Alice confessed her sins. Marie stopped, while
+Winona herself spoke:
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;assisted&nbsp;&nbsp;dear&nbsp;&nbsp;mamma&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;cutting&nbsp;&nbsp;up&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;lad,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;helped&nbsp;&nbsp;papa&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;steal&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;kiddy&nbsp;&nbsp;from&nbsp;&nbsp;its&nbsp;&nbsp;dad—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;planned&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;burglary&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;forged&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;check<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And&nbsp;&nbsp;slew&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;baby&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;coral&nbsp;&nbsp;on&nbsp;&nbsp;its&nbsp;&nbsp;neck!<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+But Father Brown seemed inclined to be forgiving,
+and with a few remarks, ended,
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We&nbsp;&nbsp;mustn’t&nbsp;&nbsp;be&nbsp;&nbsp;too&nbsp;&nbsp;hard&nbsp;&nbsp;upon&nbsp;&nbsp;these&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;girlish&nbsp;&nbsp;tricks—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s&nbsp;&nbsp;see—five&nbsp;&nbsp;crimes&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;half&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;crown—exactly&nbsp;&nbsp;twelve&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;six.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Alice thanked him in a few grateful couplets, and
+pulled out another bandanna with money tied up in it
+from which she paid him. The ballad went on to
+relate how Alice tremblingly confessed her last sin,
+about the beautiful gentleman, who passed every day:
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;blush&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;say,&nbsp;&nbsp;I’ve&nbsp;&nbsp;winked&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;him—and&nbsp;&nbsp;he&nbsp;&nbsp;has&nbsp;&nbsp;winked&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;me!<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+This shocked Father Paul for, as he explained,
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If&nbsp;&nbsp;you&nbsp;&nbsp;should&nbsp;&nbsp;marry&nbsp;&nbsp;anyone&nbsp;&nbsp;respectable&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;all,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Why,&nbsp;&nbsp;you’d&nbsp;&nbsp;reform,&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;then&nbsp;&nbsp;what&nbsp;&nbsp;would&nbsp;&nbsp;become&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;Father&nbsp;&nbsp;Paul?<br />
+</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268'></a>268</span></div>
+<p>
+So he pulled up his cowl, the ballad went on to state—and
+Louise went on to act—and trotted off to tell
+the news to Robber Brown.
+</p>
+<p>
+They came on together, while the Father repeated
+the news, and stood consulting in the corner, while
+Alice, from her actions, seemed to be thinking still
+of the sorter.
+</p>
+<p>
+Robber Brown took it quite calmly. He decided to
+be quite kind to Alice about it—merely to
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nab&nbsp;&nbsp;that&nbsp;&nbsp;gay&nbsp;&nbsp;young&nbsp;&nbsp;sorter,&nbsp;&nbsp;terrify&nbsp;&nbsp;him&nbsp;&nbsp;into&nbsp;&nbsp;fits,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And&nbsp;&nbsp;get&nbsp;&nbsp;his&nbsp;&nbsp;wife&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;chop&nbsp;&nbsp;him&nbsp;&nbsp;into&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;bits.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+He argued that Alice, after that, would not love him
+any more. So, while Father Paul exited, Robber
+Brown lay stealthily in wait, assisted by his wife.
+Presently along came the gay young sorter again, waving
+his hand jauntily to Alice. Robber Brown sprang
+out, crossed directly in front of the sorter, who
+appeared not to see him at all, and proceeded to track
+him up and down the stage two or three times, with
+Mrs. Brown trailing in the rear. After the three had
+gone up and down twice (Alice, also, oblivious to her
+parents’ presence, and throwing kisses to the sorter)
+Robber Brown finally “took a life-preserver” in the
+shape of a stout-looking stick, and pretended to fell the
+gay young sorter. Immediately Mrs. Brown bounded
+up with a piece of chalk, and proceeded to mark him
+off in pieces for dissection, for, as Robber Brown
+remarked:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269'></a>269</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;have&nbsp;&nbsp;studied&nbsp;&nbsp;human&nbsp;&nbsp;nature&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;know&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;thing&nbsp;&nbsp;or&nbsp;&nbsp;two—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Though&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;girl&nbsp;&nbsp;may&nbsp;&nbsp;fondly&nbsp;&nbsp;love&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;living&nbsp;&nbsp;chap,&nbsp;&nbsp;as&nbsp;&nbsp;many&nbsp;&nbsp;do,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;feeling&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;disgust&nbsp;&nbsp;upon&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;senses&nbsp;&nbsp;there&nbsp;&nbsp;will&nbsp;&nbsp;fall<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When&nbsp;&nbsp;she&nbsp;&nbsp;looks&nbsp;&nbsp;upon&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;lover&nbsp;&nbsp;chopped&nbsp;&nbsp;particularly&nbsp;&nbsp;small!<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Indeed, this terrifying sight as far as it went, seemed
+to have the desired effect on Alice. To be sure, she fell
+in a dead faint, and Father Paul had to catch her, while
+Mr. and Mrs. Brown, and two more bandits (in bandannas)
+carried off the late sorter; but immediately
+afterward a young bandit, very much like Robber
+Brown except that he was smaller, came in and was
+patted with obvious admiration by Mr. and Mrs. Brown,
+who led him up to Alice. She recovered slowly, sat up,
+and presently accepted his attentions with pleasure.
+Father Paul gave them his blessing, while Marie said:
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And&nbsp;&nbsp;gentle&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;Alice&nbsp;&nbsp;grew&nbsp;&nbsp;more&nbsp;&nbsp;settled&nbsp;&nbsp;in&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;mind,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She&nbsp;&nbsp;never&nbsp;&nbsp;more&nbsp;&nbsp;was&nbsp;&nbsp;guilty&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;weakness&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;that&nbsp;&nbsp;kind,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Until&nbsp;&nbsp;at&nbsp;&nbsp;length&nbsp;&nbsp;good&nbsp;&nbsp;Robber&nbsp;&nbsp;Brown&nbsp;&nbsp;bestowed&nbsp;&nbsp;her&nbsp;&nbsp;little&nbsp;&nbsp;hand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On&nbsp;&nbsp;a&nbsp;&nbsp;promising&nbsp;&nbsp;young&nbsp;&nbsp;robber,&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;lieutenant&nbsp;&nbsp;of&nbsp;&nbsp;his&nbsp;&nbsp;band!<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+After that the curtain was drawn again, while the
+girls dressed for Holmes’s “It Was a Gay Young
+Oysterman.” This, while it was good, was not the hit
+with the audience that “Gentle Alice Brown” had been.
+When it was finished, and the oysterman and his bride
+were seen “keeping a shop for mermaids down below,”
+the girls took down the curtain, and while more music
+was played the performers hurried into their pretty
+dresses. Then they came out, and strolled about the
+camp with the audience.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are Vicky and Sandy?” Winona remembered to ask
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270'></a>270</span>
+Helen, as they met after the curtain was
+down. “Did they come?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think so,” said Helen, rubbing hard at her cork
+mustache. “Adelaide, did you see Sandy anywhere?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Adelaide, who was just braiding her hair, turned.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, I did,” she said. “She’s here somewhere,
+with another little girl. I saw them not long ago.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona went in search of them, for when you ask
+a guest to an entertainment it’s only polite to hunt her
+up. It was not hard to find the sisters. They were
+sitting with Louise, eating home-made ice-cream.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona sat down by them.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m awfully glad you came, Vicky.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So’m I, too,” said Vicky. She seemed rather
+shy here in the camp, but she looked happy. “I’m
+having a nice time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m glad,” said Winona. “Did you like the
+moving pictures?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Vicky, “they were awfully funny.
+And—oh, Winona, I’ve picked out a name.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is it?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Janet. Of course people can call me Vicky still,
+if they want to, but my real name will be Janet. I
+asked uncle, the way you said, and he said I did have
+a middle name, Janet, after my grandmother.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s splendid!” said Winona. “I’m named
+after my grandmother, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That makes us a sort of relation, doesn’t it?”
+asked Vicky.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, I hope it does,” was the hearty reply.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271'></a>271</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“And there’s something I wanted to ask you about,”
+said Vicky—now Janet—shyly. “Alone, I mean.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come over here with me, and we’ll walk up and
+down and talk about it,” invited Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Vicky took her hand, and they strolled off down one
+of the wood-paths.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’d rather not ask Louise,” explained Vicky, “because—well,
+she laughs so about everything. She
+might laugh at me. And that other girl is sort of
+grown-up talking. But—well, it’s—I’d like to be like
+the rest of the people—other little girls, you know—and
+it’s dreadfully hard when you haven’t any father
+or mother, and your uncle’s an artist with a temp’rament.
+Sometimes he gets us governesses, and they say
+we’re queer, and sometimes we just do as we please.
+But—well, there isn’t anybody to show us things.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She looked at Winona wistfully, as if she thought
+she could show her how to be just like other children
+all at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why do people always come to me to show them
+how?” wondered Winona to herself. “I don’t know
+any more about how to do things than the other girls.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She did not realize that it was her sunniness and
+sympathy—her Ray-of-Lightness, as Louise called it—together
+with a certain straightforward common
+sense, that made girls who wanted help come to her.
+They could be sure that she would not laugh at them,
+or tell anyone else what they had said, and they were
+sure of advice that had brightness and sense.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What sort of things do you want me to tell you?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272'></a>272</span>
+asked Winona. “I’d love to help you, but some of the
+others know lots more about things than I do.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s you I want to ask,” said Vicky decidedly.
+“It’s my clothes, to begin with. Are they right?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona stopped and looked Vicky over. They
+were out in the open by now, and it was bright moonlight,
+so she could see plainly what the little girl had
+on. It was a blue taffeta, very stiff and rustling,
+trimmed with plaid taffeta and black buttons. By its
+looks it had been bought ready-made, for it had a sort
+of gaudy smartness. It was of good material, but
+somehow, it was cheap-looking. Also by its looks,
+bread-and-butter had been eaten on or near it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mean your dress?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Vicky. “It isn’t right, is it? But I don’t
+know what to do about it. I bought it myself.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mean your uncle gives you the money, and
+you go and buy your own things?” asked Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes,” said Vicky. “But the ones the governesses
+used to get weren’t much better. There was
+one governess who always picked out bright green. I
+hate green, anyway. And sometimes the cook used to.
+She would yet if I’d let her. But I won’t. I don’t
+think it’s any of her business.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well——” Winona hesitated.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what had I better do?” demanded Vicky.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know!” said Winona frankly. “But I
+do know that that silk dress is wrong. Why don’t you
+get summer dresses, chambrays and ginghams and
+organdies?”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273'></a>273</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know,” said Vicky. “I never thought
+about it. Silk is better, isn’t it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t think so,” said Winona. “It doesn’t wash.
+You see this dress isn’t very clean.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” acknowledged Vicky. “Does being clean
+count such a lot?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Goodness!” Words failed Winona. “I tell you,”
+she said finally. “Why don’t you come over here and
+join the Blue Birds, Vicky? Marie could tell you a lot of
+things and it would be the quickest way to learn a lot
+about being like other people, if that is what you want.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’d like to,” said Vicky, “but I sort of keep house.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I have an idea, then,” said Winona. Now, when
+Winona had ideas her friends usually waited to hear
+what she had to say. “Why couldn’t some of the girls
+come up and stay with you, after Camp is over? It
+will be quite awhile even then before school opens. We
+could help you—show you how to do things.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I’d like that,” said Vicky. Then she stopped,
+doubtfully. “That is, if I could pick out the ones.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course, you’d invite your own guests,” Winona
+assured her. “And we’d pay what we cost your uncle
+extra.... But what about him? It’s his house,
+and he mightn’t like it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, he’d never care,” said Vicky. “He never
+knows much about what goes on, anyway! And I know
+he’d like to have me learn how to be a well-bred little
+gentlewoman, because he talks about it sometimes.
+And anyway he’s going off somewhere where he can’t
+take us some time soon.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274'></a>274</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I don’t see why we can’t manage it!” said
+Winona enthusiastically. “But I can tell you now
+about the clothes. You want to buy dresses that will
+wash. And you don’t ever want to play in silk dresses,
+or even organdies or batistes—tree-climbing, and things
+like that, I mean.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I might get some middies, like you wear,” said
+Vicky thoughtfully. “And I suppose, long’s I’m going
+to reform, I might as well get Sand to keep her dresses
+on. She goes chasing out in her underwaist and
+petticoat sometimes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that was why she hadn’t any on when Louise
+found her!” said Winona, seeing a light.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” confessed Vicky. “What’s that noise?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s the horn,” said Winona. “It must mean
+that it’s bedtime. She’s playing ‘taps.’ Mrs. Bryan
+signals us with it, always.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think I’d like to be a Blue Bird,” said Vicky.
+“But I like the other plan better,” she added quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’re going to be here quite a while longer,” said
+Winona, “so you’ll have lots of time to think whether
+you want us and whether your uncle will be willing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s all right!” said Vicky as the two went
+back to camp.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275'></a>275</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR</h2>
+<p>
+It was quite true that the Camp was not to break
+up for some time, owing to the Wampoag people’s
+appetite for Camp jellies and linens; but so far as
+Winona was concerned, life under the greenwood tree
+received a sudden check.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was a harmless-looking letter enough that the
+detachment of Blue Birds brought up from the post-office.
+Winona pounced on it with a cry of joy. “Oh,
+a letter from mother!” she said. “And we only had
+one yesterday, Florence!” So she tore it open.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Dear Little Daughter,” it said, in a rather shakier
+handwriting than was usual with Mrs. Merriam. “I
+am sorry to have to tell you, as you are having such a
+splendid time, that we need you here at home. Yesterday,
+just after I had mailed my last letter to you, I
+slipped on the wet cellar stairs, and went down from top
+to bottom, and the result is a badly wrenched ankle.
+The doctor says that it is a severe sprain. Clay is a
+good little soul, but he can’t do very much more than
+the helping out, and your father has to have his meals
+and everything. So I shall have to ask my little girl
+to come home and keep house for me. I will expect you
+the day after you get this. Your loving mother.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“<em>Oh!</em>” cried Winona. “Oh, poor mother!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the matter!” asked Florence.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mother’s sprained her ankle on the cellar stairs,”
+said Winona, “and I have to go home. You needn’t,
+Floss.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276'></a>276</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I shall, though,” said Florence—and the younger
+Miss Merriam was a very determined little person. Her
+eyes filled with tears. “Frances and Lucy and I had a
+secret hike all planned,” she said. “Oh, dear, it is
+so nice in camp! But I won’t let you go home and
+nurse mother all alone, and you needn’t think it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona didn’t argue. She gave the letter to her
+little sister to read, and went off in the woods to be
+by herself. She climbed up to the platform that two of
+the girls had built, and sat there. There was no use
+denying it, she did not want to go home. She was
+going, of course, and going to nurse her mother just
+as well as she possibly could, and look after her father
+with all the powers she had learned in the Camp Fire
+activities. And she was sorry her mother’s ankle hurt
+her—very, very sorry. But—oh, dear! There was a
+beautiful new dance that Edith, who went into Wampoag
+and got lessons, which she passed promptly on,
+had been going to teach her. There was a new kind
+of cooking she had been going to teach a group of
+Blue Birds. There was a new dive—well, there were
+any amount of things, that if anyone had asked her
+about, she would have said she simply <em>couldn’t</em> break
+off. But she had to. And cooking at home in August
+was very different from doing it in the woods with a
+lot of other girls—and everyone she knew well was
+going to stay here—
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona sat up and mopped her eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This isn’t the way to follow the law of the Fire!”
+she reminded herself. “I can glorify work just as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277'></a>277</span>
+well home as here—better, in fact, for it’s pretty certain
+there’ll be more work to do!” She laughed a little.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Coming up, Winona!” called Helen from below.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come on!” called back Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the matter?” inquired Helen when she
+gained the platform. “You’ve been crying.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ve got to go home.” Winona gave the news
+briefly. “Mother’s sprained her ankle.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, what a perfect shame!” said Helen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know I’m taking it like a baby,” said Winona
+with a gulp, “instead of being noble and acting as if
+I liked going home. And of course I’m going. Only—only
+I do wish mother had picked out any time but this
+to sprain a perfectly good ankle!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t she get somebody else to come take care
+of things?” asked Helen. “I don’t know how on
+earth we’ll get along without you, Win. You never
+say much, but somehow you’re the centre of things.
+We’ll miss you awfully!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona blushed at the compliment, and reached
+down to pat Helen’s hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re a dear, Helen, to think so. But you’ll all
+get along all right. It’s I that will have most of the
+missing to do. No, there’s nobody mother could get.
+Aunt Jenny’s off in the White Mountains, getting well
+from something herself. And all we have at home is
+Clay—the little colored boy mother got at the Children’s
+Aid. From what Tom said he’s a regular Topsy. No,
+I have to go home. Oh, think of it, Helen! Hot housekeeping
+all August and half September, with every
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278'></a>278</span>
+single girl I know well up here, canoeing and swimming
+and folk-dancing and all sorts of splendid things!
+You’ll all have beads down to your feet.”
+</p>
+<p>
+This time it was Helen who patted Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Presently Winona mopped her eyes again and threw
+back her shoulders.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come along, Helen; I’ve had my little weep out.
+Now I’m going to tell Mrs. Bryan about it, and trot
+off home looking pleased to death at the prospect.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They swung themselves down from the tree-house,
+and started back to camp at a slow run. There was a
+good deal to do. There was everything of Winona’s
+to pack, and Florence’s, too, if she was really going, and
+she insisted that she was.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I won’t be a bit of trouble,” she said, “and I’ll
+be a real help. You’ll see!”
+</p>
+<p>
+So they packed everything, and said good-bye to
+everybody, and were paddled up the lake to Wampoag,
+where they were to take the train for home. They had
+to stop over at the Scouts’ camp and break the news
+to Tom. But Winona invited him fervently to stay
+where he was. She knew that with the best will in
+the world to be useful a boy makes more work than he
+does, and has to be cooked for to quite an extent. Tom
+said he would be down the next day to see his mother,
+but he would go back again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good-bye, dears,” said Mrs. Bryan, who was seeing
+them off, when she parted from Florence and
+Winona at the dock, “I know you’ll be happy. Remember
+we’ll miss you all the time, Ray-of-Light. And
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279'></a>279</span>
+I don’t know what I’ll do without Florence to run
+errands for me. Come back as soon as your mother
+can spare you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We will,” said Winona. “Only it feels like the
+poetry—don’t you remember?
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Remember&nbsp;&nbsp;what&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;tell&nbsp;&nbsp;you,&nbsp;&nbsp;says&nbsp;&nbsp;the&nbsp;&nbsp;old&nbsp;&nbsp;man&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;his&nbsp;&nbsp;son—<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Be&nbsp;&nbsp;good&nbsp;&nbsp;and&nbsp;&nbsp;you’ll&nbsp;&nbsp;be&nbsp;&nbsp;happy—but&nbsp;&nbsp;you&nbsp;&nbsp;won’t&nbsp;&nbsp;have&nbsp;&nbsp;any&nbsp;&nbsp;fun!”<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just the same,” said the Guardian, “being what
+you are, Winona, I’d venture to promise you that in
+the long run you will get more happiness out of being
+happy than out of having fun.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona laughed as she kissed her good-bye.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m going to plan ways for glorifying work and
+being happy all the way down on the train,” she said,
+“but I haven’t any—well—thoroughly planned—yet!”
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+It was nearly nightfall when Winona reached
+home, for she had not started till a late afternoon
+train. She found her mother established in the living-room,
+where a door opening on the hall gave her a good
+view of the kitchen, and Clay in it. She looked well,
+but tired, and her foot was bandaged and on a pillow.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re sure you didn’t mind coming home, dear?”
+was the first thing her mother said. “It was a shame
+you had to!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona had to reassure her mother so fervently
+about her being willing to come back, and even liking
+to, that she began to find she really did! It was pleasant
+there, after all. The garden was full of blooming
+flowers, and it was a cool, pleasant day.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280'></a>280</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“What shall I do first, mother?” she asked, as she
+and Florence sat each with one of their mother’s hands,
+and tried to tell her all about everything at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The first thing for you to do,” said Mrs. Merriam,
+“is to get baths and put on cool dresses, both of you,
+and come down to dinner. Your father and Clay are
+getting it. You aren’t to do a thing till to-morrow,
+dear. You must be tired with your trip.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t think anything could tire me!” said
+Winona blithely. And she and Florence, as each of
+them in turn took baths in the one thing a camp doesn’t
+possess—a bathtub—felt that it was good to be home
+and have mother pet you, after all!
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly is good to have you back, children,”
+said their father, as he sat with a daughter on each side
+of him after dinner. They had their mother out on the
+back porch with them. It was nearly as large as the
+front one, and she could be moved, couch and all,
+through a front window with very little trouble. “Now
+I can have an afternoon off from housekeeping. But
+I’ve done well, haven’t I, Mary?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You certainly have,” said Mrs. Merriam, “and
+it’s been hard for you, too. But now that I have my
+Camp Fire Girls back nobody’s going to need to do
+one thing.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a thing!” said Florence. “We’ve learned
+ever so many things, mother. We’re going to house-keep
+better’n you ever did!”
+</p>
+<p>
+The family shouted. It was so like Florence.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t think quite that,” said Winona modestly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281'></a>281</span>
+“But we’re going to have a lovely time running things,
+anyway!”
+</p>
+<p>
+So next morning the “lovely time” began.
+</p>
+<p>
+It seemed queer to waken on a mattress instead of
+on a pine bed; still stranger to hear the alarm-clock
+go off. Winona did not like alarm-clocks, and she
+threw a pillow at it before she stopped to think. But she
+got up as it told her, for all that, and was downstairs
+in twenty minutes. She had put on a blue ripplette
+work-dress, fresh and pretty. It was pleasant to have
+on a pretty frock instead of the camp uniform.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There are lots of nice things!” she said to herself
+sturdily. “I’m going to enjoy myself every minute, if
+I have to tie a string to my finger to remind me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She found Clay, whose acquaintance she had made
+the night before, already down. The cereal was in the
+double boiler and the coffee in the percolator, already.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hit ain’ much to do fo’ breakfast,” said he encouragingly.
+“Ah do it maself, mos’ly.” And indeed
+he proved so expert that all Winona found left her to
+do was gathering the flowers for the table, and cutting
+the oranges. Breakfast had more frills than usual,
+though—Winona had come home prepared for work,
+and she found some to do. The oranges were loosened
+back from their skins like grape-fruit, there were finger-bowls
+with flower-petals floating on top, the cereal
+dishes had little plates underneath, and even the hot
+corn-bread, which Winona, by the way, discovered Clay
+did not know how to make, was stacked in a highly
+artistic log-cabin pattern. Winona, with a little white
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282'></a>282</span>
+apron over her fresh blue dress, sat and poured the
+coffee importantly. Her father smiled with pleasure,
+as she sat opposite him, flushed and pretty and dainty.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well!” he said. “This is certainly a fine beginning,
+Winnie! Did you learn all this in the woods?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona colored with pleasure.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I think I knew most of it before I went,” she
+said. “That is, all but the corn-bread—that was an
+experiment.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And see!” said Florence. “Flowers in the
+finger-bowls!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But you mustn’t work too hard, little daughter,”
+said her father, as he went into the living-room to bid
+his wife good-bye before he went to business.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona followed him closely with her mother’s
+tray. Mrs. Merriam was dressed, and Mr. Merriam had
+helped her downstairs and to her couch. It had been
+rather fun to arrange the tray with doilies and the
+daintiest china. She carried it in as her father came out.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good-morning, mother!” she said gayly. “Things
+are going beautifully, and housekeeping’s fun!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s my brave little girl!” said her mother.
+“But I must warn you, Ray-of-Light, that you’ll get
+over-tired if you try to put on too many trimmings.
+The trouble with housekeeping is, you never get a vacation.
+It keeps on all day long. Simplify all you can.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona laughed. “I refuse to start on your tray!”
+said she.
+</p>
+<p>
+She made her mother as comfortable as she could,
+then went back to the kitchen.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283'></a>283</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now, Clay,” she said, “Mrs. Merriam’s sent for
+me to come home to run things. You and I are going to
+get as much fun out of the work as we can, and do it
+just as well and as fast as we know how. Aren’t we?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yas’m,” said Clay doubtfully. “But dey ain’ no
+fun to be got outen washin’ dishes,” he added with
+conviction.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona looked thoughtful.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, I suppose there isn’t,” she admitted. “But
+there ought to be. Up at the Camp we got credit for
+what we did, if it was done right. I wonder——”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mean dem credits what folks buys groceries
+with?” interrupted Clay.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No,” said Winona. “But—I’ll tell you, Clay, I
+have a plan! I’ll put a chart up here on the kitchen
+wall. Every time you get the dishes washed and put
+away in half an hour, without breaking them, three
+times a day for a week, you get credit—for fifteen
+cents. What do you think of that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ah like it!” said Clay. “But Ah rather have de
+two cents a day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” promised Winona rashly. “Now go
+ahead with the dishes while I put fresh paper on the
+shelves.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t take it too hard, dear,” Mrs. Merriam
+warned her once more, when Winona ran in, breathless
+from vigorous bedmaking, to report progress. “What
+are you going to do now?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Now? Nothing till lunch time. I’m so glad we
+have dinner at night. It’ll be lots easier to get the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284'></a>284</span>
+hardest meal when it’s cooler, and there’s been a rest
+between.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You dear child!” said her mother, reaching out
+her hand to Winona where she sat by the sofa. “You’re
+bound to look on the bright side.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m bound to glorify work and be happy,” said
+Winona gayly. “Now, mother, I’d like some money.
+I’d rather not start with a regular housekeeping allowance
+till Monday. But right now I want a dish-mop,
+and a soap-maker, and some new white oil-cloth for
+the kitchen dresser. Can I have all that?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly,” said her mother. “Keep the kitchen
+as spic and span as you can. The fresher the surroundings,
+the easier it is to work.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So after luncheon, which wasn’t much trouble because
+there was no man to cook for, Winona and Florence
+went shopping, leaving Clay singing “Ma Honey
+Man” cheerfully over his dishes. The money their
+mother had given them bought not only the things
+Winona went after, but pink and blue chambray for
+aprons for herself and Florence, and red for Clay.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The pretty aprons will make it more fun to be in
+the kitchen—don’t you think so, Florence?” asked
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Florence, naturally, thought so, too, and they
+bought them and made them up before the day was
+over. Florence asked of her own accord for definite
+things to do. And an idea came to Winona—that they
+start a system of home honor-beads.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course they won’t really count,” she explained
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285'></a>285</span>
+to her little sister, “but they’ll always be there to remind
+us of our work.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That will be lovely!” said Florence, “but what
+will they be like?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait and see,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+That day was all used up making the new long
+aprons and the mob-caps to match, dainty and Kate-Greenaway
+looking. But the next morning after the
+beds were done they went to sit with their mother.
+She said they could make the beads there with her.
+Winona ran out into the garden and brought back
+a handful of flowers that she put in water, and set
+beside her mother’s couch.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How do you feel, mother?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It doesn’t hurt badly at all,” said her mother
+cheerfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona carried out the tray, and moved about,
+straightening her mother’s room a little more before
+she sat down to her work.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’re sure we’re not in your way, mother?”
+she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Indeed you aren’t!” said her mother. “You don’t
+know how lonely I’ve been with all my children gone.
+And do let in all the air and sunshine you can, dear.
+It may be hot later, so that we’ll have to shut out the
+light a part of the day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Winona, doing it. Then she
+called to Florence.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Florence, will you get the oil-paints that we use
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286'></a>286</span>
+for stencilling?” she asked. “I can borrow them,
+mother, can’t I?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Merriam was perfectly willing, and while
+Florence was getting the tubes of paints, and the
+brushes, Winona brought out a jar of ordinary kidney-beans
+from the kitchen. She spread newspapers on
+the floor and on the table, and when Florence came
+back with the paint she set to work.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Just beans!” said Florence scornfully. “You
+can’t make beads out of <em>them!</em>”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t I?” said Winona, “Well, if you don’t like
+them when they’re done, I’ll buy you a string of any
+kind of colored ones that you want.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you,” said Florence, settling down to
+watch her sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+The first thing Winona did was to pierce each of the
+beans lengthwise with a steel knitting-needle, which she
+heated in the alcohol lamp’s flame. This was the longest
+part of the work. Next she strung them all on a long
+piece of cord. Then while Florence held one end of
+the cord and she the other, Winona dashed each bead
+in turn with touches of color, one after another—rose,
+blue, green and violet. She finished them with little
+flecks of gold paint, and fastened one end to the chandelier,
+where the beads could swing free and dry soon.
+The girls got luncheon while the beads were drying.
+</p>
+<p>
+After luncheon was eaten and cleared away the girls
+went to work on their beads again. Florence held the
+string while Winona went over them with shellac.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think we’d better put them outdoors this time,”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287'></a>287</span>
+she decided. “The smell of the shellac may worry
+mother.”
+</p>
+<p>
+So they swung the beads from the hammock rope.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you think you will want to wear them?” she
+asked Florence, as she came back and began to clear
+away the paint-spotted newspapers.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I should just think I would!” said Florence enthusiastically.
+“Why, they look just like the ones in
+the Wampoag stores, only lots prettier.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Who told you how to make them, Winnie?”
+asked her mother. “They are certainly lovely.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nobody,” said Winona. “I saw some like them,
+and thought I could do it—that’s all.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think you ought to get a real honor-bead for
+that,” said Florence. “I’m going to put down everything
+you do that I think might get honors for you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll keep track, too,” said Mrs. Merriam. “That’s
+a good idea, Florence. Then perhaps Winona’s having
+to leave the Camp won’t be such a setback. Give me
+a pencil, dear, and that little black notebook by it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They wrote down the making of the beads.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We must keep watch, you and I, Florence,” Mrs.
+Merriam said.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona looked radiant.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m going to write to Camp now, mother,” she
+said, “and I’ll ask Mrs. Bryan about counting things
+like this. It would be lovely if I got on as fast here
+as there—but I don’t believe it’s possible.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wait and see,” said Mrs. Merriam.
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288'></a>288</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE</h2>
+<p>
+Of course, things didn’t always go smoothly, even
+with Winona’s young energy and good-will hard at
+work. “Accidents will happen in the best regulated
+families” was a proverb whose meaning Winona
+learned thoroughly before she was through. There
+was, for instance, a tragic Saturday when she made
+ice-cream with most of the ice in the ice-box, and forgot
+to telephone for more. A sizzlingly hot Sunday
+dawned, with no ice to be had. So the Sunday chicken
+and lettuce were badly spoiled, not to mention various
+tempers. Winona, tired, hot, and with a consciousness
+of guilt, spent most of Sunday afternoon in the kitchen
+trying crossly to invent a Sunday night supper which
+did not need milk, eggs or salad. The day ended with
+a found-at-the-last-minute meal of potted tongue and
+canned peaches, and a general forgiveness all round,
+but it was a long time after that before Winona forgot
+it; indeed, she was known to get out of bed to take final
+peeps at the ice-chest and make sure it was filled.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nevertheless, and in spite of all the mishaps that
+are bound to worry housekeepers, a light heart, a strong
+body and the fixed intention to make the best of things
+carried Winona triumphantly past her worries. Presently
+she found that things were settling into a regular
+routine, and that housekeeping was more interesting
+than hard. Best of all, she found she had a great deal
+of time to herself.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289'></a>289</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Tom came home. The Scouts had had to
+break up earlier than they expected, for two or three
+reasons. One was that Mr. Gedney had to get back
+to his business, another was that several of the boys
+worked, and had to get back, too. So Tom descended
+on his family, and Billy appeared next door. And
+things began to happen.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom tried faithfully not to be any trouble, and
+succeeded pretty well. And Mrs. Merriam’s ankle got
+better, slowly, as bad sprains do. Presently she was
+well enough to be taken in a wheel chair to see her
+friends. She usually went to spend the day.
+</p>
+<p>
+One day everything seemed particularly calm and
+serene. Tom had wheeled the mother to the other end
+of town, early in the morning, and she was going to be
+taken for a long automobile ride by one of her friends.
+Tom had taken a pocketful of sandwiches, and gone
+off for a fishing-trip. So Winona built a mound of
+more sandwiches for herself and Florence, and prepared
+to take a day off.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was curled up on the front porch in a hammock,
+reading, when the first thing occurred.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Does Miss Winona Merriam live here?” inquired
+a familiar voice; and Winona, looking up, saw Louise,
+dusty and beaming.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Louise, you angel! How lovely it is to see
+you!” she said, jumping up and hugging her friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, isn’t it?” said Louise, hugging back. “I
+came down on the train, and I’m here to spend the day,
+if you want me.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290'></a>290</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Want you! I should think I did!” said Winona.
+“Come in and get cool.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m not hot,” said Louise, “but I <em>would</em> like a
+drink of water.”
+</p>
+<p>
+They were in the kitchen, fussing about pleasurably
+together, when they heard steps clattering up the porch.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s the ice-man,” said Winona. “I must pay him.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She ran upstairs, and Louise went on helping herself
+to sandwiches. She had eaten three, and was considering
+whether she really wanted anything more till lunch-time,
+when a large, fishy hand dropped over her shoulder
+and took a handful of ham-and-lettuce ones.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tom Merriam! There won’t be enough for lunch
+if we both eat them! I thought you’d gone off fishing
+for the day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“So did I,” said Tom leisurely, “but I found I
+hadn’t. Where did you blow in from?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Camp,” she said. “Winona’s upstairs hunting for
+change. She thought you walked like the ice-man.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Poor Win! She has that ice-man on her mind,”
+said Tom. “Nay, nay, little one. For far other reason
+am I here.”
+</p>
+<p>
+He struck an attitude, with the sandwich he hadn’t
+finished waving over his head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Got hungry?” asked Louise prosaically.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not at all,” said Tom. “It was this way. As I
+was purchasing bait, I met my father.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well—did he send you home?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not exactly. Only—there’s a convention in town.
+A ministers’ convention. And father’s met two long-lost
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291'></a>291</span>
+college chums, which—or who—are coming here to
+dinner to-night. One has a wife. Better tell Winona,
+and have Clay put on some extra plates. And—I forgot—here’s
+a fish I caught before I used up my bait
+and met father. Have him boiled or something for
+dinner with some of that stuff like mayonnaise dressing
+with green things in.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Your father?” asked Louise frivolously.
+</p>
+<p>
+“No, the fish!”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom rushed upstairs to change his clothes, while
+Louise thoughtfully ate another sandwich and called
+Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona came running down the back stairs.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you keep him?” she said. “I couldn’t find
+where I’d put the change.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It wasn’t the ice-man,” said Louise, “it was
+Tom.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tom?” asked Winona. “But he was gone for
+the day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anyway, he’s back. And—Winona Merriam,
+we’ll have to make more sandwiches for supper, or
+dinner or whatever it is. Two ministers and one wife
+are coming here to dinner to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona sprang to her feet and snapped her book
+shut.
+</p>
+<p>
+“<em>Sandwiches!</em>” she said scornfully. “Don’t you
+know you have to <em>feed</em> convention people? Mother
+would die, and the Ladies’ Aid faint in a body, if we
+gave them sandwiches for dinner. No. They have to
+have a course dinner!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292'></a>292</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where are you going to get it?” asked Louise
+meekly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Here!” said Winona. “I found one in a magazine
+the other day. Let’s see what we can do with it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise looked at Winona with respect. “Do you
+often rise to occasions this way?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is the almost human intelligence that I have
+sometimes,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sure it’s intelligence?” asked Louise doubtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona led the way upstairs toward her scrapbook
+without deigning to reply. Both girls bent eagerly over
+the course dinner she had pasted in on the last page.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Shellfish, soup, fish, salad, roast, entrees, vegetables,
+dessert, black coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins,”
+she read. “These, in the order named, constitute a
+simple dinner.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’d like to know who brought up the woman who
+wrote that,” commented Louise. “The Emperor of
+Russia, I should think.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anyway, I am going to try to have it,” said
+Winona. “We can have oysters to begin with, because
+Tom always has some around for bait.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“That kind mayn’t be good to eat,” objected Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind. Perhaps these people won’t know
+the difference, just think they’re a brand-new kind.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You don’t open them till the very last thing, and
+then you serve them with ice on their heads to keep
+them cool, and lemon slices. I know that much,” said
+Louise, following Winona downstairs again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then we won’t open them till the very last thing,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293'></a>293</span>
+and forget all about them till Tom comes downstairs
+again,” said Winona with decision. “Soup—let’s see.
+Oh, I know! Mother had me make some bouillon this
+morning, for old Mrs. Johnson down in Hallam’s Alley.
+We’ll serve that in the bouillon cups, and make Mrs.
+Johnson some more to-morrow, or take her chewing-tobacco
+instead. She’d much rather have it, she says.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right. And Tom brought some fish in,” supplied
+Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+They went out to inspect the fish, and found that
+there would be plenty, if it was carefully distributed.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Doesn’t everything dovetail beautifully?” said
+Winona thankfully. “What’s next?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Salad,” said Louise, consulting the scrapbook.
+“Haven’t you any lettuce in the garden?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course we have!” said Winona. “All there
+is to do is to pick it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well—the roast?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But here there was a deadlock.
+</p>
+<p>
+“There isn’t a thing in the house to roast,” said
+Winona, “and this time of year you have to telephone
+early to get things.” She moved to the telephone, and
+pulled herself back in dismay. “This is Wednesday!”
+she said. “And all the shops are closed Wednesday
+afternoon!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It isn’t afternoon, yet,” said Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Look at the clock,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+And it was afternoon—one o’clock.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Perhaps that’s a stray butcher,” said Louise, as
+they heard a long, loud knock at the kitchen door.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294'></a>294</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+But it was only Billy Lee, who explained that he
+had tried every door but this in vain. He had a note
+to Winona from his sister. He perched himself on the
+stationary tubs while she read it, on the chance that she
+might want to write an answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Come over and stay with me this afternoon,” it
+said. “I have a headache.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, I can’t, Billy!” explained Winona, looking
+up from the note. “We have dinner to get for two
+ministers and their wife, and—Billy, you have a great
+deal of steady common sense. I heard father say so.
+What would you do if there wasn’t any meat, or any
+time to get any, or any place to get it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy tucked his foot under him, and looked serious,
+mechanically taking a sandwich as he thought. The
+girls were eating them, too, for it had been silently
+agreed that that would be all the lunch they would
+bother with.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why not try Puppums?” he suggested. “If
+they’re missionaries they’re used to roast dog. Every
+missionary has to learn to like it in the last year of his
+course.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes, or we might roast Clay,” said Louise scornfully.
+“Why don’t you suggest that? He isn’t any
+use, goodness knows, and they may have been missionaries
+to the cannibals!” She glanced at the small darky,
+who was sitting on the cellar door in happy idleness,
+singing fragments of popular songs to himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You ought to make him useful,” said Billy.
+“Here, Clay, get up and help your young ladies.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295'></a>295</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ah <em>is</em> helpin’ ’em,” said Clay with dignity; nevertheless
+he rose and came in for further orders.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Down home,” continued Billy, “we always kill
+a chicken when we expect a minister.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But we haven’t so much as a papier-mache Easter
+chick,” objected Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The people next door but one have,” said Winona
+excitedly, starting up. “It’s against the law to keep
+chickens within the city limits, but they do it. But
+they’re away for the day.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They’re always getting into your garden and
+tempting poor old Puppums to chase them,” said Billy
+sympathetically.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona, acting on his suggestion, went to the door
+and looked out.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” she said. “There’s one there now. There
+nearly always is.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Louise lifted one eyebrow. “Well?” said she.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Very well,” said Winona. “Come on, ladies and
+gentlemen. We are going to catch a next-door-but-one
+chicken, and pay the Janeways for him to-morrow.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“When Puppums caught one last week,” said Florence,
+appearing suddenly, evidently in full possession of
+the conversation, “you tied it round his neck!”
+</p>
+<p>
+She went down under the tubs to extract the
+wronged animal and sympathize with him on the injustice
+of life. But only Puppums heard her, for Billy
+and Winona, hindered by Clay, were careering wildly
+about after a vociferous, very agile fowl. It was finally
+captured with a crab-net, and led away to execution
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296'></a>296</span>
+by Clay. It appeared that he, also, had had experience
+in chicken-killing for clergymen. He had often done
+it, he said, very artistically.
+</p>
+<p>
+As he and the rooster passed on their way to the
+scaffold, Winona ran into the kitchen, and out again
+with a scream.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s Henry!” she said wildly. “It’s Henry!
+We’ve caught the Janeways’s pet rooster! Clay!
+Clay!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yas’m!” said Clay, appearing with Henry’s head
+in one hand and his body in the other. “Dis heah
+roosteh she certn’ly is good an’ daid! I c’n fix ’em!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“And they loved him so!” said Winona tragically.
+“They were telling mother only yesterday how intellectual
+he was. ‘Not clever, merely,’ Mrs. Janeway said,
+‘but really intellectual, my dear Mrs. Merriam!’”
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy clutched the tubs in order to laugh better, and
+Louise sat down just where she was, on the floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the matter?” called Tom, running downstairs
+very clean and tidy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winona’s murdered the Janeways’s intellectual
+rooster!” explained Billy; and lay back on the tubs
+again.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom, too, began to howl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What—Henry?” he said, when he could speak.
+“Oh, Winnie, you <em>have</em> done it! They’ve had him in
+the family since their grandfather’s time anyway. Well,
+you’d better make the best of it, and have Clay take out
+his interior decorations. Maybe we can eat him if you
+boil him long enough. I could have robbed the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297'></a>297</span>
+Martins’s tank of their tame goldfish if I’d known you
+wanted a dinner of household pets.” He sat down
+on the tubs by Billy and went off again.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I suggested Puppums in the first place!” gurgled
+Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind, Win,” said Louise, going over to
+Winona, who stood mournfully by the window, “I’ll
+attend to Henry. We’ll boil him first and then bake
+him, and he’ll be quite good. I’ll make the stuffing for
+him, too. I know how quite well.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, thank you, Louise!” and Winona brightened
+up.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh,” teased Billy, “then the remorse isn’t because
+he’s Henry, but because he’s tough?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s both,” said Winona, “but there’s no use being
+uselessly remorseful when you have work to do. I
+can feel ever so badly about it when I go to bed to-night.
+I often do. The fish is all right, anyway, and I’m going
+to make some sauce hollandaise for it out of the cookbook.
+Really all you need to know how to cook is a
+cookbook and intelligence.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I see the cookbook, but where——” began Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Billy Lee,” said Winona firmly, “if you came to
+see Tom, won’t you please take him out on the front
+porch and see him?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I didn’t!” said Billy coolly. “I came to bring
+Nataly’s note, and I’m staying to see you invent a ten-course
+dinner, if you’ll let me. Let me stay to dinner,
+Henry and all, and I’ll make your fish-sauce. All you
+need is a cookbook and intelligence——”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298'></a>298</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Two clergymen,” counted Winona, “one wife,
+father, Louise, Tom, me—Florence is going out to supper,
+she said this morning. You’ll just make eight,
+Billy. Come and welcome, only please leave the fish-sauce
+alone.”
+</p>
+<p>
+But Billy had already tied himself into a big pink
+apron, and was mixing butter and flour in a saucepan
+with every sign of knowing what he was about.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a brief, tense silence while the chicken,
+some white potatoes and onions, were put on to boil,
+sweet potatoes laid in the oven to be baked, and Clay
+sent into the garden for lettuce and radishes. They did
+not light any of the gas-stove burners except the one
+under the late Henry, because the afternoon was yet
+long. They went out on the porch and talked for a
+couple of hours. There was a general feeling that they
+mustn’t get too far away from the dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+About four Winona remembered to say to Tom,
+“Have you any bait-clams or oysters? We need them
+for our first course.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Bait!” said Tom. “Considering we’ve stolen the
+meat from the neighbors, and robbed the poor of the
+soup, and I caught the fish, we can afford to buy a few
+blue-points. I’ll go down and get them. Is there anything
+else you’d like while I’m down town?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Is it too late to order ice-cream?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m afraid so,” he said. “The ice-cream places
+won’t be open till five-thirty, and then only for an hour,
+you know.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“The dairies are,” Winona remembered. “Please
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299'></a>299</span>
+buy some cream on your way back, and we’ll find a
+receipt and make it. There are nuts and raisins in the
+house. Crackers—cheese.... I think we’ll have
+enough for dinner.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I shouldn’t wonder!” said her brother thoughtfully,
+as he walked away to get his wheel.
+</p>
+<p>
+The others went back to the kitchen, and Billy went
+on with his sauce hollandaise—that is, he took it out of
+the bowl of water where it had been cooling, and put
+it in the ice-chest.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, it’s good!” said Winona, rather impolitely,
+having sampled it on its way.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course it’s good!” said Billy serenely. “Didn’t
+I ever tell you about our old cook down south, and how
+I adored her? I used to tag round after her all the
+time when I was small—never would stay with my
+nurse—and I learned a lot of things. And seeing I’m
+going to be invited to this banquet, looks like I’d better
+make the ice-cream for you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, can you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Watch me!” said Billy for all answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+As a matter of fact, when Tom got back with the
+blue-points and the cream, he and Billy went to work
+together, and they compounded a pineapple ice-cream
+that was fit for the gods. Louise, meanwhile, stuffed
+the parboiled fowl and put him in to roast. The boys
+captured Clay, who had gone back to his cellar door and
+his songs, and set him to crushing ice. Winona sat
+down on the tubs where Billy had been, and gave herself
+up to deep thought. The entree had not yet been solved.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300'></a>300</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Pancake batter?” she said aloud at last, in a
+mildly conversational tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m sure of it,” said Billy, poking his head in
+from the back porch.
+</p>
+<p>
+“If I take that pancake batter I got ready for to-morrow
+morning, sweeten it, and put butter and eggs
+and peaches in it, I don’t see why it wouldn’t be peach
+fritters. Anyway I can try ... then you drop
+them in the lard....”
+</p>
+<p>
+She thought it over a little longer silently. Then
+she jumped down, and went into the cellar for the
+batter and the peaches, and brought them out on the
+back porch, near the ice-box, to experiment with. Tom
+had gone back to the pantry to see if there was cake
+enough, but Billy was still packing ice and salt around
+the ice-cream.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Dear me!” said Winona, setting down her load
+on a low shelf. “I hate to see you doing all this.
+You’re company, you know, and here we’re letting you
+get a lot of the dinner. It worries me!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t let it,” counselled Billy, tossing a lock of
+hair out of his eyes and going on with the packing.
+“I’m having a good time. To tell you the truth, I
+always have a good time over here. I rather feel as
+if I belonged to the family—and that’s a nice feel to
+have. You’re a good little chum, Winnie.... If
+you don’t let me pack all the freezers and things I
+want to I’ll just have to go back to merely being let
+in once in awhile, like company.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I feel as if you belonged to the family, too, Billy,”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301'></a>301</span>
+said Winona sincerely, “and if your packing freezers
+is any sign you do, go right on, please.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am,” Billy assured her with his usual placidity.
+</p>
+<p>
+“The lard’s hot, Win! Come see if they’ll frit!”
+called Louise from within; and Winona dashed off with
+her batter. But it was nice to have Billy feel that way
+about things. He was certainly the nicest boy she
+knew....
+</p>
+<p>
+They began together, she and Louise, to drop the
+yellow batter into the fat, while Clay and the boys
+turned the freezer by turns. Louise and Winona had
+become so excited about their dinner by this time that
+a mere fritter-sauce was nothing. They made one, it
+seemed to them afterwards, looking back, without
+knowing how they did it, and it was very good at that.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oysters, soup, fish, salad,” muttered Winona for
+the twentieth time. “I believe everything’s ready but
+the cream, and that must be almost finished. Boys!”
+she called out through the back door, “will you please
+go and deck yourselves for the feast? Wear your
+tuxedos, please. We’re going to keep up the Merriam
+reputation for hospitality, or die in the attempt!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right—just wait till we pack it,” Tom called
+back.
+</p>
+<p>
+But she saw that they had separated in quest of
+their evening clothes before she left. Tom had just
+acquired his first set, and wasn’t particularly fond of
+them. But he put them on meekly, just the same.
+</p>
+<p>
+“We’d better dress, too,” said Louise. “I’ll run
+over home and slip some things in a suitcase, and be
+right back again.”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_302'></a>302</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX</h2>
+<p>
+Louise was as good as her word. She was back in
+a very few minutes, and in Winona’s room again.
+She found her friend standing in the middle of the
+floor, her dress exactly what it had been when she left.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Better hurry,” warned Louise. “We haven’t
+overmuch time.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hurry!” said Winona despairingly. “How can
+I? Do you know what I’ve done? I’ve hung away
+every single thin dress I own in the wardrobe, instead
+of putting them in the wash. I knew there was something
+I’d forgotten, and I couldn’t think what it was.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, how dreadful!” said Louise. “You’ll have
+to put on something gorgeous, to match the boys’
+clothes.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What can I do?” asked Winona sadly, and swung
+open the doors of her wardrobe. There, crumpled, forlorn,
+dejected, hung a line of dresses each hopelessly
+past wearing in its present state.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Isn’t that a nice trick for a Camp Fire Girl?”
+inquired Winona scornfully. “It’s the kind of thing
+you’d lecture a Blue Bird kindly but firmly for doing,
+and make her see what a wreck she was going to make
+of her whole life if she kept on.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Never mind,” said Louise soothingly. “You’ve
+had so many other things to do, it’s no wonder you
+couldn’t remember that. Haven’t you anything but
+wash dresses? Where’s your yellow silk voile?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I <em>did</em> remember that!” said Winona with a reluctant
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303'></a>303</span>
+grin. “I sent it to the cleaner’s day before yesterday.
+It won’t be done till Saturday.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What about your flowered dimity? Is all the
+freshness out of that? You don’t wear it often.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I sent for it from camp, for one of the girls to
+use in the Samantha tableaux, and the girl still has it,
+I suppose. She never gave it back. I forgot to ask
+for it, in the hurry of getting home. There’s no
+use trying to think. I’ve thought and thought, and
+everything else is too hot to wear, or soiled. There’s
+nothing for it but a shirtwaist and skirt.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anything of mine would be up to your knees,
+and baggy,” said Louise thoughtfully. “Wait a minute,
+Win, till I think.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll do my hair while you’re at it,” said Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why couldn’t you borrow something of your
+mother’s?” was Louise’s next thought.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mother wears long dresses,” said Winona. “If
+she didn’t I could—I’m nearly her build.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Couldn’t you pin them up?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I declare, I believe I’ll try,” exclaimed Winona
+daringly. She ran out of the room, while Louise went
+on with her own dressing, and came back in a minute
+with a fresh, silk-lined black organdy over her arm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is all there is for it,” she said. “Mother
+would be willing, I know, if she were here. She always
+wants me to wear her things.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s lovely,” said Louise admiringly, as Winona’s
+pink cheeks and blue eyes appeared above the soft black,
+“but I’m afraid we’ll hurt it if we put pins in it.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304'></a>304</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“I won’t pin it up, then,” said Winona. “The
+guests will never know the difference. I don’t suppose
+father has mentioned my age.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll look awfully old!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t care! Have you any black hair-ribbons
+you could let me have, Louise? I see where I never
+get the honor bead for not borrowing, by the way!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You won’t lose it on account of my ribbons,” said
+Louise, “because I haven’t any. But I don’t believe
+hair-ribbons and your gown would match. Did you
+know you had a train?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“No!” said Winona joyfully. She loved “dressing
+up,” and this was beginning to look very much like
+it. “I’ll do my hair up on top of my head, and nobody’ll
+think I’m younger than twenty!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good!” said Louise, and helped. They wound the
+goldy-brown mass up on the very top, and completed
+the effect by hunting out a pair of plain glass eye-glasses,
+which Tom had brought from the ten-cent
+store once long ago.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You look twenty-five anyway!” exclaimed Louise,
+and Winona fitted the glasses on her nose and assumed
+a severe expression to match. “Put your hair back off
+your forehead—that way.... That’s splendid!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do look old!” said Winona, with a pleased expression.
+She trained up and down the room and
+looked at herself in the glass. “I’ll go down now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’ll be there in a minute,” said Louise. “Don’t
+wait for me.”
+</p>
+<p>
+When Winona sailed down in her disguise to put the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305'></a>305</span>
+finishing touches to the table she found that Tom was
+already dressed, and was standing meekly at the head
+of the board. And also he had found time to decorate it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How do you like it?” he asked in a tone even
+meeker than his attitude.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona looked, pulled off her glasses in order to
+see better, looked again—and dropped down in a hopeless
+heap in the opposite chair. She did not say anything—the
+situation was beyond words.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t you like it?” said Tom again sweetly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Like it!” said Winona, beginning to giggle.
+</p>
+<p>
+Four half-barrel hoops had been wreathed in smilax,
+and arched across the table at regular intervals, one
+at each end and one between each two places. In the
+middle of the table, completely hiding the olives, lay a
+half-opened gridiron, also wound with smilax. It was
+all very neatly done, for Tom was very neat-handed;
+but the general effect was rather startling.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It—why, it looks like somebody’s grave!” said
+Winona protestingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Her tone was so stern that Puppums rose from beneath
+the table and tried nervously to hide under the
+sideboard, revealing as he went a decoration of smilax
+round his neck, continued in a garland down his spine,
+fastened at the tail. He did not seem to like it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s what it is!” said Tom complacently, as
+Winona pounced on the abject dog and unwreathed
+him. “Here’s the magazine I got it from. You said
+to. All there was in this month’s copy was a page of
+neat and inexpensive grave decorations. I copied the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306'></a>306</span>
+handsomest one in the bunch, ‘William R. Hicks; complete
+cost of decoration three dollars and twenty cents.’
+That thing in the middle’s a Gates Ajar, or the nearest
+I could get to it. It got a prize, too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Do you suppose I want William R. Hicks’s grave,
+or anybody’s grave, on the table when we’re having a
+special hand-made dinner that I’ve spent most of the
+afternoon on?” demanded his sister, laughing in spite
+of her objections.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the row?” asked Billy cheerfully, appearing
+in the door with an armful of roses and ferns.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I followed Win’s directions about the table, and
+she doesn’t seem to like it,” said Tom in a voice that
+was intended to sound injured.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the gridiron for? A gentle reminder of
+the Cannibal Isles? We don’t really know yet that
+they’re missionaries!” said Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Sorry you don’t know a Gates Ajar when you see
+it,” said Tom, grinning.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do,” said Billy decidedly. “That isn’t one.
+Here are your roses, Winnie. You look like somebody’s
+step-mother in all that train and glasses. Where
+did you get them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winona!” called Louise, tearing downstairs,
+“I’ve just remembered that Clay has been calling the
+fritters ‘crullers’ ever since we made them. He’ll
+send them in with the ice-cream if he isn’t told not to.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She fled to the kitchen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Step-mother.... M’m,” said Tom with a
+light of mischief in his eye; and followed Louise.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307'></a>307</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“<em>Look</em> at the table!” Winona implored Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Billy looked, took in the whole effect, and, as
+Winona had done, sat down to laugh in comfort.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s not so bad, after all,” he said comfortingly
+when he was through. “Let’s take the bones out of
+these green wicket-things, and lay the vines straight
+across the table. They’ll get into the eats, likely, but we
+can’t stop for that. Can’t you do anything with that
+gridiron ajar? I should think the stuff on it would
+look all right around a low bowl of roses.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe it would,” said Winona with renewed courage,
+and set to work stripping it while Billy took the
+supports from the smilax arches, and laid it flat, with
+an occasional rose at intervals. They found a low,
+wide bowl that, filled with roses, and wound with
+smilax, made an excellent centerpiece.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona stepped back to view the general effect
+with a sigh of satisfaction.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Billy! I’ll remember this afternoon of you to
+the longest day I live!” she said.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Billy! We want you!” called Louise from the
+kitchen in a smothered voice. Winona would have
+gone, too, for she was sure she heard giggles, but just
+at this moment Clay came in, and his inability to understand
+why he shouldn’t add a wide red cheese-cloth
+sash to his white apron drove everything else out of
+her head. By the time she had argued him out of it
+the others were back, suspiciously grave.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not here yet!” sighed Louise. “I feel as if I
+couldn’t wait to have them taste my stuffing! Let’s go
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308'></a>308</span>
+into the living-room and sing, or go out back and play
+tag, or something.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Dar dey is!” shouted Clay, running to the window.
+</p>
+<p>
+The rest rushed, too, and looked over his woolly
+head.
+</p>
+<p>
+“A big one and a little one and a middle-sized wife,
+like the Three Bears,” commented Winona. “They’re
+coming in by the front way. Oh——”
+</p>
+<p>
+That was because the fritter-sauce boiled over just
+as the guests were ushered in. Both the girls forgot
+their manners, and ran to the kitchen to rescue it. So
+only Tom and Billy were in the living-room to be
+introduced.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My wife and daughter will be here presently,”
+said Mr. Merriam, who had evidently forgotten that
+Mrs. Merriam was expected to stay away till about
+nine. “Tom, will you run up and tell your mother
+and Winona that our friends are here?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But even as he spoke Winona, a little breathless,
+but trained, psyche-knotted and eye-glassed, appeared
+in the doorway with Louise behind her. She came in
+with an air of dignity which her mother could not have
+bettered, and greeted her guests regally, in her excitement
+forgetting to wait for an introduction.
+</p>
+<p>
+Not so Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“My step-mother, and my sister,” he whispered in
+the ear of Mr. Driggs, the tall minister, who promptly
+addressed Winona as “Mrs. Merriam.” Winona
+thought he said “Miss,” and went on talking excitedly
+about everything she could think of. Her father was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_309'></a>309</span>
+deep in conversation with Mr. Donne, the other guest,
+who was a classmate of his. Tom’s murmured “Mother
+isn’t home yet—Winona’s managing things——”
+scarcely stopped the flood of reminiscences.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I never heard that your father had a second wife,”
+remarked Mrs. Driggs to Louise, who had selected her
+to talk to.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s quite recent,” said Louise sadly; and Mrs.
+Driggs did not ask any more questions.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before things got more complicated Clay announced
+dinner in an awestruck voice, and fled instead of holding
+aside the portieres for the guests, as he had been
+instructed. He had a good deal on his mind, for he
+could not read very well yet, so they had had to sketch
+each particular thing with a pencil, and pin the series of
+pictures against the wall in their order as they were
+to come. The pictures of the oysters and the sweet
+potatoes were very much alike, and, as Clay confided to
+Winona afterward, they worried him considerably.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona seated her guests with the same dignity
+which had been hers ever since the train had; and led
+the conversation in the ways it should go, nobly assisted
+by Billy. It appeared Billy could talk like a grown-up
+person of forty when he wanted to—which wasn’t often,
+for Billy was a rather silent person ordinarily. Tom
+and Louise were never, either of them, troubled by
+shyness, and except that they seemed to laugh a little
+more than the facts warranted they were just as usual.
+</p>
+<p>
+Every course, from old Mrs. Johnson’s stolen bouillon
+to the black coffee, came on in its proper place and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310'></a>310</span>
+was eaten with enthusiasm. As the third course came
+on without mishap, Winona began to relax, and by
+the end of the dinner was quite at ease. Mr. Donne,
+beside her, was liking his dinner so much that for
+quite awhile Winona did not have to do any talking.
+When he did talk it was about Ladies’ Aid Societies.
+Now Mrs. Merriam was the President of the Ladies’
+Aid of her church, not to speak of various things that
+she held minor offices in, and she was quite an authority.
+Mr. Donne had been told this, and he thought
+he was talking to Winona about something she was an
+authority on. Winona was rather bewildered, for she
+had never attended a Ladies’ Aid meeting in her life,
+and like the inventor of the Purple Cow, till she was
+grown up “never hoped to see one.” Nevertheless she
+struck out valiantly, and was getting on fairly well
+when Mrs. Driggs’s voice struck across the general
+tide of talk.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mrs. Merriam,” she said, “I’m sorry to trouble
+you, but I never can eat fish without a sprinkle of nutmeg.
+Could you have a little grated on this delicious
+bit for me?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, yes!” said Winona cordially. “Clay——!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hit ain’ none, Miss Winnie,” interrupted the small
+servant in a distressed whisper.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then go borrow one at Mrs. Lee’s, and hurry!”
+whispered Winona. “Anything, so you only get it and
+have it for Mrs. Driggs’s fish.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Clay looked black for a moment. Then a comprehensive
+grin dawned on his face. He trotted out
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311'></a>311</span>
+with Mrs. Driggs’s fish, and brought it back again a
+few moments later, liberally nutmegged and very much
+to the lady’s taste. She ate it all and was happy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You seem to have no difficulty in keeping discipline
+in your family and among your step-children,
+Mrs. Merriam,” said Mr. Donne, almost directly after
+the nutmeg episode. “You must seem more like a
+sister than a mother to these tall young people.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona was struck dumb with astonishment for a
+moment. She looked across at Tom, who looked back
+at her imploringly. She could see what had happened
+out in the kitchen, that time that the three others had
+been there alone and giggling. But this was no time to
+have a scene. She braced herself and settled her glasses
+more firmly, after one reproachful look at the three
+culprits, whose faces were tense with apprehension.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” she replied quietly, talking, as Tom afterwards
+said, like a seraph, “They do seem like that.
+They are charming children, really.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Donne went on talking about it. Winona went
+on replying with serene dignity. Even when he praised
+the cook she took it serenely, and when the Ladies’
+Aid came in sight again she called to mind a visit from
+the secretary at which she had been present, and quite
+overwhelmed Mr. Donne with particulars.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Driggs had been a little quiet and hard to
+talk to at the beginning of the meal, but Billy—Billy
+the quiet, Billy the shy among his own kind—proved
+to have the art of talking to grown people down to
+a fine point. He not only kept his end up, but he steered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312'></a>312</span>
+nobly away from risky questions of relationship, and
+other such perilous topics.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It certainly gives you confidence to be a married
+woman!” thought Winona, as she excused herself
+and went to see about unpacking the ice-cream. Clay’s
+performance so far had been perfect, but she did not
+trust anybody but herself to get the cream successfully
+out of the freezer, without getting salt into it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Where did you find that nutmeg, Clay?” she
+asked curiously, as they arranged the cakes and ice-cream,
+and put melted chocolate in a pitcher.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Law, Miss Winnie,” said Clay, his smile nearly
+coiling itself around his ears, “I done tole you hit
+wasn’t none. I des took dis yere ole wooden button-hook
+what hangs on a nail here, an’ grate a li’l bit of
+it off. De minister’s wife she never know de diffunce.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona caught her breath, but this was no time to
+be overcome. The dessert had to be served. They were
+all laughing at something Louise was saying, when she
+came back. “I wonder if they would look so happy if
+I told them about the nutmeg!” she couldn’t help thinking,
+but it did not seem a very good thing to tell anyone,
+just then—although it was too good to keep always.
+The Camp Fire heard about it afterward.
+</p>
+<p>
+Coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins, all appeared and
+disappeared, and then Winona led her sated guests
+out on the porch. She felt triumphantly virtuous. The
+dinner had been good straight through, the talk had
+gone smoothly, and the company seemed very happy and
+pleased. She sat down by Mrs. Driggs and went on
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313'></a>313</span>
+talking. She was going on prosperously when Mr.
+Donne’s voice, from the other end of the porch, stopped
+Mrs. Driggs’s account of her last maid.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How long did you say you had been married,
+Mrs. Merriam?” he inquired.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Married?” echoed Winona desperately, trying to
+think of a way out.
+</p>
+<p>
+She was spared giving her answer. There was a
+sound of footsteps and wheels within the house, and
+Mrs. Merriam’s wheel-chair, propelled by Florence,
+appeared in the doorway.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I got back sooner than I thought I should,
+Frances,” said the real Mrs. Merriam’s cheerful voice.
+“Florence came over and told me that our friends
+were here, so I had her wheel me back as soon as I’d had
+my supper. We didn’t get home from the ride till a
+little while ago, and I couldn’t get here for the meal.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona did not wait to hear more. There was
+a long open window at her back. One spring—and all
+that remained to tell the tale of “young Mrs. Merriam”
+was an overturned porch-chair and the distant sound of
+a tearing garment. Up in her room, pulling down her
+hair and slipping on her fresh middy-blouse and white
+skirt, Winona heard the laughter, and knew the others
+were being forgiven, and the whole tale told.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Anyway!” she said to herself as she took off
+her glasses, shook down her hair, washed her hot face
+and prepared to walk downstairs and meet the family.
+“Anyway, that couldn’t have been a better dinner if
+I’d been married sixteen times!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314'></a>314</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN</h2>
+<p>
+“This paying for deceased poultry,” said Tom, “is
+getting monotonous. First there were those pedigreed
+geese up on the river, and now Henry. I know Henry
+never cost as much as the Janeways say he did.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think we’re paying for all it cost to send him to
+prep school and college,” suggested Louise, who was
+staying over a day. “You forget that Henry was
+intellectual.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“He was tough,” agreed Tom, “if that’s any
+sign! So was paying for him.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, Tommy dear!” said Winona penitently.
+“Henry was really my fault. I oughtn’t to let you
+join in with me. I can pay for Henry very well alone.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think I see you!” said Tom. “No, Winnie,
+united we stand, divided we fall. I help pay for Henry—see
+you later—just remembered how late it is.”
+</p>
+<p>
+He bolted upstairs, leaving Winona, Louise and
+Billy on the porch staring at each other.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s struck Tom?” asked Billy. “First time
+I ever knew him to be in a hurry.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, I don’t know,” said Louise. “I thought
+you two generally hunted together.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not to-night,” said Billy. He vaulted the railing
+casually, and walked out into the middle of the
+lawn, where he could see Tom’s lighted window.
+“He’s up there with all the lights on, walking the floor
+as if he had something on his conscience, trying to tie
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315'></a>315</span>
+all his neckties, one after another,” reported Billy.
+“There—there goes the third one. He’s going to try
+a red one now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I know what it is,” said Winona, seeing a light.
+“I’ve just remembered. He’s going to call on a girl.
+He’s been going to for all week, and just got braced up
+to it. He’s been wearing me out all day, asking me
+for things to talk to her about. I suppose he’s trying
+to decide on the necktie that matches his socks best.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“But, great Scott, he’s been to see girls before!”
+protested Billy. “I’ve been along when he’s been
+seeing girls, and fellows, and even old gentlemen, and
+he never took it so hard.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s a very particular, grown-up call,” explained
+Winona, “with a card-case and a cane, and everything
+like that.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“What’s the cane for?” asked Billy, who had come
+back to his seat on the porch. “Girl collecting them?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I think it must be for moral support,” put in
+Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I didn’t know he had one,” said Billy. “Where
+did he get it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Christmas present last year,” explained Winona
+briefly. “Billy, don’t you wish we were all back at
+Wampoag, having a moonlight swim?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I certainly do,” said Billy. “Not but that your
+porch is nice, too,” he added with the politeness he
+never seemed to forget.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before they could lament camp life any further,
+Tom rushed down the stairs.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316'></a>316</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winnie! Winnie! Where’s my blue scarf?”
+he called from inside the front door.
+</p>
+<p>
+“On Louise,” Winona called back promptly.
+“Don’t you remember, you asked her if she didn’t
+want to wear it with her sailor-suit?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can I have it, Lou?” he asked, coming out. “I
+wouldn’t ask you, but it just matches my hatband.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly you can have it,” said Louise, with
+chilly politeness, unfastening it and handing it to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Good-evening, Mr. Merriam,” said Billy, grinning,
+and rising in order to make a very low bow. “I
+never thought you were this far on the way to being
+a perfect lady, old boy—Mr. Merriam, I mean.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Going to call on an awfully correct girl,” said
+Tom off-handedly. “I say, Lou, can I have that blue
+class-pin of yours?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Certainly,” said Louise again, still more coldly,
+detaching it and holding it out. “Anything else you
+think you’d like?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not that I can think of,” said Tom, taking the
+class-pin. “That’s a good old Lou,” he ended, adding
+insult to injury. Then he sat down and pulled out his
+mother’s celluloid memorandum tablets. He laid them
+on his knee and looked at them earnestly, as he adjusted
+the tie and the class-pin.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Did you think of any more things for me to say
+after I landed the California Exposition on her?” he
+asked his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona looked over at Billy to see if he saw the
+funny side of it. There was no use looking at Louise,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_317'></a>317</span>
+for in her present sulky frame of mind she would not
+have seen anything funny in a whole joke-book.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How would the next election do?” she suggested
+gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+“M-m—all right,” said Tom, entering it. “That
+won’t last forever, though, because all you can ever
+do is guess which man will get it. I think you might
+help a fellow out, Lou. You’re generally so clever.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Ask her how she likes her hats trimmed,” said
+Louise scornfully, without turning around to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no,” said Tom, “that’s too silly a question.”
+But he put it down just the same. “Let’s see. That
+ought to carry me on till nearly nine.... Cæsar!
+It’s time I went! Don’t mind if I go off and leave you,
+do you Bill?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a bit!” said Billy calmly. “I’m all right.
+But”—Billy’s eyes twinkled—“don’t you really think
+you ought to wear your tuxedo, old fellow? Much
+more correct, you know. I saw it in a Hints to Best
+Dressers’ column awhile ago. It said that no true
+gentleman was without evening clothes in the evening.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom looked uneasy, but he was firm.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I won’t get into that thing for anything less than
+a dance or a hand-made clerical dinner,” he said,
+thoughtlessly jamming his hat down over one ear the
+way he usually wore it, then putting it straight with a
+jerk. “Great Scott! I must hurry!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“My ears and whiskers! The Duchess! Won’t I
+catch it if I’m late!” quoted Louise scornfully from
+Alice in Wonderland, as Tom dived down the steps.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318'></a>318</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“What on earth’s got into Tom!” asked Billy.
+“The idea of doing that because you like it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t know,” said Winona. “It is queer, isn’t
+it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Going off acting like he was all grown up!”
+mused Billy, still lost in wonder at such a waste of a
+perfectly good evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I do wish you wouldn’t always say ‘like’ for
+‘as if,’ Billy,” interrupted Louise sharply. “I hate it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“We always say it that way down home,” said
+Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“That’s no reason for your doing it here! Being
+born in China doesn’t make it good manners for you
+to eat with chopsticks,” said Louise, walking into the
+house and slamming the screen-door behind her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Can’t Ah help yo’ find yo’ tempah, Louise?”
+Billy called teasingly after her, with a purposely exaggerated
+Southern accent. There was no answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’d be cross, too, if you were Louise,” Winona
+defended her friend. “One of the things she stayed
+down from camp over to-night for was that she and
+Tom were going off to kodak some cloud effects for a
+magazine prize. And she was going to try to get some
+photographs that would count in Camp Fire work, too.
+And Tom’s walked off, forgetting all about it.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why didn’t you remind him?” asked Billy
+sensibly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Louise wouldn’t let me. She said she’d go
+straight back if I did.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, she needn’t have taken it out on me,” said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319'></a>319</span>
+Billy plaintively. “I didn’t break any engagements.
+I suppose she has a red-haired temper.”
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+Meanwhile Louise, after she banged the screen-door,
+had gone straight through the house to the back.
+Mrs. Merriam was in the living-room, which prevented
+her crying there. She was very much hurt at Tom’s
+forgetfulness. They had been chums for a long time,
+and this particular expedition after cloud effects had
+been something they had planned long before the
+Scouts’ camp broke up. And now Tom had gone gayly
+off, forgetting all about it. It really was horrid.
+</p>
+<p>
+Crying on a bed is hot work in summer, so she
+decided to go out back and do it. She sat on the porch,
+put her arms on the back of a chair and began to cry.
+</p>
+<p>
+But circumstances seemed to be against her.
+Puppums, who had been asleep under a chair, got up,
+yawned, sauntered across the porch, and sat down
+by her. Then he proceeded to whine for her to turn
+around, make a lap, and take him up into it.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, do stop!” said Louise indignantly, when
+the whining had gone on steadily for some minutes.
+But if you took any notice of Puppums he merely
+argued that a little more work would get him what he
+wanted, and went on begging. In the present instance
+he answered Louise by lifting his nose further up in
+the air, and howling, as if he wished to assure her
+that he felt for her.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You mean old dog!” said Louise, jumping up.
+“I’ll settle you!” Puppums was very much pleased.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_320'></a>320</span>
+He had an optimistic disposition, and he thought it was
+a game. He ran around and around the porch, finally,
+when he began to see that Louise was in earnest, hiding
+under the ice-chest, where he knew nobody could follow
+him. Louise stopped short, and eyed the ice-box.
+It occurred to her that she was thirsty.
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is what you might call being guided,” said
+she, and opening the lid, looked in. She found a bag
+of lemons, a bunch of bananas, and she thought she
+remembered where Winona kept the bottled cherries
+and the cookies. She went into the kitchen and began
+work, and in a very little while was on her way back
+to the front porch with a tray, designed to show her
+remorse for being cross, piled with cookies and fruit
+lemonade. Mrs. Merriam, to whom she offered the
+first glass, pronounced it very good indeed, and sent
+her on her way. Puppums danced wildly about her,
+with the idea that she was clearing a table, and he
+might get bones.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona and Billy were still talking as placidly as
+if Tom had not been wrestling with a formal call, and
+Louise with a bad temper, for the last twenty minutes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Cookies—oh, and fruit lemonade! Louise, you
+dear!” cried Winona, while Billy took the tray and
+put it on a table.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Won’t you have some, Billy? I know you like
+it, and—and I <em>do</em> like your Southern accent,” she
+added in a rush.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Thank you, Louise,” said Billy. “I like your
+accent, too—and your fruit lemonade—very much.”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_321'></a>321</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+They both laughed. “Let’s bury the hatchet,” he
+added. “Louise, these certainly are fine cookies.”
+</p>
+<p>
+The three were still sitting comfortably over their
+refreshments, even Puppums crunching cakes contentedly
+in a corner, when Tom hurried up the steps and
+banged himself down in a chair. His hat was jammed
+to one side in the old unceremonious fashion, his gloves
+had vanished, and even his cane was nowhere to be seen.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have some,” said Billy tactfully before Tom
+could say anything. They pushed the cakes toward
+him, and poured him some lemonade in Winona’s glass,
+and after he seemed less gloomy they got him to talk.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tell us all about it,” said Winona soothingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Nothing to tell!” said Tom in something rather
+like a growl.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Have another cooky, and tell us all about it,”
+repeated his sister in a persuasive voice. And after
+awhile, when he had had some more cookies and
+another glass of lemonade, he told them, gradually.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, I sent in my card, of course,” he began.
+“Asked for Miss Davis.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Of course!” said Winona; for her brother’s
+usual custom was to call up from the sidewalk, “I’m
+coming over to-night,” and then to walk unceremoniously
+in whenever he thought of it, that evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I did that all right, thank goodness!” said Tom.
+“The maid kept me waiting about a year, with a copy
+of Snowbound, and a Gems from Shakespeare, and
+a pug-dog made out of plaster, to amuse me. The
+Davises never seem to sit around in their rooms and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_322'></a>322</span>
+on their porches like other people. Just as I got to the
+point of thinking I’d better go back home <em>Mrs.</em> Davis
+walked in. I was so surprised at seeing her, instead
+of Elsie, that I couldn’t think of a blessed thing to
+say—so I fished up this!”
+</p>
+<p>
+He jerked the tablets out of his pocket and threw
+them to Winona.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Keep ’em away from me,” he said. “I never want
+to see the blessed things again. First thing I found was
+‘Civil War.’ I’d picked out that for a start anyway—thought
+it would be nice and general, and we had it in
+History last term, so I knew a lot about it. You’d have
+thought that would have lasted awhile, wouldn’t you?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Seeing that the real thing lasted four years or so,
+I think it might have,” answered Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a bit of it!” said Tom mournfully. “Mrs.
+Davis turned out to have had a grand-uncle or something
+in it, and she said it was a painful subject. I
+don’t think she ever had a grand-uncle. I believe she
+didn’t know anything about it, and just invented the
+old fellow to get out of talking about it!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Mercy, what suspicions!” said Winona, laughing.
+“You certainly have nearly ruined your lovely disposition.
+Never mind, Tommy, I sympathize with you.
+What did you tackle next?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Tariff-reform, I think,” said Tom.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What is tariff-reform?” asked Winona. “I
+never could understand it exactly.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t ask me to say it all over again!” begged
+Tom. “I was getting anxious by that time for fear I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_323'></a>323</span>
+wouldn’t have subjects enough left to use on Elsie.
+You know she isn’t much of a talker. But I had to say
+something, and Mrs. Davis didn’t, and I couldn’t think
+of anything but this foolish book. Mrs. Davis didn’t
+seem to care much about tariff-reform, either, so I gave
+that up and looked at the list again, and chose
+‘Weather.’ She did warm up a little at that. But
+the best weather won’t last forever, and you could just
+hear the silence bump every little while.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Then I got desperate, and used up Politics and
+Canoeing and the California Fair, and all the rest.
+Folks, I finished off every last thing I was going to
+talk to Elsie about, before she ever appeared! Except
+about trimming hats—that seemed such a foolish thing
+to ask a woman that old about.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“They discussed Measles and Mice, and Music, and
+everything else that began with an M,” quoted Louise
+from her favorite Alice in Wonderland.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Don’t mind her,” said Billy as soberly as he could.
+“Just go on. Did Elsie Davis ever come down at all?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Tom, “she did. Just as I finished my
+last subject, if you please! She seemed to be dressed
+for a party, but she said she wasn’t. She sat down at
+the other end of the room, and tried to see if she couldn’t
+keep as still as her mother. Mrs. Davis stayed right
+there, too, and smiled like an alligator—and there was
+I without an idea in my head or on the memorandum!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Didn’t they even show you the photograph
+album?” inquired Louise, forgetting to be offended.
+</p>
+<p>
+“They wouldn’t talk, I tell you!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_324'></a>324</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well, what <em>did</em> you do?” asked Louise.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom grinned a little, shamefacedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Well—I simply yanked out that old tablet, and
+began at Civil War again. I said ‘As I was just saying
+to your mother!’ and I gave her every subject over!”
+</p>
+<p>
+His hearers howled, and after a minute Tom himself
+joined in. “Did it work better this time?” asked
+Winona at last, wiping her eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Not a work,” said Tom cheerfully, reaching for
+the last cooky. “That is, all but the hat one. That was
+clever of you, Lou. She got almost human over that,
+and began to talk about how many engagements she
+had—had to break half of them. And I said ‘I don’t
+believe in breaking dates,’ and suddenly I remembered
+the one with you to take the pictures—and I left then
+and there, like a streak of lightning. I left my cane—I
+don’t care—she can have it to remember me by.
+Louise, I owe you an apology the size of the house.
+Why didn’t you remind me about those snapshots?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It’s not too late,” said Louise amiably. “The
+moon’s just about right, now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom went into the house after the cameras, sending
+his hat flying up to the hat-tree, followed by his gloves.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Let’s go, too,” said Billy.
+</p>
+<p>
+“All right,” said Winona. She leaned back, and
+laughed, as they waited for the others to come out.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I don’t believe Tom will try any more formal calls
+till he’s eighteen, anyway,” she remarked.
+</p>
+<p>
+“It seems a pity, though,” said Billy, getting up.
+“He wasted a perfectly good cane!”
+</p>
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_325'></a>325</span>CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT</h2>
+<p>
+Louise went back to camp next day, and Winona
+went on with her work at home. Louise had left all
+sorts of presents and messages from the girls, and
+taken a great many from Winona away with her.
+Louise’s visit cheered Winona up very much. There
+was only one hard thing about it—the news Louise had
+brought that the girls had extended the time of their
+stay again. The plan now was to stay in Camp Karonya
+till the fourteenth of September. School opened on the
+fifteenth. It seemed a long time to wait to see her
+friends again—for the doctor was certain that her
+mother would not be able to bear her weight on the
+injured ankle for a month to come.
+</p>
+<p>
+Meanwhile Winona wrote to the girls, and her
+mother and Florence kept track, in what Winona considered
+a very wild way, of the things she did that
+should entitle her to honors. The honor-list and a
+sheet of blanks lived under her mother’s pillow, Winona
+was sure. If it gave her mother pleasure she was glad
+to have her do it; but it occurred to Winona the day
+after Louise left that it mightn’t be a bad scheme to collect
+a few honors herself, things that she was sure
+would count. Also she wanted some fun, and she had
+found that the acquiring of honors usually led to it. So
+Winona proceeded to “start something.”
+</p>
+<p>
+To begin with, next door lived Nataly Lee. Winona
+went over there the very afternoon of the day Louise
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_326'></a>326</span>
+left, and spent the most persuasive three hours of her
+life, explaining to Nataly that they, as the only two
+Camp Fire Girls in town, ought to start some good times
+for other people, who, not being Camp Fire Girls,
+probably didn’t know how. And before she went back
+to get supper she had persuaded Nataly she was right.
+</p>
+<p>
+Next day she and Nataly, cheerful and enthusiastic,
+made a canvass of the girls in their classes who were
+staying home. Winona had rather gone on the principle
+that nearly everyone was off somewhere else, but
+she found it wasn’t so at all. There were six girls beside
+herself and Nataly who were ready and willing
+to join a Porch Club that was to meet once a week,
+and have a picnic one week and a party the next.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona and Tom and Billy, with Nataly, even,
+helping once in a while, spent some time in furnishing
+the Merriam porch with chairs and hammocks and
+screens and lanterns. Then the boys went forth and
+invited their own friends with a lavish hand. The
+first porch party was a grand success, although there
+were about three boys to one girl. But that righted
+itself next time, which was three days later, for the
+Porch Club made an unanimous and prompt decision
+that it wanted to meet twice a week. And more girls
+wanted to join. So, although they were not like her
+own old comrades, Winona found that she was making
+friends whom she would never have had at all, if it had
+not been that she was cut off from her own set of girls,
+still having good times at Camp Karonya. As for
+Nataly, she was a marvellously different person. The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_327'></a>327</span>
+work of management, of social entertaining, proved to
+be exactly what she could do best. And having to
+teach things to others (for the Porch Club added an
+afternoon session, devoted to hand-craft work and reading
+aloud), made her find that she could do things very
+well here that she hadn’t liked doing in camp at all!
+As for Winona, she let Nataly run things as much as
+she wanted to. She herself was just what she had
+always been, Ray of Light, holding the girls and boys
+together by her brightness and her fondness for them.
+She was the centre of things, after all. Not that she
+realized it, particularly; she only thought how queer
+it was that there were so many nice, friendly people
+in the world, willing to do nice things and have nice
+times if you only suggested it. And there are, too.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And, Helen and Louise dear,” Winona wrote to
+her own two best friends back at Camp Karonya.
+“Some of the girls in our classes that we scarcely
+knew, and thought were quiet and stupid, are as nice
+and bright and funny as ever they can be, and ever so
+Camp Firey! I believe we can organize another Camp
+Fire this fall. And I have my housework arranged so
+that I have two hours in the morning, and most of my
+afternoon and evening, to do what I please with. So
+I have a gorgeous time working for honors. It’s a
+scheme I shan’t tell you about till it’s all worked out
+and over with, but I think it’s going to work all right.
+Florence suggested it, bless her heart. Love to the
+whole Camp Fire, and ask them to take a hike for me!”
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_328'></a>328</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona’s supplementary plan for honor-winning
+had been suggested to her this way:
+</p>
+<p>
+One day she was on the back porch, mending, and
+Florence had four bosom friends out in the back garden,
+making a most fearful racket. Mrs. Merriam had
+a headache, and Winona knew that in a little while
+the headache would be worse, or that she would have
+to go and send Florence’s friends home, which meant
+hurting that independent young person’s feelings.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Florence,” called Winona, “wouldn’t you and
+the other girls like me to come down to the end of the
+garden and tell you fairy-stories?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The little girls seemed to very much want to. So
+Winona took her mending and her rocker, and they
+sat down in the shelter of a big tree. Winona told them
+stories till it was time for her to go in and see about
+supper. By then her mother’s headache was over. But
+after supper Florence came up to Winona, and said,
+“The girls want to ask something. They want to know
+if you won’t tell them stories other times, too!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Why, what a lovely idea!” said Winona. “Of
+course I will!”
+</p>
+<p>
+So to the Porch Club and the housekeeping Winona
+added two hours every other day, telling stories to
+Florence and her small friends. She felt rather shy
+over it at first, but gradually it began to be more and
+more easy. When the fairy-tales ran low she went
+to the library and hunted out the Robin Hood and
+Arthur legends, and even history stories once in awhile.
+And one day when she was rummaging the card catalogue
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_329'></a>329</span>
+for more stories about King Arthur she found
+out that the Malory book was only a very little of what
+there was to be told. Everything seemed to lead somewhere
+else. So the story-hours kept to King Arthur,
+except for one fairy afternoon a week, for the rest of
+the month, and Winona learned a good deal about him
+that she would never have found out by herself.
+</p>
+<p>
+After one or two meetings, sewing as she talked,
+she began to show the children a little about darning,
+too. They brought stockings after that, and kept
+quieter, she found, when they were working as well as
+she. The most surprising thing of all to her was that
+she had time enough for everything. The story-hours
+took care of all the household mending that her mother
+did not do; the Porch Club, which met at different
+houses in rotation, was no trouble at all, merely a
+good-times affair. The housekeeping was running
+smoothly, and Winona got time for letter-writing and
+walks with the boys, and even practice on the piano.
+There were lots of places where she and Nataly and
+Tom and Billy could go trolley riding on hot evenings,
+and there were always boys and girls running in and
+out, asking her to go places and do things. Winona
+discovered, as others have before her, that you can have
+a very good time by staying home in the summer.
+</p>
+<p>
+One night, toward the last of August, her mother
+asked her a question.
+</p>
+<p>
+“How would you like to go back to camp to celebrate
+your birthday, dear?” she asked.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now Winona’s birthday, her fifteenth, was on the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_330'></a>330</span>
+eleventh of September, just two days before the girls
+were coming back.
+</p>
+<p>
+“I would, very much,” she said, “but do you think
+you will be able to spare me?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I am quite sure of it,” said her mother. “Indeed,
+I might be able to take charge of the house again by
+next week, if my ankle improves as it is doing now.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, no,” said Winona, “I won’t take the risk.
+Besides, I couldn’t leave the story-hour children, and
+the Porch Club has to have some things planned for it
+that I think I’d better help with. But if I can go up
+there over my birthday it will be lovely.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“You’ll have to get somebody else to tell the stories
+while you’re gone, then,” said Florence. “I don’t want
+my story-hour broken up!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“By all means, don’t break up Florence’s private
+story-hour!” said Tom. “Why don’t you do the
+story-telling yourself, Floss?”
+</p>
+<p>
+But, “That’s true, Florence,” said Winona. “I
+think I can find one of the girls in the Porch Club who
+will do it. You see, mother dear, I’ll need to get all the
+loose ends up out of the way if I go back even for
+three days!”
+</p>
+<p>
+But all the loose ends tied themselves up neatly.
+Ellen Marks, one of the nicest of the Porch Club girls,
+promised to tell the stories for the two days Winona
+would miss. Nataly could look after things elsewhere,
+and by the eleventh Mrs. Merriam was nearly as well as
+ever. So the morning of that day saw Winona on her
+way back to Camp Karonya, with joy in her heart, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_331'></a>331</span>
+her ceremonial costume over her arm, in a special bag.
+</p>
+<p>
+The whole crowd of girls rushed out to meet her,
+and sang a cheer from the time her motor-boat was
+in sight till she landed. They surrounded her, and carried
+her into camp, where supper was nearly ready.
+</p>
+<p>
+It seemed very good to be back. The pine needles
+smelled as woodsily as ever, and the long wooden table
+looked very homelike, with its brown, chattering girls
+surrounding it, all trying to tell her everything at once.
+As soon as supper was over Helen and Louise swept
+her off to her old tent.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hurry,” said Helen. “Get into your ceremonial
+costume, honey. Heap big Council Fire to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Council Fire?” said Winona in surprise. “Why,
+is it the night for it?”
+</p>
+<p>
+“This is an extra-special,” explained Helen hastily.
+“Here, Win, let me help you.”
+</p>
+<p>
+She began to unfasten Winona’s travelling suit.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have a lot more beads than you had,” Winona
+observed a little wistfully, as Helen took her own
+gown down from the wall and began to put it on.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen laughed as she slung the long string of
+colored honor-beads around her neck.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Maybe you’ll catch up,” she remarked carelessly.
+“You’ll doubtless get an honor or so to-night.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, yes,” said Winona. “I ought to get a bead
+or two for home-craft, and I did some story-hour work,
+too.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“As if that was all you did!” said Helen indignantly;
+and stopped herself short.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_332'></a>332</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Hurry up, girls!” said Louise, sticking her bead-banded
+head into the tent. “Time to begin. Hear the
+drum!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, the nice old drum!” cried Winona happily,
+as she heard its well-remembered monotonous sound
+in the distance. The three girls linked arms, and hurried
+to the council hill.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Oh, but it’s good to be back!” said Winona for
+the third or fourth time, as she sank into her place in
+the circle around the first place. She listened dreamily
+as the ceremony of fire-lighting and all the rest went
+forward. Things had been happening, it appeared.
+The reports were given one by one. Winona listened
+on, and Hike the Camp Cat trotted noiselessly over the
+ground and curled himself into Winona’s lap. Even
+he remembered her. She stroked him and listened.
+</p>
+<p>
+Helen, they told, had managed to coax an old farmer
+down the road, the identical one they didn’t buy the
+music-box of, to stop setting traps that hurt rabbits.
+Louise had, after many hoppings about in solitude,
+actually managed to master five folk-dances. Adelaide
+and little Frances had made an emergency dash down
+the river to get the doctor, when one of the other little
+girls had fallen from a tree and broken her wrist.
+There were other things as thrilling.
+</p>
+<p>
+“And all I did was stay home!” thought Winona
+as the tales went on, and the beads were awarded.
+Then she sat up and began to listen more closely, for
+Mrs. Bryan, Opeechee herself, was rising to give this
+report, and that was something sure to be special and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_333'></a>333</span>
+worth while. When Opeechee related what a girl had
+done it was an honor worth having.
+</p>
+<p>
+“You have all done well, and deserved the honors
+you have been awarded on this, our final Council in the
+open,” began the Guardian. “Here, together in the
+woods, it has been easy to follow the law of the fire.
+We have found it so, I know.
+</p>
+<p>
+“But now I want to tell you about a watcher of
+the Camp Fire who has been following the law without
+any of the helps we have. She gave up the camp and
+its good times, and went back to assume the duties of a
+woman—the tending of the real Fire of home. She
+had charge of the household. She kept a family of four
+beside herself, including an invalid mother, comfortable,
+well taken care of and happy, for one month.
+She made a pleasure out of her duties, and showed
+others how. Besides this, she collected girls who had
+not much social life and gave it to them. She led them
+for a month, three times a week. She told children
+stories and taught them sewing every other day for a
+month. And through it all she was happy, and made
+light for others wherever she went. She has carried the
+Torch of happiness and health and work and love, and
+passed it on undimmed to others. Winona, the Flashing
+Ray of Light, is just fifteen to-night. That is the
+earliest age at which anyone can be made a Torch-bearer—but
+I think she deserves the rank, Sisters of
+the Camp Fire. What do you say?”
+</p>
+<p>
+Before the girls could answer Winona was on her
+feet with the kitten in her arms, scarlet and protesting.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_334'></a>334</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“But I didn’t do all those wonderful things,
+Opeechee!” she cried. “I just did what there was to
+do. I like to plan things and have people have good
+times. I just wanted to get as good a time out of it
+all as I could. And I don’t believe I have enough honor
+beads to be a Torch-bearer.”
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan paid her protest very little attention.
+</p>
+<p>
+“What do you say, Sisters of the Camp Fire?”
+</p>
+<p>
+The girls burst out into cheering.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Winona, Flashing Ray of Light, is to take the
+rank of Torch-bearer to-day,” repeated Mrs. Bryan
+inexorably. “Rise, Winona.”
+</p>
+<p>
+And as Winona stood up again (she had sat down
+hastily after her first objection) Mrs. Bryan repeated
+the honors she had won, and that her mother and Florence
+had kept track of so faithfully. She had expected
+the honor for story-telling, but the one for marketing—and
+the one for folk-songs—and—why, that Alice
+Brown pantomime had meant an honor bead! So had
+bringing in and arranging her mother’s invalid-tray,
+and the Porch Club and the story-hour had given
+her a double right to the Torch-bearer rank, which
+requires leadership of a group. Then, of course, the
+wood-craft honors she had won before she went home—she
+had known about those. But to think that everything,
+even that hilarious ten-course dinner she and
+Louise had planned, had been good for a bead! Winona
+had far more than the fifteen required honors for the
+highest rank of the Camp Fire.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_335'></a>335</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+“Repeat the Torch-bearer’s Desire, Winona,” said
+Mrs. Bryan, and Winona, half in a dream, said,
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The&nbsp;&nbsp;light&nbsp;&nbsp;which&nbsp;&nbsp;has&nbsp;&nbsp;been&nbsp;&nbsp;given&nbsp;&nbsp;me<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;&nbsp;desire&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;pass&nbsp;&nbsp;undimmed&nbsp;&nbsp;to&nbsp;&nbsp;others.<br />
+</p>
+<p>
+Mrs. Bryan stepped forward, and threw a string
+of beads over her head. She had not been in Camp
+till now, and so the beads had not come one by one as
+they generally did. She fastened the pin on Winona’s
+breast, and stepped back, while the girls sang a tempestuous
+cheer.
+</p>
+<p>
+Winona sat down on the grass, still bewildered.
+</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>
+“Well, how does it feel to be a Torch-bearer—the
+only one in Camp?” asked Helen late that night, as
+the girls were undressing together.
+</p>
+<p>
+“Wonderful—only I don’t believe it, yet!” said
+Winona. “Think of all those honors that I never even
+dreamed I was getting—and to think I was having
+such fun getting them, too! It seems as if I ought to
+have worked so hard it was uncomfortable, somehow,
+to deserve them.”
+</p>
+<p>
+“It was dreadfully hard to keep the surprise a
+secret, sometimes,” said Helen. “When your letters
+were a wee little bit lonesome, sometimes, we had hard
+work keeping Louise from telling. Oh, Winona, all
+the girls are so glad!”
+</p>
+<p>
+“I’m glad, too,” said Winona soberly. “And oh,
+Helen, I <em>am</em> going to keep on carrying the torch, too—as
+high as ever I can!”
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Winona of the Camp Fire
+
+Author: Margaret Widdemer
+
+Release Date: August 26, 2011 [EBook #37207]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THEY DESCENDED IN A BODY ON ADELAIDE'S TENT _Page 125_]
+
+
+
+
+ WINONA OF THE
+ CAMP FIRE
+
+ By MARGARET WIDDEMER
+
+ Author of
+ "Winona of Camp Karonya," "Winona's War
+ Farm," "Winona's Way."
+
+ A. L. BURT COMPANY
+ Publishers--New York
+
+ _Published by arrangement with J. B. Lippincott Company_
+
+ Printed in U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+WINONA OF THE CAMP FIRE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ONE
+
+
+The room they called the Den in Winnie Merriam's house was dark, except
+for the leaping wood-fire in the big stone fireplace. Around the fire
+sat and lay five girls. They had been toasting marshmallows, but they
+were past the point where you eat the toasted ones with pleasure, or
+even steal the raw ones--which don't taste burnt--to eat
+surreptitiously.
+
+"Helen Bryan, you've been feeding Puppums all your marshmallows for the
+last ten minutes," accused Winnie, sitting up. She had been draping
+herself along a pile of cushions for the last fifteen minutes--thinking,
+evidently, for she had been quiet--a very unusual thing for chattering
+Winnie.
+
+Winnie Merriam was fourteen, but people usually took her for a year
+older, because of her slim height. She had big blue eyes in a face that
+was not regularly pretty, perhaps, but so gay and pink-cheeked and
+quick-smiling that people always _said_ she was pretty--which does quite
+as well.
+
+Her chum, Helen, defiantly fed a last marshmallow to the fat
+near-fox-terrier in the centre of the circle, who didn't particularly
+seem to want it.
+
+"I've got to be polite to my hostess's dog, haven't I?" she retorted.
+"And he asked for them so pathetically!"
+
+"I expect the poor old pup will look more pathetic this time to-morrow,"
+said Winnie. "He'll probably look like Buster Brown's Tige in the last
+pictures--both paws up over his aching head. Then you'll have to come
+back here and hold ice on his fevered brow, won't she, Puppums?"
+
+"Or yours, maybe," suggested Marie Hunter, the quiet brown girl in the
+corner. "What's the matter, Win? You haven't said a word for ages. I've
+been watching you."
+
+"I've been _thinking_!" explained Winnie, nodding her curly brown head
+with dignity.
+
+"For the first time?" suggested Helen. "Don't do it if it hurts, honey."
+
+"No," said Winnie placidly, "I've often been known to do it."
+
+"Well, what were you thinking?" asked Edith Hillis, lifting her yellow
+curls from Marie's lap. Edith was the fluffy member of the crowd, small
+for her age, yellow-haired and blue-eyed and rather too much dressed.
+She was supposed to care more for her complexion than for anything else
+on earth except Marie Hunter, but she was as sweet-tempered as she could
+be, and everybody liked her. "You looked as if you were thinking about
+something awfully interesting."
+
+"Well," said Winnie slowly, "I was thinking about _us_. We know each
+other very, very well, and go together, and have gorgeous times--I was
+thinking that it would be nice if we made ourselves into a club, or some
+sort of a society."
+
+"Oh, say! That's a perfectly gorgeous idea!" exclaimed chubby,
+red-haired Louise Lane, from behind Helen. "I vote we _be_ a club, right
+away!"
+
+"But is five enough?" asked Marie doubtfully. Marie was always the one
+who thought of things. She was a good deal of a bookworm, and did a
+great deal of beautiful embroidery, and never said much. But she was the
+one the girls were apt to ask advice of if they needed it badly. She was
+nearly a year older than Winnie and Edith. Louise wasn't quite fourteen,
+and Helen would be fifteen in two months.
+
+"I think five's plenty," said Louise.
+
+"I don't, exactly," demurred Winnie. "Seems to me there ought to be
+seven or eight anyway, or we'd be like an army all major-generals."
+
+"All right," came from Helen sleepily. "But that can wait. I think the
+thing to make up our minds about first is--what would it do if it was a
+club? I mean clubs have to have some object."
+
+"Why!" exclaimed Winnie blankly, "I never thought of that!"
+
+"Well," still opposed Louise, "I don't see why we have to have an
+object. Just meet, and have a president and secretary and things, and
+enjoy ourselves."
+
+"What about an embroidery club?" suggested Edith. "Marie and I like to
+embroider."
+
+"I _don't_," said Louise flatly.
+
+"Nannie was telling me about a walking-club she belonged to," Helen
+suggested pacifically.
+
+Nannie was Helen's step-mother--not at all like the step-mothers in the
+fairy-tales, but a pretty, gay woman of about twenty-eight, who was
+great friends with her step-daughter and the step-daughter's chums.
+
+"A hiking-club?" asked Winnie. "That would be fun. Why couldn't we
+combine both those things in one?"
+
+"Lovely!" jeered Louise. "I can see myself trotting along up a mountain,
+embroidering as I go!"
+
+"Listen to Louise being sarcastic!" said Helen. "I think the idea of
+combining two or three things is a splendid one."
+
+"What's splendid?" asked a bright voice from the darkness at the other
+end of the room.
+
+"Oh, are you there, Nannie?" called Helen. "We're planning a club--a
+very fine combination club where you do everything."
+
+"It sounds like a Camp Fire," said Nannie. "Your father's downstairs,
+Helen. I ran up to tell you that we're ready to go whenever you are."
+
+"Oh, not yet, please!" begged Winnie. "What is a Camp Fire, Mrs. Bryan?
+Do come sit down by us, and have some marshmallows."
+
+"It corresponds to the Boy Scouts," Mrs. Bryan explained, dropping down
+among the girls, "and it includes doing about everything there is to do.
+It's national, though, and you're affiliated with headquarters."
+
+[Illustration: THEY MADE HER TELL THEM ALL SHE KNEW ABOUT CAMP FIRES]
+
+"Regular dues and meetings?" asked Helen, pricking up her ears. "Oh,
+stay here, Nannie, and tell us all about it!"
+
+They surrounded Mrs. Bryan, and made her tell them all she knew about
+Camp Fires, which was a good deal.
+
+"I like it!" announced Louise when Mrs. Bryan was done. "Me be heap big
+chiefess--wahoo-oo!"
+
+She jumped up as she spoke and waved Helen's best hat above her head for
+a hatchet.
+
+"Oh, my hat!" cried Helen, making a wild dive for it. Puppums thought it
+was all a game for his special benefit, and dived after them--and the
+meeting broke up in disorder. But not before the girls had decided to
+_be_ a Camp Fire, and made Mrs. Bryan promise to act as their Guardian.
+
+Winnie, after the girls had gone, returned alone to the fire, and sat
+down by it, thinking over the things she had been hearing.
+
+"It's going to be heaps of fun," was the first thing she thought, and
+then, "It's going to take lots of time!"
+
+Then she got up and shook herself. "Anyway, I love it!" she decided.
+Then she put the lights out and went to bed.
+
+Helen Bryan was over early next morning.
+
+"Oh, Winnie!" she called up to her friend's window.
+
+"Come on up!" called Winnie back. "I've just had my bath, but I haven't
+finished dressing."
+
+Helen came in by the open back door, spoke to Mrs. Merriam, who was
+getting breakfast, and tore up the stairs to Winnie's room.
+
+"Oh, there's such heaps to tell!" she announced before she was well
+inside the room. "Rings and bands and dresses and ceremonies
+and--everything! Only we will have to take more girls in. You have to
+have at least seven to start with."
+
+Helen stopped for lack of breath, and dropped on the bed. Winnie, who
+was doing her hair before the mirror, turned around.
+
+"It's like the Boy Scouts, only it's girls," she decided thoughtfully.
+"Helen, I don't see why we can't have just as good times as they do.
+Tom's always telling about the glorious times his patrol had last
+summer, camping up near Wampoag. I don't see why we shouldn't go
+camping, too, and have heaps of fun!"
+
+"Why, of course we can!" agreed Helen. "None of your mothers will mind
+if Nannie goes along, and she'll have to if she's Guardian."
+
+"Come on down and have breakfast with us," invited Winnie, straightening
+up from her last shoe-lace. "You haven't told me half the things there
+are to tell."
+
+"Well, I've had breakfast," said Helen, "but----"
+
+"Oh, you can eat some more," insisted Winnie. "We're going to have
+flapjacks and maple syrup."
+
+"Well, all right," said Helen, weakening. Flapjacks and maple syrup did
+sound good. So they went down together to the breakfast table.
+
+Winnie's family, her father and mother and her brother Tom, and
+eight-year-old Florence, had to be told all about it.
+
+"Can't I be a Fire Camp Girl, too?" demanded Florence on the spot.
+
+"I don't know yet," said Helen. "We'll have to find out."
+
+"I will be, whether you find out or not," said Florence, who was a
+determined young person, and something of a tagger.
+
+"Well, thank goodness, to-day's Saturday," and Winnie changed the
+subject cheerfully. "We have all day to find out in, and there's
+scarcely any home-work to do. Have you any, Helen?"
+
+"Only a little history," said Helen, "and I can do that to-night."
+
+"Such heaps of good times coming!" sang Winnie rapturously as she sprang
+up from the table, to get a fresh supply of flapjacks.
+
+"If you have as good a time as the Scouts do you'll have fun, all
+right," said Tom. "But I don't see how you can--just girls!"
+
+Helen laughed, but his sister flew up.
+
+"We can, and better, too," she flashed. "Just you wait and see!"
+
+"Seeing's believing," said Tom mischievously, passing his plate for the
+flapjacks as Winnie brought in the heaping plate that had been keeping
+hot in the oven.
+
+"That's true," said his father gravely, putting a pile of buttered
+quarter-sections on his son's plate. "At least, nobody who hadn't seen
+it would believe you could eat so many flapjacks and not explode!"
+
+Everyone laughed; but Tom calmly went on eating.
+
+"They're awfully good, mother," he said. "I'll tell you, Winnie, if you
+could learn to make as good flapjacks as mother with your Fire Camping,
+as Florence calls it, you'd be doing something worth while."
+
+"Oh, I don't suppose there's anything about flapjacks in it--do you
+think there could be, Helen?" asked Winnie.
+
+Mrs. Merriam laughed a little.
+
+"Well, do you know, my dears," she said, "I have a strange feeling that
+there _is!_"
+
+"I don't see how," doubted Winona. "But maybe, if I get time, Tom, I'll
+learn how to make them. Come on, Helen, let's go back to Nannie and ask
+her all the questions we can think of."
+
+The two girls ran out hand-in-hand.
+
+"Are there flapjacks in it, mother?" asked little Florence.
+
+Mrs. Merriam laughed again as she began to clear the table.
+
+"There are, and a great deal besides, or I'm much mistaken, dear!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWO
+
+
+Within the next week Mrs. Bryan had sent for and filled out and returned
+the application blanks, and now the girls were merely waiting for the
+return of the blanks and their charter. Meanwhile, out of school hours,
+Winnie helped her mother about the house.
+
+"I mayn't have time for much housework when I belong to the Camp Fire,"
+she thought, "and I'd better do all I can now."
+
+So she learned a good deal about cooking, and helped regularly with the
+dishes--and with the supper-getting and tidying. Finally--it was almost
+the end of May by then--the charter came, and material for the
+ceremonial dresses, and various other things; and the girls held their
+first Camp Fire. It was at Winnie's house, with its big fireplace, that
+they had it. Mrs. Bryan invited two other girls to join, to make up the
+number; Dorothy Gray and Adelaide Hughes. Dorothy the girls all knew and
+liked--she was everybody's choice for one of the vacant places--but
+nobody knew much about Adelaide, who was a newcomer in town, except that
+she had no mother, and lived with her father and her younger brother and
+little sister in one of the few apartment-houses that were beginning to
+be put up in the little town where the girls all lived. She was a quiet,
+rather sullen girl, and she dressed badly--almost untidily. The girls
+were surprised at her joining, for she seemed to keep away from people
+almost as if she did it on purpose. But Mrs. Bryan wanted her in, and
+the girls would any of them have done anything for Mrs. Bryan. Only they
+confided to each other that they hoped Adelaide wouldn't spoil the fun.
+
+As each girl came, the night of the first meeting, she was taken, not
+into the living-room, but to a little room beside it, and asked to wait
+there for the rest. Edith Hillis was the last to come, and then they
+were summoned into the other room. It was lighted only by the blaze of
+the fire.
+
+Helen explained things to the girls, as her step-mother had explained to
+her.
+
+"When the drum begins to beat we are to come in, Indian file," she
+reminded them, as a soft, measured beat began to be heard in the next
+room.
+
+Putting herself at the head of the line, she led the seven girls into
+the room to the rhythmic beating. They circled around it once, then sat
+down in a ring about the fireplace, and looked at Mrs. Bryan with
+admiration.
+
+She had on a straight brownish gown, with deep fringes at its bottom.
+She sat on the floor by a curious drum, of a sort most of them had never
+even seen pictures of. She was beating it softly, Indian fashion, with
+her closed fist.
+
+"Welcome," she spoke clearly, rising as the girls came to a halt around
+her. "Have you come desiring to make a Camp Fire and tend it?"
+
+"Yes," answered all the girls. It was then that they dropped into their
+places, in a semi-circle around the fire and their Guardian.
+
+Then each of the girls, in turn, rose and repeated her wish to become a
+Camp Fire Girl, and follow the Law of the Fire. When they had all
+finished Mrs. Bryan leaned back in her corner, and talked to them about
+the Law--what each of the seven parts of it meant.
+
+"Why--it covers everything!" said Winnie.
+
+"It certainly does!" seconded Louise. "All I have to do, it seems to me,
+is to go on living, and I'll acquire unnumbered honor beads."
+
+"You may think so," Helen warned her, "but you'll find there's plenty to
+learn about it. I've been studying it out."
+
+"Oh, that's all right!" said Louise airily. She caught up the manual as
+she spoke, and ran her eye down the list of honors by the firelight.
+"Wash and iron a shirtwaist--I love to wash things. Make a bed for two
+months--I'd be hung with beads if I had one for every two months I've
+made my bed. Abstain from gum, candy, ice-cream--oh, good gracious!"
+
+"That counts as much as the rest," said Winnie mischievously, "and think
+how good it will be for you!"
+
+"I'll get thin," Louise remarked thoughtfully. "What are you going to
+start with, Winnie?"
+
+"Health-craft, I think." Winona had taken the book in her turn, and was
+looking through the pages. "I've always wanted to learn horseback
+riding, and I think perhaps father'll let me, now it's in a book as
+something you ought to do." Then she remembered what her brother had
+said about the flapjacks, and she shook her head as she passed on the
+book. "No," she corrected herself, "I don't believe that will be the
+first thing I'll do. I think I need home-craft quite as much as I do
+learning to ride."
+
+"What about you, Helen?" asked Louise.
+
+"Why, clay-modelling and brass-work, or things like that," was the
+prompt answer. "I want to take up art-craft when I get older, and I
+might as well begin."
+
+"Can you clay-model in camp?" asked Louise.
+
+"Just as well as you can make a shirtwaist," replied Helen, unruffled.
+
+"I like the hand-crafts, too," said Edith Hillis. "I think I shall
+specialize on fancy-work."
+
+"Always a perfect lady!" teased Louise, who was something of a tomboy,
+and frankly thought it was silly of Edith to refuse to get her hair wet
+in the swimming-pool, and wear veils for her complexion.
+
+The other three girls, Marie Hunter and Dorothy Gray and Adelaide
+Hughes, did not say what honors they were going to work for. Everybody
+was pretty sure that Marie was going to write a play, and Dorothy did
+beautiful needle-work. But as for Adelaide, silent in her place, nobody
+could guess.
+
+"You mustn't any of you forget that there's sewing to do, right now,"
+warned Mrs. Bryan. "And I want all of you to look at my dress, because
+each of you will have to make one like it."
+
+She stood up again, and they all examined the straight khaki dress with
+its leather fringes.
+
+"That won't be especially hard to make," concluded Marie, who did most
+of her own sewing. "There's a pattern, isn't there, Mrs. Bryan?"
+
+"Oh, yes, and I have it. And there's one more thing, girls--two, rather.
+We must each choose a name, and a symbol to go with the name. Then we
+have to name the Camp Fire."
+
+"A name--how do you mean?" asked Winnie.
+
+"I mean that, of course, our Camp Fire has to be called something.
+Beside that, so does each Camp Fire Girl. I like birds and bird-study,
+so I am going to call myself 'Opeechee,' the Robin, and take a pair of
+spread wings for my symbol. It's to put on one's personal belongings
+like a crest--see? as I have it on this pillow-top."
+
+The girls clustered around her to see the symbol, stencilled on the
+pillow-cover on her lap. She told them she was going to burn it on her
+shirtwaist box as well, and showed them where she had woven it into her
+headband, a gorgeous thing of brown and orange-red beads.
+
+"It would go on a paddle-blade, too," said Helen thoughtfully.
+
+"It shall on mine to-morrow," declared Marie. "That is, if I've thought
+of a symbol by then," she added prudently.
+
+"I think this new name idea is perfectly gorgeous!" cried Louise
+enthusiastically. "I've always hated my name--you'd expect a Louise to
+be tall and severe and haughty--and look at _me!_"
+
+She jumped up in the firelight and spread out her plump arms tragically.
+
+"We see you!" nodded Helen calmly, and Louise sat down again.
+
+"You'll be glad you have red hair when you're grown up," consoled Edith.
+"It's supposed to be very beautiful."
+
+"Well, it _isn't_," said Louise energetically, "with people always
+asking after the white horse. I wonder why red-haired girls and white
+horses are supposed to go together?"
+
+But nobody could tell her. They were all clustered about Mrs. Bryan and
+the manual, choosing names, and planning symbols, and you couldn't hear
+yourself think. Winnie and Helen and Mrs. Bryan had planned to finish
+the evening by playing games, but all the girls were so busy talking
+that it was impossible to get a game in edgewise.
+
+Presently Mrs. Merriam and little Florence came in with cocoa and
+sandwiches. And then, at about ten-thirty, the meeting broke up, after
+planning a bacon-bat for the next Saturday.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Winnie Merriam sat, as she loved to sit, by the dying fire. Her mother
+began to clear away the dishes, but Winnie stopped her with:
+
+"Please wait a little while, and talk to me, mother. I haven't had half
+enough sandwiches, and besides, the nicest part of a party is talking it
+over afterwards."
+
+"Very well," said Mrs. Merriam, sitting down across from her daughter
+and helping herself to something to eat. "I didn't get much chance at
+the refreshments either, I was so busy helping you serve them. What was
+it you wanted to say particularly, dear?"
+
+"I wanted to ask you about my name, mother. I wasn't christened
+'Winnie,' was I?"
+
+"Why, no, dear--you know that. You were christened 'Winona,' after your
+grandmother--only somehow, we never called you that."
+
+"It's a real Indian name, isn't it?" asked Winnie.
+
+"It certainly is," her mother assured her. "Why, dear, I've told you the
+story of it many a time."
+
+"Not for a long time now," persuaded her daughter. "I think I've
+forgotten some of it. Didn't a real Indian give it to grandmother?"
+
+"The Indian didn't exactly give it to her, it belonged to the Indian's
+baby."
+
+"Oh, tell me the story!" urged Florence sleepily. "I want to hear, too!"
+
+Mrs. Merriam made room for Florence in her lap, and went on above her
+with the sandwich and the story.
+
+"Your great-grandfather was an Indian missionary, and when he and your
+Great-grandmother Martin went out to live among the Indians, they took
+with them their little baby daughter, so young they had not named her
+yet. Well, one day, while your grandmother was sitting on the steps of
+the log house where they lived with her baby on her lap, a squaw came
+along with _her_ baby. She had it strapped to her back, the way they
+carry them, you know. She was a stranger, not one of the mission
+Indians, and oh, so tired and ragged and dusty!
+
+"Great-grandmother Martin couldn't understand her language, but she
+beckoned her into the house and gave her food for herself and milk for
+the baby. And then, by signs, she asked the baby's name. And the Indian
+woman said 'Winona--papoose Winona--yes.' It seemed she could speak a
+very little English. So then Great-grandmother Martin asked the woman
+what the name meant--for all Indian names have meanings, you know. But
+the woman hadn't enough English words to answer her. So she got up from
+the floor where she had been sitting and took the bright steel
+bread-knife that lay where great-grandmother had been cutting bread for
+her. She held it in a ray of sunlight that crossed the room, and shook
+it so the light flashed and was reflected, bright and quivering, in the
+room.
+
+"'That Winona!' she explained.
+
+"After she was rested she wouldn't stay. She went on her travels,
+wherever she was going,--great-grandmother never saw her again. But she
+didn't forget the name, and as soon as she could she asked the Indian
+interpreter what 'Winona' really meant. He told her that it was the name
+of another tribe for 'ray of light that sparkles,' or 'flashing ray of
+light.'
+
+"So Great-grandmother Martin named her own little girl Winona. The name
+was pretty, and the meaning was prettier still. And she grew up and
+married Grandfather Merriam--and when you came we named you for her."
+
+"Then it really is a sure-enough Indian name," said its owner. "And the
+meaning is lovely. 'A ray of flashing light'--you couldn't ask to be
+anything better than that, could you, mother? I believe if I can I shall
+keep my own name for the Camp Fire. It is prettier than anything I could
+make up or find."
+
+"It certainly is," said her mother.
+
+"Why didn't I have a Nindian name, too?" clamored Florence aggrievedly,
+sitting up and rubbing her eyes.
+
+"Because your other grandmother didn't," said her mother, kissing her.
+"One Indian maiden in a family is enough. What names have the other
+girls chosen, Winnie?"
+
+Winona began to laugh.
+
+"Louise says she is going to call herself 'Ishkoodah'--don't you
+remember, in Hiawatha, 'Ishkoodah, the Comet--Ishkoodah, with fiery
+tresses?' she says she thinks she can make a lovely symbol out of it.
+It's funny, but Louise is always doing funny things. I think she's
+really in earnest about this. And Helen says she's going to call herself
+'Night-Star.' We don't know the Indian for that yet, but we're going to
+hunt it up at the library. She thinks she will specialize on
+astronomy--learn what the constellations are, you know. I'd like to do
+that, too. All I know is the Big Dipper, and that the slanty W set up
+sidewise is Cassiopea's Chair. I learned that from the little Storyland
+of Stars you gave me when I was seven."
+
+"I want to know chairs, too," said Florence drowsily.
+
+"All right, dear, you shall," soothed Winona. Then she went on talking
+to her mother.
+
+"So all the girls said they'd take sky names, and we decided to call our
+camp by the Indian name for the sky, because we want to camp out as much
+as we can."
+
+"I think that is a good idea," said Mrs. Merriam.
+
+"It was mine," said Winona. "But Mrs. Bryan remembered an Indian name
+for it--Karonya. We're Camp Karonya--isn't that pretty? And then Marie
+remembered the Indian name for South-Wind, one of them, Shawondassee,
+and took it. But the rest couldn't think of Indian names, so we waited
+to hunt some."
+
+"Do the names have to be Indian?"
+
+"Oh, no," Winnie answered sleepily, "but it's better."
+
+"Come!" said her mother, setting Florence, who was fast asleep, on her
+feet. "We'd all better go to bed, or we'll be too sleepy to go to church
+to-morrow."
+
+"And the sooner I go to sleep the sooner next Saturday will come, as you
+used to say when I was a little girl," added Winona. "Oh, I can scarcely
+wait to find out what a bacon-bat really is on its native heath--or
+anywhere, for that matter."
+
+"Didn't they tell you what it was?"
+
+"No--Marie is planning it, and she wouldn't say, except that it would be
+heaps of fun, and I was to bring a dozen rolls and some salt and a
+jack-knife. I'll have to borrow Tom's. Good-night, mother dear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THREE
+
+
+"Have you got everything, Winnie?" asked Helen anxiously, as they met
+half-way between Winnie's gate and Helen's, about ten o'clock on
+Saturday morning.
+
+"I think so," answered Helen a little uncertainly. "Marie told me to
+bring a pound of bacon--that's all. What are you bringing?"
+
+"Two dozen humble, necessary rolls," said Winnie, "and salt. I had to
+buy a knife, because Tom lost his yesterday. He loses it regularly, once
+a week."
+
+"Pity he picked out to-day," commented Helen as they fell into step. "Do
+you suppose we'll be late?"
+
+"Mercy, no!" said Winnie, "We're more likely to be the first!"
+
+"We won't be"--and Helen laughed--"Louise is always the earliest
+everywhere. She says she's lost more perfectly good time being punctual
+than any other way she knows."
+
+"Well, we'll be ahead of Edith, anyway," Winnie remarked cheerfully. She
+adjusted the two dozen rolls more easily, for that many rolls, when you
+have far to carry them, have a way of feeling lumpy.
+
+"It's a good thing it isn't far to the trolley!" said Helen. "I didn't
+know how nubbly this bacon was going to be."
+
+"So are my rolls! Let's trade," suggested Winnie brilliantly.
+
+"Almost human intelligence!" gibed Helen; so they traded, and each found
+her load much more comfortable than the one she'd had before--which says
+a good deal for the powers of imagination.
+
+"Don't let's sit up on the benches of that trolley-station--they're the
+most uncomfortable things in town!" objected Winnie. "Come on, Helen.
+Let's be real sports, and sit on the grass."
+
+"I do believe we're the first!" was Helen's sole reply, as she eyed the
+little trolley-station worriedly.
+
+"Oh, we _can't_ be," said Winnie confidently, "unless Louise has died or
+gone West. If she's in the land of the living I know she's here. Once I
+asked the crowd over in the afternoon to make fudge, and she got there
+just as I was in the middle of sweeping out the kitchen, at one
+o'clock!"
+
+"You never told me about that!" reminded Helen interestedly. "What did
+you do?"
+
+Winona laughed. "Do! I didn't have to do anything. Louise did the
+doing--she took the broom out of my hands, and sent me flying upstairs
+to dress, and did the sweeping herself! Oh, and there she is!
+Lou-i-ise!"
+
+"Here I am!" Louise answered placidly, rising up in her white blouse
+from the very centre of the field by the station, and looking, with the
+sun shining on her brilliant hair, like a large white blossom with a red
+centre. "I got here long ago. Come on over here on the grass. It's
+horrid on the benches, and I'm making friends with the nicest little
+brown hoptoad."
+
+"Ugh--no!" shuddered Helen, who did not care for hoptoads. "Here's
+Nannie, with Adelaide and Dorothy."
+
+So the girls ran over to meet their Guardian, and the hoptoad was
+averted. Just behind the newcomers arrived Marie and Edith, Marie
+dignified and neat, as usual, in her dark-blue sailor-suit, and Edith in
+a fluffy pink dress that did not look as if it could stand much
+strenuous picnicking.
+
+"Did you bring the rolls, Winnie?" called Marie.
+
+"Certainly I did, and Helen has the bacon."
+
+"And I have the hard-boiled eggs," said Louise gayly, "and here is the
+trolley--it sounds like a French lesson. We mount the trolley that we
+may go to the picnic. Come on, girls."
+
+The girls were bound for a little wood, five miles out, where nearly
+everybody that went on picnics had them. They sat down on a rear seat in
+a giggling row, while Marie went ruthlessly on counting supplies.
+
+"Adelaide, did you bring condensed cream? And who was to bring
+cake--were you, Edith? Dorothy has knives and forks and a kettle."
+
+"Cake?" from Edith blankly. "Why, no, Marie, I brought eggs. I thought
+you said to--I thought we were going to fry them with the bacon."
+
+A howl of laughter went up, in which Edith joined in spite of herself.
+
+"How did you think we'd do it, dear?" Mrs. Bryan asked at last, trying
+to straighten her face.
+
+"That's easy," promised Louise cheerfully. "You just peel the eggs
+carefully, throw away the shell, poke the raw egg on the point of a
+stick, and toast it over the fire till it's all gone."
+
+Edith giggled. "Well, I don't see how you could expect me to get it
+straight over the 'phone, anyway. If I'd known you expected me to bring
+a cake--I don't believe it was me you--ow!"
+
+For a lurch of the car had sent the satchel in which Dorothy had the
+knives and forks smashing against the raw eggs they had been talking
+about; and as Stevenson said of the cow when they asked him the immortal
+question about the cow meeting the locomotive--it was "so much the worse
+for the eggs." They broke promptly, and one fatal corner of the bag that
+held them began to leak on Edith's pretty pink dress.
+
+Dorothy tried to repair damages with her handkerchief, but there was a
+yellow smear on the front breadth, for all they could do. As it proved
+afterwards, it was poor Edith's hoodoo day.
+
+"Poor little eggs!" Louise lamented pensively. "Nobody's wasting any
+sympathy on them--and they're all broken up."
+
+"Oh, what an awful pun!" cried everybody; but Louise went on. She lifted
+the limp bag gingerly, and looked at it as if she was very sorry for it
+indeed.
+
+"Let's serenade the eggs, girls!" she said. "Just follow me!"
+
+And the people in the front seats of the trolley heard a hearty chorus
+of young voices ringing out from the two back seats:
+
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye--
+ Don't cry, little eggs, don't cry;
+ Although you break for our sweet sake
+ While we're marching away upon a picnic--
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye--
+ By and bye, little eggs, by and bye
+ We'll be eating up our lunch, but we won't have
+ you to crunch--
+ Good-bye, little eggs, good-bye!
+
+The girls were in fits of laughter by the time they had done singing
+Louise's doggerel.
+
+"And yet--it really is silly!" said Marie consideringly when they were
+done.
+
+"Don't insult my beautiful, high-brow pome," said Louise cheerfully,
+hopping out of the trolley, for they were at their journey's end. "Who's
+going to fetch water? Don't all speak at once."
+
+"We'll get the water," Edith promised, speaking for herself and Marie.
+"It won't be as hard on my poor clothes as frying bacon."
+
+So the two of them took the kettle and started off.
+
+The place the girls had chosen for their bacon-bat was a little wood at
+the end of the trolley-line, which possessed a spring, and an open,
+sheltered sort of ravine where picnickers were wont to build their
+fires. The girls sauntered along in ones and twos till they reached this
+ravine, set down the things they carried, and scattered to look for
+sticks.
+
+Winnie and Helen, peacefully gathering wood as they went, suddenly heard
+screams, and dropped their wood and ran toward the sound.
+
+"It's--it's near the spring," panted Winona to Helen. "Oh, I do hope
+nobody's fallen in!"
+
+They arrived at the spring just as Adelaide Hughes and Mrs. Bryan
+reached it from another direction.
+
+Now the spring was not an untouched, wildwood affair at all. The
+authorities had done things to it which made its water a great deal
+better for drinking purposes, but much less picturesque--and deeper. Its
+bed had been widened and lined with concrete, and barred across at
+intervals, whether to keep the earth back or the concrete solid nobody
+but the Town Council that had done it knew. And although falling between
+the bars didn't seem very easy even for a slim, small girl, Edith seemed
+to have accomplished it. She was wedged between two of the bars across
+the water, and what was more, she had managed to drag Marie Hunter down
+with her in her fall. Marie only had one foot in the water, and she was
+struggling to get out, though the force of the stream was making it hard
+for her, for the pool was about four feet deep. But Edith, wedged
+between the bars, was devoting her energies exclusively to screaming for
+help. The reason was apparent when the rescuing parties came closer. One
+arm was caught down beside her, so that she could balance herself, but
+not get out. Winona took one look at the situation.
+
+"We'll get Edith out!" she called to Mrs. Bryan. "Can you manage Marie?"
+
+Mrs. Bryan was a slender, delicate-looking woman, but she was stronger
+than Winona realized.
+
+"Certainly!" she encouraged. And Helen and Winona began eagerly trying
+to extricate their friend.
+
+It was impossible to reach Edith and take her free hand to pull her out
+by--the bank each side the sluice, or stream, or whatever you choose to
+call it, was too deep. Winnie thought a minute. Then she took off the
+long, strong blue silk scarf she wore in a big bow at the neck of her
+blouse.
+
+"Can I have yours, too, Helen?" And Helen handed hers over promptly.
+Either alone was long enough, but Winnie wanted the two to twist
+together, for fear one would not bear Edith's weight.
+
+"Can you get around to the other side with your end, Helen?" she said.
+
+Helen scurried around up back of the source. Then she and Winnie, each
+holding an end of the scarf-rope, walked down either side of the stream
+till they were parallel with Edith. They knelt down and lowered the
+scarf till Edith could slip her free arm over it, and pull herself up.
+With its aid as a brace, she managed to free the caught arm, jammed
+against her side. After that it was easy enough, and in a few minutes
+she extricated herself entirely, and half dragged, half pulled herself
+up the steep bank. By the time the girls were done pulling her out she
+and they were pretty well worn out, and they dropped on the grass, Helen
+and Edith on one side and Winnie on the other, and took time to find
+their lost breaths.
+
+Mrs. Bryan and Marie came up to them now--getting Marie out of the water
+had been a fairly easy matter--and made the others get up.
+
+"Edith and Marie must go straight and get off their wet things!" the
+older woman advised. "And Adelaide's feet are wet, too."
+
+"Where had we better go?" asked Marie, calm as ever, though nobody could
+have been much wetter than she was up to her waist.
+
+"Old Mary's is the quickest place," said Mrs. Bryan. "Hurry, now--run,
+or you'll catch cold. Adelaide and I are coming, too."
+
+The whole party--for Winnie and Helen wanted to see the finish--set off
+at a brisk trot for Old Mary's.
+
+Old Mary was an elderly Irishwoman who earned her living mostly by
+taking in washing, but also by selling ginger-ale, cookies and
+sandwiches to such picnics and automobile parties as came her way. Her
+little house was close to the picnic-woods.
+
+"They're sure of a good fire to change their things by, that's one
+comfort," said Winnie to Helen as they ran along in the rear of their
+dripping friends.
+
+"Yes, but----" Helen began to laugh. "What are they going to change to?"
+she inquired. "We didn't any of us bring our trunks--it isn't done on
+picnics!"
+
+"They'll have to go to bed!" was Winnie's solution, and they both began
+to laugh again.
+
+"It's a shame, though, to have them miss all the picnic," said Winnie,
+sobering down.
+
+But when they arrived on the scene they found the victims hadn't the
+least intention of going to bed.
+
+"Sure, I'll iron their bits of clothes dry," said Old Mary, "an' who'll
+be the worse if they borry a few clothes from me ironin' horse till the
+others are dry? The people that own 'em 'd never mind--I've an elegant
+trade in the washin' of clothes, an' there's plenty to fit yez all on
+the horse."
+
+It was not half-past eleven yet, and the girls would not be going home
+for some hours, so there would be plenty of time for the things to dry.
+So Edith and Marie accepted Old Mary's offer on the spot. Among the
+various family washes that she was doing were some things of their own.
+They managed to pick out enough dry clothing for all their needs--all
+but dresses. There were shirtwaists and blouses galore, but it was too
+early for many wash-skirts to be going to the laundress.
+
+However, there was an ample red cotton wrapper, the property of Mary
+herself, which at least covered Marie. But Edith was little, and there
+was nothing which came near fitting her but an expensively trimmed white
+organdy party-dress, which Mary said frankly she did not feel she could
+lend.
+
+"What shall I do?" asked Edith in desperation. "I can't sit here all day
+till my dress dries!"
+
+"I dunno, darlin'. Sure 'tis too bad. Wait a minute, though." She
+hurried out of the room, and presently returned waving something blue.
+"If ye wouldn't mind these overalls, now," she said, "they're just
+washed an' ironed for little James Dempsey to wear. An' the beauty of
+overalls is they fit anybody."
+
+"_Overalls!_" said Edith mournfully.
+
+But overalls were better than a day in bed, and the end of it was, that
+out of Old Mary's hospitable cottage walked a tall Irishwoman with two
+long braids over her trailing red wrapper, and a small Irishman with
+yellow curls over very baggy and much turned-up overalls, instead of
+neat Marie and fluffy Edith. They and Adelaide had put on dry stockings,
+and had many thicknesses of newspaper on their shoes till they could get
+to the fire to dry them.
+
+"Good-mornin'!" said Marie cheerfully to her astonished friends, as she
+sailed majestically up to the freshly-made fire.
+
+"Sure we're the world-renowned vaudeville team, Hunter an' Hillis."
+
+"Just back from doing their justly-famous diving stunt!" added Winnie.
+"Better come near the fire, girls, and try to get your shoes dry."
+
+The fire, which the rest had made during the "diving-stunt," was burning
+beautifully. The girls laid down waterproofs and blankets, and disposed
+themselves comfortably around it, for the fire-makers were tired, and
+the rescuers and rescued were particularly glad to lie down and be warm
+and dry and limp.
+
+"Two long hours to dinner-time!" from Winnie presently in a very sad
+voice. "I don't feel as if I could stand it."
+
+"Nor I!" several voices chimed in.
+
+"Then why do you?" suggested Mrs. Bryan sensibly. "If everybody's hungry
+we might as well have dinner now!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOUR
+
+
+At the mention of dinner everybody became energetic as by magic. Winnie
+split her two dozen rolls neatly down the middle, and set them in rows
+on a newspaper, ready for the broiled bacon. Marie, with her red wrapper
+pinned up out of harm's way, banked the fire, while Edith mixed cocoa
+and condensed milk industriously in the bottom of a gigantic kettle
+which was discovered, too late, to have been intended to boil the water
+in. It occurred to Winnie that Edith in overalls was much more fun than
+Edith in fluffy ruffles that she had to remember to take care of, as she
+watched her flying around with her curls waving in the wind, looking
+like a stage newsboy. Helen, on her knees by the heap of provisions, was
+unwrapping her bacon, and somebody else was peeling all the hard-boiled
+eggs.
+
+"Didn't anybody bring cake?" asked Louise plaintively. "Have we nothing
+but rolls, bacon and eggs?"
+
+"Why, what else do you want?" asked Marie with a dignity rather
+interfered with by the way her scarlet draperies flapped in the breeze.
+"All the bacon-bats I ever heard about they just had rolls and bacon--we
+have a lot of things extra."
+
+"Glad I never attended one of the just-rolls-and-bacon kind," Louise
+rebelliously declared.
+
+Winnie, who liked cake herself, and thought she had seen some, went back
+to the heap of provisions and began to dig at it like a small dog at a
+mole-hill.
+
+"Marie!" she called triumphantly in a minute, "There _is_ cake! And a
+lot of bananas!"
+
+"That's good," Marie serenely remarked. "Bring them along."
+
+Winnie reappeared in a minute, very flushed and triumphant, with a hand
+of bananas under her arm, and a huge chocolate cake, with almost
+undamaged icing, poised carefully before her.
+
+"Oh, I remember!" said absent-minded Dorothy, "I brought that cake. It
+was in the satchel with the knives and forks."
+
+"You certainly saved all our lives," said Louise feelingly, and went on
+whittling toasting-sticks for the bacon. "Here, Winnie, take a stick and
+start in to be useful."
+
+"How do you do it?" Winnie wondered--"cook bacon, I mean? I never did it
+this way before."
+
+"Just string it on the stick any way at all," Marie advised, and speared
+a slice scientifically as she spoke.
+
+"Easy when you know how!" laughed Winnie, sharpening her own stick a
+little more and threading some bacon on it.
+
+In a few minutes everybody had slices of bacon frizzling gayly, and
+getting more or less charred. When they were done enough they were
+popped between the opened rolls, and--eaten, cinders and all. The water,
+though it was boiled in something else than its own proper
+kettle--something remarkably like a dish-pan cunningly slung over the
+fire by a wonderful system of forked sticks--came to a boil without
+accident, and was poured on the cocoa. Each girl had brought her own
+drinking-cup, so there was no difficulty about crockery. It seemed to
+Winnie, balanced on one elbow on her rug, that nothing had ever tasted
+so good as the bacon sandwiches and hard-boiled eggs, washed down by all
+the hot cocoa you could drink.
+
+By the time the cake and bananas came the girls felt as if they couldn't
+eat another thing. But they did. It was delightful lying around the fire
+talking and eating and laughing. It was one of those mild days which
+come in May sometimes, bright, with a little breeze. After awhile
+somebody started a Camp Fire song, and one by one they all joined in.
+After that they lay quiet for awhile, talking and being lazy.
+
+When they began to clear away Edith declared that she didn't dare go
+near the spring again. So it was Winona and Louise who took the few
+things there were to wash, the cocoa-kettle and dish-pan and
+drinking-cups and the silver, over to the spring. It was pleasant, lazy
+work, not a bit like home dish-washing. Louise splashed the things up
+and down in the running water, and Winona dried them.
+
+"Isn't it nice?" sighed Winnie. "Oh, I do wish we could camp outdoors
+all this summer, instead of living in hot houses! Don't you always hate
+to sleep indoors when it's hot?"
+
+Louise rolled over on her back and looked at the sky.
+
+"Yes, I think I do," she spoke thoughtfully. "You have to, though. Out
+in California they say everybody has sleeping-porches, and never thinks
+of going inside at night. I wish people had them here."
+
+A brilliant idea came to Winona--which, by the way, she afterward
+carried out. "Our side-porch is almost all screened. I wonder if mother
+wouldn't let me sleep there? I'm going to ask her, anyway."
+
+"I wish I could, too," breathed Louise, "but our side-porch is where
+everybody goes by--that's the worst of living on a corner. I know I
+never could break the milkman and the baker of contributing rolls and
+milk on top of me in the early morning!"
+
+"What a splendid idea! Then you could have 'breakfast in your bed,' like
+Harry Lauder," said Winnie, and both girls stopped to giggle. "But
+honestly," began Winnie again, as she reached out for some long grass
+near her and began to plait it, "don't you think we can all camp out
+this summer?"
+
+"Here?"
+
+"N-no, not here--at least, I don't believe they'd let us, the people who
+own it, I mean. But there must be somewhere that we could go, somewhere
+not too far off to cost a lot to get there."
+
+"I wonder!" said Louise, pulling a thick red pig-tail around in order to
+nibble its end thoughtfully. She had a habit of gnawing at her hair when
+she thought hard. "What about Cribb's Creek?"
+
+"That's too near," Winnie opposed.
+
+"Well, where did the Boy Scouts go last year?"
+
+"Up on Wampoag River, a little way below Wampoag," said Winona. "They
+said it was a cinch, because they could sell all the fish they caught to
+the Wampoag hotel-keepers, and get things they needed, and yet it was
+just as wild as it could be if you went a little way along the river."
+
+Wampoag was a summer resort not far from them.
+
+"Well, how far's that?" asked Louise.
+
+"About ten miles to the boys' camp," answered Winona. "But there would
+be plenty of good camping-ground nearer home, and quite close to that
+little village--what's its name?"
+
+"Green's Corners," supplied Louise.
+
+"I wonder who Green was, and if he really _did_ have corners," Winona
+thoughtfully remarked.
+
+Louise giggled. "He was a square man, I suppose," she said, and Winnie
+gave her a shove. "Oh, don't!" she said. "That's an awful pun."
+
+"I thought it was a very good one. Well, to come back to business, the
+boys didn't go by train. Indeed, I don't think you can, unless you go
+away round. They hiked."
+
+"Well, why shouldn't we, too?" asked Louise.
+
+"Or part of the way, anyway!" added Winnie,
+
+"People would take us for a band of 'I won't works!' We'd look it, too,
+by the time we got to the end of the journey."
+
+"But we needn't do it all at once," said Winnie. "We could break the
+journey overnight. Don't you know, people in England have walking-tours
+that last for days and days? I've read about it. They stop in inns
+overnight and have adventures."
+
+"Well, I'd like the adventures, if they didn't mean falling into ponds
+and getting your clothes wet," said Louise.
+
+Winnie yawned.
+
+"I suppose they think we've tied the cups round our necks and jumped
+in," and she lazily started to get up. "Come on, Louise, let's find Mrs.
+Bryan and ask her about camping. She's sure to know about hikes and
+everything."
+
+Finding Mrs. Bryan proved to be hard, because she was not in the kind of
+a place where you would expect to find a grown-up step-mother. They
+finally discovered her by a flutter of blue skirt that hung down below
+the branches of an old apple-tree. She was sitting comfortably in one of
+its crotches, trying to carve herself a willow whistle.
+
+"Come on up, girls!" she hailed them cheerfully. "There's always room at
+the top!"
+
+"Where are the rest of them?" asked Winnie, beginning to climb. Louise
+followed more slowly, for Winnie was more slender and quicker in her
+movements.
+
+"Scattered all over, I suppose," said Mrs. Bryan. "Edith went back to
+old Mary's to see if her clothes were dry. Did you want them for
+anything special?"
+
+"No indeed," Winnie assured her. "It was you we wanted for something
+special."
+
+"Well, I'm here," and Mrs. Bryan dropped an affectionate hand on the
+pretty brown head beneath her. "What is it, dear?"
+
+"It's about camping out," spoke Winnie and Louise in a breath. "Do you
+think we can do it?"
+
+Mrs. Bryan laughed.
+
+"'Can we do it?' Why, my dears, that's just what we're for! What would
+be the fun of belonging to a Camp Fire if we couldn't go camping
+outdoors?"
+
+"Oh, lovely!" cried Winnie. "Then you'll go, too?"
+
+"I certainly will!" said Mrs. Bryan promptly. "It would have to be when
+Mr. Bryan was having his vacation, though, because it would never do to
+leave, not only my own hearth-fire, but my own poor helpless husband,
+untended. And, of course, it will not be till school is through."
+
+"Oh, oh, it begins to sound almost real!" Winnie cried with a joyous
+little jounce that shook several pink blossoms from the tree.
+
+"Just wait!" warned Louise from her lower limb. "When we start that
+twenty-five-mile hike, it will seem quite too real for comfort, take my
+word for it!"
+
+"Don't you think we could hike to camp?" appealed Winnie.
+
+"You'll have to practise shorter hikes first," was the answer. "If you
+do that there's no reason why we couldn't all walk the distance. I
+suppose we'll camp somewhere on the Wampoag River."
+
+"Yes, that's what we thought," said the girls.
+
+"Of course, we'd have to break the journey," Winnie went on.
+
+"Well, yes, I think so," Mrs. Bryan answered. "Oh, here are Helen and
+Marie now. Oh, Helen! We're up in this tree! No, don't come up--all the
+seats are full!"
+
+"Then come down!" called Helen. "We have something to show you."
+
+The something proved to be a small and very scared garter-snake, that
+Helen was carrying in a forked stick.
+
+"Poor little snakelet!" said Louise. "Do let him go home, Helen--I'm
+sure he's not grown-up yet."
+
+So Helen put down the snake and off he went.
+
+"Did you find your clothes?" Louise asked Marie rather superfluously,
+for she had on her sailor-suit, rather fresher-looking than it had been
+before.
+
+"It was all done when we got there," said Marie, "but Edith's dress was
+harder to do--all those ruffles, you know--so Mary's still ironing it."
+
+"Then we'd better sit here and wait for her," suggested Louise. "And oh,
+girls, we have a plan."
+
+"A real plan, all hand-made?" mocked Helen. "Do tell us about it."
+
+So then the camping-trip was discussed and votes taken about it. Helen,
+of course, could go. Marie was sure she would be allowed to.
+
+"Mother says I stay in the house and read too much anyway," she said.
+
+The other girls, drifting up one by one, were all wild over the idea.
+Edith, in her freshly-laundered frock, was a little doubtful about the
+hike, but as she said, if she fainted from exhaustion she could take a
+train or a carriage or something the rest of the way.
+
+They talked camping till it was time to go back and pack up things for
+the return trip. So the girls rose up from around the apple-tree, and
+stowed everything away in the baskets and satchels they had brought, and
+walked back to the trolley. First, though, they gave old Mary all the
+provisions they had left; cocoa, six rolls, and a generous half of the
+chocolate cake.
+
+"That certainly was a life-sized cake!" breathed Winnie as she set it on
+Mary's kitchen table. "But it won't be as hard to eat as it was to
+carry, will it?"
+
+"Sure ye needn't worry but what it'll get et," laughed Mary. "Many
+thanks, an' good luck to yez all."
+
+They piled into the trolley, rather sleepy with the long day in the
+wind, and, except for Marie and Edith, rather crumpled. Winnie's blouse
+had a grass-stain, and Louise's was marked neatly across the back, like
+a Japanese stencil, with a wet brown bough-mark. There were also burrs,
+more or less, on everybody. But what were burrs?
+
+Everybody heaved a sight of contentment as they settled down in their
+seats.
+
+"It certainly was a lovely picnic!" they said.
+
+"How beautifully fresh and clean Edith Hillis keeps her dresses!" said
+Mrs. Merriam to Winnie, as Edith turned to wave good-bye at the Merriam
+gate, and went down the street with Marie and Helen. "You'd think that
+pink dress had just been washed and ironed, and yet she's been out in
+the woods with the rest of you tousled-looking children all day!"
+
+And Winona laughed so that it was at least two minutes before she could
+explain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIVE
+
+
+"I'd advise you girls to hurry up with those squaw dresses," hinted Tom
+Merriam darkly, as he fled through the sitting-room on his way back from
+Scout-practice.
+
+Winnie looked up. She and Helen and Louise were sitting in a row on the
+window-seat, sewing for dear life on their ceremonial gowns.
+
+"We are hurrying all we can," she smiled. "These have to be done by
+to-night anyway."
+
+"They are, nearly," chimed in Louise, shaking out her garment and
+observing its fringes with satisfaction. "What's he talking about, Win?"
+
+"Tommy! Tom! Come back and tell us!" called his sister.
+
+"Can't!" shouted Tom down the stairs. "You'll find out in time--you're
+going to need 'em, that's all!"
+
+"What on earth do you suppose he means?" wondered Helen, as the last
+glimpse of Tom's khaki-clad form vanished up the stairs.
+
+Winnie laughed as she finished off a seam.
+
+"I don't believe it meant anything," she said. "Tom's always trying to
+get up excitements."
+
+"_I_ think it means something!" said Louise, beginning to take out
+bastings. She was the best seamstress of the three, and consequently was
+done first. "Here, Helen, let me finish that sleeve for you while you do
+the other one."
+
+She took up the sleeve, and jumped up and began to dance with the sleeve
+for a partner.
+
+ Something's goin' to happen, honey,
+ Happen, honey, happen mighty soon!
+
+"Oh, thank you!" said Helen gratefully, referring not to the song and
+dance, but to the aid. She hated sewing, and nothing but the Camp Fire
+requirements would ever have made her persevere till her gown was done.
+Winnie did not mind sewing one way or the other, and by a queer
+contradiction harum-scarum Louise loved it.
+
+The girls worked on, and discussed on. Winnie was sure Tom meant
+nothing, and the others were just as sure that he had some reason for
+saying what he had.
+
+That night the girls were to hold their first Council Fire. That was why
+they were hurrying so to finish their dresses.
+
+When it came Winnie's turn to answer the roll-call, she rose, slim and
+graceful in her khaki dress, before her turn was reached.
+
+"Opeechee, Guardian of the Fire, may I speak before my turn comes to
+answer to my name?" she asked.
+
+"Speak," said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Opeechee, I do not want to change my name. May I not be known in the
+Camp Fire as Winona? The name is one that an Indian gave one of my own
+people many circles of moons ago, and it is mine by inheritance."
+
+"Will you tell the Camp Fire about it?" asked Mrs. Bryan.
+
+So Winnie told the Camp Fire the story her mother had told her, of the
+weary Indian woman her grandmother had helped, and whose papoose had
+been called "Winona," "Flashing Ray of Light."
+
+"Could anything be better than to be a ray of light in dark places?"
+asked Winona. "I like the meaning of my name, and if the Camp Fire will
+let me keep it I promise to be a brightness wherever I can, always, that
+will light the dark places for people who need it."
+
+"What do you say, Daughters of the Camp Fire?" asked Mrs. Bryan when
+Winona was done.
+
+"If we all have different Camp Fire names, won't it seem strange for
+Winona to have the same name straight through?" objected Marie. "It is a
+beautiful name with a beautiful meaning, if it weren't that it is her
+every-day name."
+
+"Nobody ever calls me anything but Winnie," said Winona.
+
+"Why not use the translation?" suggested Helen. "'Ray of Light' is
+pretty. And then Winnie could keep the meaning."
+
+"You have spoken well!" said Mrs. Bryan. "What do you say to that,
+Daughters of the Camp Fire?"
+
+"Good!" from all the girls.
+
+"Kolah, Ray of Light!" spoke Mrs. Bryan.
+
+Then she went on with the business of the evening.
+
+"Two of our Camp Fire Girls are to become Wood-gatherers to-night. Will
+they rise?"
+
+Winona and Marie had qualified, and they stood up.
+
+"Ray of Light," Mrs. Bryan went on, "will you tell us how you chose your
+name?"
+
+"'Flashing Ray of Light' is the name my fathers gave me," clearly spoke
+Winona, "and I have told the Camp Fire the reason of its choosing. But I
+keep it because I intend to carry out its meaning. I have tried to earn
+my right to it by being bright, and helping all I could, no matter how
+dark the days were, nor how much nicer it would have been to be cross.
+As my symbol I have chosen the firefly, because it lights dark places."
+
+"Flashing Ray of Light brings brightness to our Camp Fire," said the
+Guardian. "We welcome you to your place in our Camp Fire Circle."
+
+She gave Winona her pretty silver ring with its raying fagots, and
+repeating the formula which went with it.
+
+When the girls had welcomed her rank and sung her a cheer, Winona sat
+down, she hoped, for the last time.
+
+"How does it feel?" whispered Louise, who sat next her. "I wish I'd
+collected my requirements as quickly."
+
+"It feels partly awfully proud and partly awfully relieved," Winona
+whispered back. "And I feel as if I oughtn't to have picked out such
+awfully easy honors to take. Anybody could make a shirtwaist and know
+about their ancestors and trim a hat----"
+
+"No, they couldn't!" contradicted Louise, who admired Winona very much.
+"You just happen to be cleverer than the rest of us, that's all."
+
+"I'm _not!_" said Winona as vehemently as it could be said in a whisper.
+"Marie's getting her Wood-gatherer's ring to-night, too."
+
+Mrs. Bryan's voice rose again in the same formula.
+
+"Shawondassee, tell us how you chose your name."
+
+"Shawondassee means 'South Wind,'" answered Marie's steady voice. "I
+chose the name because the South Wind coaxes instead of scolding, and I
+thought it was a good name to remind me to do the same thing. As my
+symbol I have chosen the willow shoots, because they come up year after
+year, no matter how often they are cut down, and I wish to have their
+perseverance."
+
+"Perseverance and cheerfulness!" whispered Louise. "Who would have
+thought Marie needed either of them?"
+
+"You can't tell much about Marie, because you never can get to her to
+talk about herself," answered Winona. "But she certainly is one of the
+hardest workers in the class at school."
+
+At this point the girls had to stop talking, to join in the
+Wood-gatherer's verses for Marie.
+
+Nearly all Marie's required honors were Patriotism, for she was the
+student of the crowd.
+
+"It fairly makes me shiver to think how much that girl knows," whispered
+Louise. "My honors are going to be plain home-craft--making pies and
+chaperoning ice-chests and massaging floors, and so forth."
+
+"Will your mother let you?" asked Winona; for Mrs. Lane kept two maids,
+having the money to do it, and a big family.
+
+"Let me!" exploded Louise. "She'll weep tears of joy if there's any
+prospect of my getting thinner!"
+
+Just as Louise spoke there fell one of those uncanny silences which have
+a way of occurring at the worst possible times. Louise's statement
+pealed cheerfully through the room, and poor Louise, blushing scarlet,
+tried to make herself very small--a hard matter.
+
+The girls could not help laughing, but Mrs. Bryan had mercy on her
+embarrassment, and went on with the awarding of the honor beads each
+girl had won since the last meeting. Winona's were rather various--a few
+from each class. Helen's were nearly all hand-craft--stencilling and
+clay-modelling. She had brought along a bureau-scarf she had done, to
+show, and a beautiful little bowl she had modelled and painted and
+fired. Louise had only three beads so far, one for identifying birds,
+one for preserving, and one for making her ceremonial dress.
+
+Edith Hillis, to everybody's surprise, was given an honor for
+folk-dancing, and proceeded, when she was asked, to get up and
+demonstrate. This held up the regular course of the meeting for quite a
+little while, because when she showed them the Highland Fling all the
+girls wanted to learn it. So for at least a half-hour they practised it,
+till the floor over Mr. Bryan's head, in his study beneath, must have
+seemed to be coming down.
+
+After they had all tired themselves thoroughly they sang for awhile.
+About midway of the second song Mrs. Bryan evidently remembered
+something, for she gave a start as if she were going to speak. As soon
+as they had finished she raised her hand for silence, and said:
+
+"I have a message for Camp Karonya. It should be delivered at the
+business meeting, I suppose, but--it won't keep till then. The Boy
+Scouts, Camp No. Six, of this town, invite the Camp Fire Girls to a
+dance given by them in the school-house assembly-room next Wednesday
+night."
+
+"Oh, how perfectly lovely!" cried Edith. "Of course we'll go!"
+
+A confused noise of voices broke out, all speaking at once. You could
+catch an occasional word--"blue messaline," "white organdy,"
+"orchestra," "how perfectly dandy!"--but for the most part it was just a
+noise.
+
+Mrs. Bryan waited placidly till it had quieted down.
+
+"What is your pleasure in this matter, Daughters of the Camp Fire?" she
+asked then.
+
+"Oh, we'll go!" cried everybody at once.
+
+"Then you'd better instruct the Secretary to write them to that effect,"
+suggested Mrs. Bryan gravely, for the tumult seemed inclined to break
+out again.
+
+Winona jumped up and put it in the form of a motion that the Secretary
+should reply, and actually induced the girls to second and ratify it.
+
+"I'll write the acceptance right away!" declared Helen with enthusiasm.
+
+She went into the next room, got paper and ink, came back, sat down in
+the middle of a ring of interested suggesters, and wrote a very pleased
+acceptance.
+
+Winona, robbed of her usual confidante, turned to the girl on her other
+side, to talk clothes.
+
+"I'm going to wear my blue organdy, with the Dresden sash and
+hair-ribbons," she said without looking to see to whom she was talking.
+
+"Are you?" said the other girl, hesitating a little.
+
+Winona looked at her, at the sound of her voice. She had thought she was
+speaking to Louise. But Louise was on the other side of the room, and
+the girl next her was Adelaide Hughes, one of the two girls Mrs. Bryan
+had brought into their Camp Fire.
+
+It was two months now since Winona and Adelaide had begun to meet each
+other weekly at the Camp Fire good times and Ceremonials, but when you
+have all the bosom friends you want it is hard to see such a very great
+deal of other people. Winona realized now that she had scarcely
+exchanged two consecutive sentences with Adelaide all the time she had
+known her.
+
+Adelaide was a thin, tired-looking girl of about thirteen, with big blue
+eyes and a sensitive mouth, and hair that had curious yellow and brown
+lights. She did not join very heartily, ever, in the frolics, but she
+seemed to enjoy everything with a sort of shy, watching intensity.
+
+"And what are you going to wear?" Winona asked, more out of friendliness
+than curiosity.
+
+Adelaide colored.
+
+"I--I don't know," she said. "I--a white dress, I think."
+
+"Voile?" asked Winona.
+
+Adelaide shook her head.
+
+"No, lawn--if I come. But maybe I won't be there."
+
+"Why, what a shame!" said Winona with the bright friendliness that was a
+part of her. "Of course you must be there. Helen accepted for all of
+us."
+
+"I know, but--but maybe I can't come," repeated Adelaide.
+
+"Of course you can!" insisted Winona.
+
+Adelaide's eyes filled with tears, and she shook her head.
+
+Winona slipped one arm around her. The two girls were sitting a little
+apart from the rest by now, in a dusky corner.
+
+"There's some reason why you think you can't, some horrid reason," she
+coaxed. "Now, just tell Winona what it is." She spoke as if she were
+petting her own younger sister, though Adelaide was only a year younger
+than she was.
+
+Adelaide's eyes overflowed, and she felt gropingly for her handkerchief,
+to dry her eyes.
+
+"Here's one," whispered Winona, slipping her own into Adelaide's hand.
+"Now, tell me, dear. It isn't very bad, is it? Maybe I could help."
+
+"You _can't!_" said Adelaide fiercely, "and I won't tell you a thing
+unless you promise not to."
+
+"All right," said Winona cheerfully, "I promise."
+
+"I--I haven't any party dress, and father can't afford to get me one,"
+choked Adelaide, "and all I have is an old white lawn I wear afternoons,
+and it's _horrid_. And--and, Winona Merriam, if you offer to loan me a
+dress I'll never speak to you again!"
+
+"I wasn't going to," comforted Winona, stroking poor sobbing Adelaide's
+shoulder, while her own quick, friendly mind cast about for a way out.
+
+For Adelaide must come to the dance, and evidently she wouldn't borrow
+anything from anybody.
+
+"Not borrow--how queer!" said Winona, voicing her thought. "Why, I don't
+know any of the girls I wouldn't borrow from, if I needed to, or they
+from me. Don't you ever borrow anything, Adelaide--except trouble?"
+
+"No, I don't," said Adelaide chokily but proudly. "It's--it's different
+when you _have_ to!"
+
+"I don't see why!" said sunny, friendly-hearted Winona, who always took
+it for granted that she liked people, and of course that they would like
+her! She had never known what it was to be rich, but never either what
+it was to be painfully poor. "Well, let's think of some other way. I
+suppose you haven't time to earn the money for a dress for this party.
+Opeechee was telling us last week that we ought to try to earn so much
+money apiece, and that there were lots of ways for doing it."
+
+"No, there wouldn't be time," answered Adelaide mournfully; but she
+stopped crying and began to look interested.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIX
+
+
+The two girls sat and thought hard for a moment; then Winnie suddenly
+thought of something.
+
+"Just a minute, Adelaide!" she whispered, and she went over to the
+corner where Mrs. Bryan and Marie Hunter were discussing business
+together. The rest were still all talking dance excitedly by the
+fireplace.
+
+"Opeechee," she said, "may I ask you something? Would there be any
+reason why the girls couldn't wear their ceremonial dresses to the
+dance?"
+
+Mrs. Bryan thought for a moment.
+
+"There's no actual reason why we shouldn't," she said. "Only the idea is
+that the dresses should be kept for rather intimate and private things."
+
+"But it would be such a good idea if we wore them," insisted Winona
+eagerly. "You see, perhaps--perhaps some of us mightn't be able to
+afford new party dresses, and maybe we mightn't have any old good ones,
+either."
+
+"Why, Winnie, you have that blue----" began Marie, and checked herself
+as she saw a light.
+
+"Some of us mightn't have any new party dresses," repeated Winona
+obstinately, but with an appealing look at Mrs. Bryan. She did so hope
+she would understand! "Anyway, the boys expect us to," she went on
+eagerly. "Tom said this afternoon that we'd better get the dresses
+ready, only we didn't know then what he meant."
+
+Mrs. Bryan looked at Winona's vivid, earnest face, and--understood.
+
+"I think you are quite right, Ray of Light. I'll speak to the girls."
+
+She stood up and struck lightly on the little Indian drum to call the
+girls' attention.
+
+"Girls!" she said, "as the dance that the Scouts have asked us to is an
+affair to which we have been invited as an official body, it seems to me
+that it would be only courteous for us to wear our ceremonial gowns. So
+I am going to ask that you all do it."
+
+There was a murmur of approval all over the room. When you have just
+acquired a beautiful new costume it's human nature to want to wear it
+early and often. There was only a plaintive wail, which Marie
+suppressed, from Edith Hillis:
+
+"Oh, my lovely new green messaline!"
+
+Winona crossed over to the place where Adelaide still sat.
+
+"Well?" she said triumphantly.
+
+"Did you tell Mrs. Bryan anything about me?" Adelaide demanded
+suspiciously.
+
+"No, I didn't," replied Winona rather indignantly. "What do you take me
+for, when I said I wouldn't?"
+
+"Well, I didn't know," apologized Adelaide. "And--thank you, ever so
+much, Winona! You--you don't _know!_"
+
+Winona laughed.
+
+"Why, yes, I do. At least, I've often wanted new clothes when I couldn't
+have them. But mother says if you can't the next best thing is to go on
+wearing what you have, and be so cheerful nobody has time to think what
+you have on!"
+
+"Nobody ever told me that," pondered Adelaide, as if it were an entirely
+new idea to her. "But my mother's dead, you see. And, anyway, it doesn't
+sound as if it could be true. Did you ever try it?"
+
+"Yes," Winona said, and laughed. "I did--it was funny, too. I was
+visiting some cousins of mine. I hadn't expected to stay, and I hadn't
+brought a single party thing, and none of their clothes would fit me.
+They had perfectly lovely dresses. And suddenly we were all invited to a
+party, and I had nothing but a blue linen; and all the rest of them in
+the fluffiest clothes you ever saw!"
+
+"Well," said Adelaide, "didn't it feel _horrid_."
+
+"Yes, it did for awhile," owned Winona. "But everybody was sitting
+around as stiff as stiff--you know, some parties are like that at first.
+And somebody just had to say something. And pretty soon I thought of a
+game that just fitted in, and asked them to play it. After that I was so
+busy thinking up games that I never remembered a thing I had on till we
+got home that night. And I only did then because my cousin Ethel said,
+'Oh, I've torn my dress!' and I said it was queer I hadn't torn mine,
+too--and then I remembered that it was linen and wouldn't tear. We
+certainly had a good time at that party!"
+
+Adelaide looked at Winona's shining eyes and flushed cheeks enviously.
+
+"Yes, you could do that," she said, "and people would be so busy
+watching you that they wouldn't know whether you had a flour-sack on or
+a satin. But I can't, because I keep worrying all the time about what
+people think of me."
+
+"Oh, I should think that _would_ be horrid," Winona sympathized.
+
+"It is," said Adelaide, "only I----"
+
+The rest that Adelaide had been going to say was drowned, because just
+then came the signal for the closing song, and soon the Council Fire was
+over.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"What on earth were you talking to Adelaide Hughes so long about?"
+demanded Louise curiously as they walked home, for their ways lay
+together.
+
+"Oh, just things," was Winona's answer. "I think she's awfully shy, and
+a little afraid of the rest of us, Lou."
+
+"And you think we ought to make a special fuss over her?" said Louise
+mournfully. "I knew that was coming. Well, I suppose we will--Helen and
+I always do what you tell us to. I wish I were shy, and people ran
+around saying, 'we really must make an effort to draw poor little timid
+Louise out!'"
+
+Winona burst out laughing--the idea of "poor, little, timid Louise" was
+so irresistibly funny.
+
+"It's going to be a gorgeous dance, though." Louise went on. "Wasn't it
+splendid of the Scouts to think of doing it? And what about my being
+right?"
+
+"You certainly were right," Winona admitted. "Are you sure you don't
+mind going on alone?"
+
+For they had reached the Merriam house.
+
+"Not a bit," said Louise cheerfully. "It's only a block, anyway.
+Good-night, honey."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Oh, it's lovely!" exclaimed Winona next morning when she ran
+downstairs. She flung herself on Tom bodily and hugged him hard as she
+spoke.
+
+"What's lovely?" asked Tom, detaching himself, or trying to. "Go easy,
+Winnie; it was just sheer luck that you didn't break any ribs or my
+collar-bone or something. Affection's all right in its place, but----"
+
+"But its place isn't on you, you mean?" retorted Winona, unwinding
+herself cheerfully from her brother. "Why, I mean the dance, of course."
+
+"Oh, that!" said Tom. "That's nothing! It ought to be pretty good fun,
+though, don't you think so?"
+
+"Oh, I know it will!" cried Winona fervently. "Are the boys going to
+wear their uniforms?"
+
+"Well," said Tom doubtfully, "we don't know. You see, we've hiked in
+'em, and rolled around on the grass in 'em wrestling, and done about
+everything to those poor old uniforms that you can do to clothes, and
+they really aren't fit for civilized society."
+
+"Meaning ours?" said Winona. "Thanks for the compliment! Why don't you
+have them cleaned? I suppose even khaki cleans!"
+
+"I don't know," said her brother, "I'll ask mother. Maybe we can manage
+it. But--oh, say, Winnie, there's something I wanted to speak to you
+about. You know, there are new people moved in next door. They're
+Southerners, here for the mother's health or something. There's a boy
+about my age, and a girl somewhere around yours. I don't know much about
+the girl, but Billy Lee's an awfully decent fellow, and we've got him in
+the Scouts. Now what do you think about taking his sister into your Camp
+Fire? She'd just about fit in as far as age goes, and it would be nice
+and neighborly. We'll have to ask her for the dance anyway, because
+there aren't enough of you Camp Firers yet to go around. The girl must
+need something to do, because Billy seems to worry about her rather.
+Stands to reason it isn't natural for a fellow to fret about his sister
+having a good time unless she needs it pretty badly."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," said Winona. "When you come to a strange place
+things are bound to be stupid till you get to know people. We've lived
+here always, you know. But I'll go over and see her as soon as I've done
+the breakfast dishes."
+
+Accordingly, when the breakfast dishes were done and the dining-room
+tidied, Winona washed her hands over again very carefully, and put
+cold-cream and talcum powder on them, for she did not like the smell of
+dish-water, especially when she was going calling. Then she made her way
+to the house next door.
+
+All the houses on that block stood in deep yards, which went all around
+them. Winona crossed the path and went up the porch, feeling a little
+shy. She had not asked anyone to join the Camp Fire before. They were to
+take in five new girls at the next monthly meeting, just before they
+went camping, but all of them had let the girls know that they wanted to
+join. Winona was a moving spirit in Camp Karonya, and she knew that
+anyone she vouched for would be welcome. But she did hope the next-door
+girl would fit in with the rest of them.
+
+The door was opened by a colored maid, but before she could say whom she
+was, a dark, handsome boy of about fifteen, in a Scout uniform, came
+running down the stairs.
+
+"You're Winnie Merriam, aren't you?" he asked eagerly. "I'm Billy Lee. I
+asked your brother to send you over to see Nataly."
+
+Winona liked Billy on the spot, he was so friendly and natural and nice,
+and very good-looking besides.
+
+"If his sister's like him she'll be splendid to have in the Camp Fire,"
+she thought, and her spirits went up with such a bound that she was able
+to smile brightly, and say enthusiastically as she held out her hand to
+Billy Lee:
+
+"Yes, indeed, I'm Winona Merriam, and I'm so glad Tom did send me. I
+know your sister and I are going to be friends."
+
+"Well, I do hope so," said Billy as confidentially as if he had known
+her for years. "I'm having a gorgeous time in the Scouts--went on a hike
+yesterday, and we never got back till nine o'clock, and three of the
+fellows got all stung up with a hornet's nest."
+
+This didn't sound much like a fine time to Winona, but she supposed boys
+knew what they liked. She couldn't help laughing, though.
+
+ If that's your idea of a wonderful time
+ Take me home--take me home!
+
+she hummed. She thought she'd sung it under her breath, but it was
+evidently loud enough to be heard, for Billy Lee burst out laughing,
+too.
+
+"Well, I didn't mean that getting stung was a pleasure exactly," said
+he, "but we do have dandy times."
+
+All this time they had been standing in the hall. Suddenly it seemed to
+occur to Billy that Winona had come to see his sister, not him. He
+ushered her hurriedly into the living-room.
+
+"I'll send Nataly down to you," he promised. But in another minute he
+came tearing downstairs again.
+
+"She says, would you mind coming up to her room?" he panted. "She hasn't
+felt so awfully well to-day, and she isn't exactly up."
+
+Winona followed him, consumed with curiosity as to what could ail a
+girl, not to be up on a beautiful spring morning, and what "not exactly
+up" meant. She found out in another minute.
+
+The bed-room where Nataly was had all its windows closed, and there was
+a close scent of toilet-water and sachet-powder and unairedness through
+the whole place.
+
+"Here's Winnie Merriam, that I told you about, sister," said Billy Lee,
+and bolted. He never seemed to walk, only to run.
+
+Nataly Lee rose from the couch where she had been lying, and came toward
+Winona.
+
+"I'm very glad to see you," she greeted Winnie languidly. "I think I
+have seen you--out in your back garden yesterday."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder," said Winona. "I was playing tag there with my
+sister Florence and little Bessie Williams."
+
+"Do you still play tag?" asked Nataly, gesturing her visitor to a seat,
+and lifting one weary eyebrow.
+
+"Not as a confirmed habit," said Winona mischievously. "But you can't
+play it well with only two, and the children wanted me to, so--well, I
+just did, that was all. Don't you like tag?" she added. ("I was morally
+certain she'd faint," she confided to Tom afterwards, "but she didn't.")
+
+As a matter of fact, Nataly pulled closer the blue brocaded negligee
+that was obviously covering up a nightgown, and said, "I don't know much
+about games. I like reading better."
+
+"Oh, do you?" exclaimed Winona, interested at once. "I love reading,
+too, but somehow there's so little time for it except when it's bad
+weather. Don't you do anything but read?"
+
+"Not much," replied Nataly languidly. "Sports bore me."
+
+Winona gave an inward gasp of dismay.
+
+"Mercy!" she thought, "what a queer girl!" But outwardly she persevered.
+"Don't you ever dance?"
+
+Nataly opened her heavy hazel eyes with a little more interest.
+
+"Oh, yes, I dance, of course."
+
+"So do I," said Winona. "I love it."
+
+"Do you?" said Nataly. "I shouldn't think so--you seem so--athletic."
+
+"Oh, I'm glad," said Winona innocently, beaming with pleasure. "But I'm
+not, particularly. I can swim, of course, and row and paddle a little,
+and play tennis a little. But I've never played hockey or basket-ball,
+either of them, much. Or baseball."
+
+"Do girls play baseball up here?" demanded Nataly, sitting up and
+letting a paper novel with a thrilling picture on the cover slide to the
+floor.
+
+"They do," averred Winona solemnly, but with sparkling eyes. She was
+tempted to go on shocking her hostess by thrilling stories of invented
+boxing-matches between herself and her little schoolmates, but she
+thought better of it. "But that wasn't really what I came about," she
+went on, looking longingly at the closed window, for the airless room
+was beginning to make her cheeks burn. "Next week the Scouts are giving
+us Camp Fire Girls a dance, you know--and you are coming, aren't you?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," Nataly spoke slowly, lying back on the sofa and
+beginning to finger her paper novel again.
+
+"Well"--it came out with rather a rush--"would you like to join the Camp
+Fire? I think you'd like it."
+
+She went on enthusiastically telling Nataly all about it, till she was
+brought up short by a genuine and unsuppressed yawn on Nataly's part.
+
+"All that work?" said Nataly plaintively. "Oh, I couldn't do any of
+those things--I'd die!"
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry," Winona was a little taken aback. The idea of
+considering whether things were too much trouble or not was a new one to
+her. She had always gone on the principle that--why--you _wanted_ to
+plunge into things head-foremost, and do them with all your might--that
+was the way to have fun! So the idea of lying on a sofa and shuddering
+at the idea of work was a great surprise.
+
+"No, I really couldn't join," said Nataly, with the first energy she had
+shown. "But I'm very glad you came to see me."
+
+"Yes, so am I," said Winona politely. "And you will come and see me as
+soon as you can, won't you?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," promised Nataly. She threw up her hand and pressed a
+button back of her sofa as she spoke, for Winona was rising to go.
+
+"Emma will show you the way downstairs," she said languidly, "and don't
+you want this? It's very interesting--I've just finished it."
+
+"This" was the paper novel with the melodramatic cover.
+
+"Why, thank you!" said Winona, taking it politely. "It's very kind of
+you. And you will come over?"
+
+"Oh, yes," responded Billy Lee's sister, "I shall be very glad to call."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well, how was it?" demanded Tom of his sister that evening.
+
+Winona laughed and shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"Why, very nice. Only Nataly Lee's about a million years older than I
+am, and she made me feel as if I were seven instead of fourteen. And she
+certainly is the _queerest_ girl! She doesn't seem to want to do
+anything for fear it will be too much trouble!"
+
+"What about joining up with your Daughters of Pocahontas?" inquired Tom.
+
+Winona didn't stop to rebuke him for his flippancy.
+
+"Well, about that," she replied, "she reminded me of one of the haughty
+ladies in the Japanese Schoolboy's housework experiences--don't you
+remember? 'I have not the want to,' she sniffed haughtily with
+considerable frequency! But she's coming to the dance."
+
+"Queer," said Tom. "There's no nonsense about Billy--he's a good
+all-around fellow. Well, you never can tell."
+
+"No," acquiesced Winona philosophically, "you can't, and it's rather a
+good thing, too!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVEN
+
+
+"You certainly are taking it easy, considering there's going to be a
+dance!" declared Tom. "Usually when anything like that is going to
+happen you run around like a hen with its head cut off!"
+
+"No reason why I should, this time," said Winona, laughing. "You Scouts
+are giving the dance, not we. Though perhaps it's because my dress is
+off my mind. You always have to press a frock out and clean your white
+shoes, and be sure your sash is all right, when you're wearing anything
+festive. But thanks to your suggestion about wearing the ceremonial
+dress, you'll see 'ten little Injuns' walking in to-night, headbands,
+moccasins and all--and I have nothing to worry about."
+
+Winona stretched herself out in the Morris-chair and looked provokingly
+comfortable and unoccupied.
+
+"I heard about it," said Tom.
+
+Winona flushed.
+
+"What did you hear?"
+
+"About you and your ceremonial dresses. But I guessed, too."
+
+"Who told you--and what did they tell?" demanded Winona, sitting up and
+looking ruffled.
+
+"Marie--that all the girls mightn't have party clothes," Tom placidly
+replied.
+
+"Marie hadn't any business to!" said Winona.
+
+"Well, I guessed the rest. You see, Lonny Hughes is in the Scouts, too,
+and he--well, he tells me things sometimes. And I know Adelaide felt
+pretty badly for awhile because she couldn't keep up with some of
+you--Edith mostly, I guess. He said he had to fairly bully his sister
+into joining you girls, even after Nannie'd coaxed her. You certainly
+were a good sport, Win! You know, there's just Lonny and Adelaide and a
+younger sister, and the father. They have one of those little flats over
+James's drug-store, in the Williamson Block, and Mr. Hughes doesn't get
+an awful lot of salary. Anyway, the kids keep house, and Adelaide has to
+look after herself all the way round. So she takes this hard, the money
+end, I mean."
+
+"I think she's silly!" said downright Winona.
+
+"Maybe!" said Tom wisely, and went on bestowing loving care on his
+repeating rifle, the joy of his life.
+
+Winona retired into a book, and Tom, looking up a second later, caught
+sight of its cover.
+
+"Great Scott!" he ejaculated, eying it. "Where did you get _that?_"
+
+"Where did she get what?" asked Louise, walking unceremoniously in.
+"Hello, Tom. Oh, Winnie, I want you to show me about this headband. I
+can't get the colors matched right--you know you have to be rather kind
+to beautiful golden hair like mine. It won't stand every color there
+is."
+
+"No rest for the wicked!" said Winona cheerfully, sitting up and
+abandoning her book. "You don't mean you're going to try to get this
+done for to-night?"
+
+"I certainly am," said Louise doggedly.
+
+"All right." And Winona, pulled up a little table between them.
+"Here--this is the way."
+
+The two girls bent over the little loom, their heads close together.
+Tom, meanwhile, finished cleaning his gun, wrapped it carefully in oiled
+red flannel, and looked around for more worlds to conquer.
+
+The first thing his eyes lighted on was the paper novel Winona had
+reluctantly laid down--the one Nataly had loaned her.
+
+"For the love of Mike, where did you get this?"
+
+"Your friend's sister, next door," said Winona mischievously. "Don't you
+like her taste in books?"
+
+"Crazy about it!" said Tom. "'Beautiful Coralie's Doom; or, Answered in
+Jest,'" he read from the vivid cover. "Say Louise, this hero was a
+dream. You ought to hear the amount of things he's called the heroine,
+and this is only the first chapter!"
+
+"Go ahead," urged Louise, while Winona tried vainly to get the book away
+from her brother, "I guess I can bear it!"
+
+"Let's see. Child, sweetheart, angel, cara-mia, little one--I'll have to
+start on the other hand, I've used up all my fingers on this one--loved
+one, petite, schatzchen--wonder what that is? The only thing he's left
+out so far is 'kiddo.' I suppose we'll come to that further on.
+'Lancelot looked down at her through his long, superfluous eyelashes,'"
+Tom went on, reading at the top of his strong young voice. "Those were
+well-trained eyelashes all right. I'll bet he hung by 'em every day to
+get 'em in shape to use so much. I've found six sentences about those
+lashes on one page, and every one the same."
+
+"You wouldn't expect him to have a new set every time, would you?"
+inquired Louise sarcastically.
+
+"It's a wonder he didn't have to. One set must have been pretty well
+worn out by the end of a chapter. 'Ah, you wicked fellow,' Coralie said
+archly," he went on, sitting down on the floor with the book. Winona
+made a dive for it, but she wasn't quick enough. "This wicked part's
+what gets me. There's an average of twenty-five 'wickeds' to every
+chapter, and the poor fellow's never even forgotten to return an
+umbrella!"
+
+"Or a book his sister was reading," suggested Louise.
+
+"And what's a 'saucy meow,' Winona? Coralie did 'em all the time. Can
+you?"
+
+But here Winona threw herself bodily on him, and this time she managed
+to recover her book, which she sat on.
+
+"Well, this literature class is very interesting, but my happy home
+wants me," said Louise, rising and taking up her loom and the headband,
+which was in a fair way to be properly finished now. "Thanks, ever so
+much, Ray of Light. You're the best girl as ever-ever-was. See you
+to-night, Tommy."
+
+"Now, _that's_ some girl," said Tom admiringly. "No nonsense about her.
+Do you want me to take you over, Winnie?"
+
+"That would be awfully nice of you, but we thought we'd 'attend in a
+body,' as the papers say," answered Winona. "Aren't you boys going to?"
+
+"Well, you see, there are extra girls," explained Tom. "There aren't
+enough of you Scoutragettes to go round, so we've asked some other
+girls, and we have to go after them. But we'll get them early, and be
+there to meet you when you get there."
+
+"Well, I don't want to croak." And Winona arose to go into the kitchen,
+for that way lay an honor bead, and it was nearly supper-getting time.
+"But I think the boy who goes after Nataly Lee _won't_ be drawn up to
+meet us, unless we kindly hold back the order of march for him."
+
+"Shouldn't wonder," called Tom after her. "Get something good for
+supper, there's a useful sister!"
+
+But though there was a slight delay in the order of march, it was Louise
+Lane, of all unexpected people, who was responsible for it: her headband
+went wrong after all, she explained when, flushed and panting, she
+appeared in her other one at the meeting-place.
+
+The girls fell into step and marched, two and two, out into the street
+up the short block to the school-house, where most of the public affairs
+in the town were held.
+
+"Oh, isn't it gorgeous?" whispered Winona irrepressibly as they came
+steadily and lightly up the centre of the hall, till they faced the
+Scouts.
+
+These last were drawn up in a military formation, in the order of their
+seniority, with the Scoutmaster at their head. He was a plump, cheerful,
+middle-aged man, the father of three of the Scouts, and vice-principal
+of the High School. But you would never have thought he had seen a
+class-room, he looked so military and colonel-fied, there at the head of
+his line of erect, soldierly-looking boys.
+
+"It's like real receptions!" whispered Helen to Winona, as the orchestra
+blared out "Hail to the Chief!" which was as near to "Welcome to the
+Camp Fire Girls" as the orchestra's resources could come. Then Mrs.
+Bryan and Mr. Gedney gave the order to break ranks, and the orchestra
+slid with surprising ease into a Paul Jones. So did the boys and girls.
+
+"We got here first, you see," whispered Tom to Winona as he crossed her.
+The round went on for quite a little while before the whistle blew for
+the breaking up into twos, so Winona was able to question and answer bit
+by bit as she and her brother met and parted.
+
+"What about the extra girls?" she whispered, for no extra girls were to
+be seen.
+
+"The fellows are going after them now," explained Tom. "This was a
+dance----" Tom had to leave, and finished on the next round, "for the
+Camp Fire. The others didn't come first, naturally."
+
+And sure enough, by the time the first dance was over, the extra boys
+were back, bringing partners with them--girls Camp Karonya knew, and who
+were presently going to form a second Camp Fire--for Camp Karonya's
+membership list was almost full now. The newcomers had evidently been
+asked to wear fancy costume, and the effect of the Indian dresses that
+the Camp Fire Girls wore, and the boys' military clothes, was lighted up
+and made more beautiful by the dash of color made by an occasional gypsy
+or Oriental lady.
+
+The hall had been decorated in a half-military, half-woodland fashion,
+with tents draped against the walls, crossed rifles, green boughs and
+lighted lanterns. It was a warm night, so they had filled the big
+fireplace at the side of the room with boughs. The entrance to the
+kitchen, where the cooking-classes were held in the school every Friday,
+was covered by a tent. Behind that tent, the exciting rumor spread, was
+a real colored caterer who was going to serve refreshments of
+unparalleled splendor at the proper time.
+
+But at about ten o'clock a frenzied rapping was heard from the place
+which was supposed to hold the mysterious caterer. It rose above the
+music. Mr. Gedney hurried to the door to see what had happened. An irate
+negro appeared--the city caterer who had been imported to lend grandeur
+to the scene.
+
+"Mr. Gedney," he said in what he may have thought was a tragic whisper,
+but which echoed through half the hall, "I'se been a-caperin' fo'
+nineteen yeahs, an' ah nevah had anything as shockin' happen to me as
+dis heah befo'."
+
+"Why, what's the matter, Thomas?" Mr. Gedney asked, while the more
+curious of the dancers marked time gently within earshot.
+
+"Dey done stole mah 'freshments!" wailed the darky, forgetting, in his
+emotion, to lower his voice. "Ah had de ice-cream an' de san-wiches an'
+de fruit-punch an' de fancy-cake"--a soft moan went up unconsciously
+over the room as the hungry dancers heard of these vanished
+glories--"an' Ah put dem out on de side poach till Ah wanted dem. Ah
+didn't know Ah was comin' to no thief-town. An dey's _gone!_"
+
+Mr. Gedney rose to the occasion nobly.
+
+"We'll find some of them, Thomas," he said.
+
+By this time nearly everyone in the room had paused about the door. Mr.
+Gedney raised his voice. "Ladies," he said, "if you will excuse your
+partners for half an hour they will go out on the trail of
+our--ah--vanished refection. Scouts, attention! By twos, forward--hike!"
+
+In an instant every Scout, with a hasty excuse to his partner, had
+vanished from the building.
+
+"It's that Bent Street gang," hissed Tom to his sister in passing. "We
+know where they hang out, and where they're likely to have cached the
+eats."
+
+"I only hope there'll be something left by the time the Scouts find the
+food," wailed Louise. "Don't look so happy, Winnie--it's insulting!"
+
+"She's swelling as if she had an idea," suggested Helen, who had come
+over. "What is it, Win?"
+
+"So I have!" said Winona, her eyes sparkling as they always did when
+Great Ideas came her way. She was rather given to them. She ran across
+to Mrs. Bryan and began to talk to her in an excited whisper.
+
+When she had done Mrs. Bryan nodded.
+
+"Splendid!" she said. "Tell the girls yourself, my dear."
+
+So Winona stood swiftly out in the middle of the floor, a slim, gallant
+little figure in her Indian frock and the long strings of scarlet beads
+she had added to it.
+
+"Girls!" she said. "Those refreshments mayn't ever come back. The boys
+won't be back with them right away, anyhow. Let's get together and make
+some more!"
+
+"Good!" called out all the girls at once, and came flocking around Mrs.
+Bryan and Winona for orders. But Mrs. Bryan wouldn't give any.
+
+"You manage it, Ray of Light!" said she as Winona turned to her.
+
+"We want sandwiches and fruit punch and cakes, and--we can't get
+ice-cream this late at night," she remembered.
+
+"We can get oysters," said Helen's competent voice from behind a group
+of girls. "That oyster house down on Front Street is always open till
+twelve."
+
+"Then we can make creamed oysters--good!" said Winona. "Let's
+see--sixteen couples--about fifty sandwiches, if you count three to a
+person. Six loaves of bread, about. Marie, you belong to a big
+family--do you think you have any bread in the house your family could
+part with?"
+
+"Three loaves, anyway," said Marie.
+
+"I'll bring the other three," spoke up Elizabeth Greene, one of the new
+members.
+
+They both threw on their wraps and hurried out. Fortunately, most of the
+girls lived close by.
+
+"We'll send Thomas for the oysters," suggested Mrs. Bryan next. "None of
+you want to go to Front Street this time of night."
+
+She produced her purse from the pocket of her ceremonial dress, and went
+to send Thomas for the oysters.
+
+"Has anybody got anything in their house to fill sandwiches with?"
+Winona went on.
+
+"We have two pounds of dates," offered Edith Hillis, "and some rolls of
+cream cheese."
+
+"And I have the other half of both sketches, peanut butter and
+lettuces," called out Louise, "three heads, and two big glasses."
+
+"All right, go get 'em," said Winona unceremoniously, and two more
+sisters of the Camp Fire hurried on their wraps and fled out into the
+night.
+
+"I have milk and butter, myself," went on Winona.
+
+"Nannie," hinted Helen to Mrs. Bryan, who had returned, "do you remember
+those three big layer cakes you made for the Presbyterian fair? I'll
+make them over again if I can have them now."
+
+"No you won't, my child, because they're my contribution," returned her
+step-mother briskly. "Thank you for reminding me. I'll get them, and
+pineapples and lemons for your contribution to the lemonade."
+
+Dorothy remembered that she had some oranges and bananas, and Adelaide
+finally recalled to the rest that creamed oysters need thickening, and
+went after flour and salt and pepper.
+
+A couple of the other girls had candy at home, beautifully fresh and
+home-made. In fifteen minutes every girl was back laden down, and all of
+them invaded the little school kitchen. Fortunately most of the sixteen
+had taken cooking lessons there, and knew just where to find everything,
+even to their own aprons. So there was no time lost searching for
+matches and knives and bowls, and other such necessaries.
+
+One group of four cut and squeezed and sliced fruit for the
+fruit-punch--or fruit-lemonade, to give it the only name it was really
+entitled to. Another set prepared the sandwiches, which, what with
+pitting and chopping the dates for the date-and-peanut-butter ones, and
+cutting and spreading six big loaves of bread, was quite an undertaking.
+Another group handled the creamed oysters. This last wasn't exactly a
+group, though, because, try as you may, it is impossible for more than
+two people to make one cream gravy, or white sauce. The rest cut cake
+and arranged plates and looked after the serving generally.
+
+Thomas the "caperer" sat in a corner and "shucked oysters," as he called
+it, with his two attendant waiters standing statue-like behind him. It
+made a very impressive, if rather useless group.
+
+Mrs. Bryan lent a helping hand here and there as it was needed, but in
+the main she left the guidance of the affair to Winona's generalship.
+
+"Why, I didn't know how easy it was to have people do things!" Winona
+whispered to the Guardian, when that lady came over to her once to
+advise a little more butter in the gravy.
+
+"You happen to have executive ability, that's all," explained Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+Winona laughed. "Oh, it doesn't take executive ability when people want
+to help!" she returned gayly.
+
+The boys got back in just forty-five minutes, with rather dirtier
+uniforms than they had taken away. They were panting, also, and had a
+general cheerful air of having had something happen. But with them they
+bore, triumphantly, the untouched freezer, full of beautiful molds of
+ice-cream; also a large pasteboard box full of untouched, but rather
+crumpled-looking, fancy cakes.
+
+The sandwiches, they explained regretfully, were beyond recall, and so
+was the salad. The Bent Street gang had been just about to begin their
+last course when the Scouts descended.
+
+"We had a bully time!" said Billy Lee to Winona, who emerged from the
+kitchen, trying hard to look unoccupied, as did all the rest of the
+girls. "We didn't expect a lark like that in the middle of this. But
+it's hard on you girls to miss half the refreshments!"
+
+"Don't worry," said Winona cheerfully. "We aren't going to miss any of
+the refreshments, and neither are you! What do you think Camp Fire Girls
+are good for?"
+
+"Lots!" said Billy honestly, "but I don't see----"
+
+"That's because you aren't looking," laughed Winona.
+
+She pointed towards the little tent that draped the kitchen door. From
+out that tent issued haughtily Thomas's two negro waiters, each bearing
+a steaming, creamed-oyster-laden tray.
+
+"You'd better sit down," suggested Winona, "Everybody else has."
+
+"Well, this is great!" cried Billy enthusiastically, between bites of
+creamed oysters and sandwiches, and sips of fruit lemonade that was
+really better than that the Bent Street gang had stolen. "You don't mean
+to say you girls did all this right off the bat, while we were hunting
+the hoodlums, do you?"
+
+"Why, of course we did," and Winona dimpled with pleasure. "There were
+such a lot of us that it wasn't hard at all."
+
+"Anyhow, whoever managed it was a mighty clever person," said Billy,
+meditatively eating his last oyster. "Don't you think so?"
+
+This happened to be a rather embarrassing question.
+
+"Why, no!" she said thoughtlessly.
+
+"Then it was you!" said Billy, jumping cleverly to his conclusion.
+
+"We all helped," said Winona, blushing. "Everybody brought something. I
+only thought of it first--that was easy."
+
+"Easy if you know how!" said Billy skeptically.
+
+"Winona knew how," asserted Helen's voice behind them. She began to talk
+to Winona and Billy very earnestly about several things that didn't seem
+to have much to do with life in general. They had to turn half round to
+face her, which was what she wanted, for it prevented Winona from seeing
+that all the members of the Camp Fire were clustered near her place. The
+first she knew of it was Mrs. Bryan's voice saying:
+
+"All together, girls--a cheer for Ray of Light, who saved the
+refreshments!"
+
+The girls' voices rang out in the triple cheer for Winona, who blushed
+harder than ever.
+
+"I didn't do anything but suggest it!" she explained uselessly. Then she
+remembered her manners and sprang up.
+
+"Thank you, Sisters of the Camp Fire--even if I _don't_ deserve it!" she
+said gayly.
+
+Then the band started up and dancing went on.
+
+The evening ended with a riotous Virginia reel (which, by the way, meant
+an honor bead for every girl, because the boys none of them knew much
+about reeling, and had to be shown) and a final ringing cheer for the
+Camp Fire Girls by the Scouts. Then the party broke up. Though broke up
+is hardly the word, for the girls marched out, as they had come, in a
+body, with a military file of Scouts on either side of them. Altogether
+it certainly was the most festive of parties, and everybody thought so
+even next morning, when the mournful things about a party are apt to
+occur to you.
+
+The Scouts insisted, by the way, on replacing the various things that
+had been taken out of various pantries. The girls had intended to pay
+their families scrupulously back, but the Scouts extracted an exact
+account of the commandeered supplies from their sisters and cousins.
+Then they saw to it that everything, from the last loaf of bread to the
+last peanut, was redelivered by four next day. And so ended "the very
+best party," as everybody agreed, "that we ever had."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHT
+
+
+"It _was_ a nice party!" sighed Winona, for the tenth time, next day.
+
+"It was," admitted Tom. "I enjoyed it myself. Also the eats were good.
+Very clever of us to give a party like that. The question is, if you
+girls had to manage a real meal what would happen?"
+
+"That's exactly what we're going to do," said Winona. "This very
+afternoon, at Mrs. Bryan's!"
+
+"Oh, can't I go?" clamored Florence.
+
+"Well, it's just Helen and Louise and Adelaide Hughes and I," Winona
+hesitated. "It's the maid's day out, and we're going to get the supper
+and clear it away. Four of the others are going to do it a day or so
+later. And we're all going to try to get the same supper at our own
+houses, the next night."
+
+"Then of course I want to go!" said Florence, "so I can get the same
+supper at home the next night."
+
+Still Winona hesitated. It certainly is a nuisance to have a small
+sister who wants to tag, when you are just starting off to have a
+particularly nice time with your most intimate friends. And to add to
+the charm of the situation, just then in rushed Puppums through the back
+door, and seeing Winona with her hat in her hand, promptly sat up and
+began to beg wildly. Winona began to laugh.
+
+"Oh, come on, then, the whole family!" she said.
+
+Florence and Puppums both yelped for joy.
+
+"Shall I send Tom over to bring you back this evening?" asked Winona's
+mother, who was sitting near.
+
+"Oh, no--it isn't far," said Winona, "and it won't be late when I get
+back. Besides, I'll have Florence and the doggie."
+
+"Very well," said her mother. "And don't try to cook things that are too
+gorgeous, my dear, because we haven't as much money as the Bryans, and
+it might turn out to be very expensive."
+
+"I'll remember," said Winona, starting off with her little sister beside
+her, and Puppums careering wildly about them both. But it was one of the
+things that never did worry the Merriams, whether or not they had as
+much money as their neighbors. The three children and the dog, as their
+friends said, "always did seem to be having such a good time!" They were
+handsome and light-hearted--that is, the children were. Puppums was more
+remarkable for brains than beauty, as Tom said; being part pug, part
+bull-terrier and part fox-terrier, with a dash of retriever suspected in
+his remote ancestry. However, as long as he had his own way and plenty
+of bones and enough laps to sit on, neither his looks nor anything else
+worried the Puppums dog. His family had intended to give him a very fine
+name, but as Puppums he started when he was a small, wriggling
+mongrel-baby, and to nothing but Puppums would he ever deign to answer.
+So the family made the best of it. It was a way they had, anyway.
+
+Florence began to career around her sister very much as the dog was
+doing, singing at the top of her voice meanwhile. So, as Winona did not
+have to talk, she began to think. What her mother had said about their
+not having so much money as the Bryans set her to wondering, not about
+herself, but about Adelaide Hughes. She had noticed that Mrs. Bryan
+seemed to want Adelaide to make friends with the other girls, and that
+Adelaide herself was very apt to leave the first advances to them. And
+the reason, she supposed, was that Adelaide felt she was too poor to
+keep up with them, or so Tom had said.
+
+"But I don't ever feel as if I had to keep up with Helen, and she has
+twice as many dresses and twice as much money to spend as I have,"
+meditated Winona. "I wonder if I could ask Adelaide about it without
+hurting her feelings. I will if I get the chance."
+
+About this time Winona and her caravan reached the Bryan house, and
+Florence ran ahead so quickly to ring the bell that Winona had to run,
+too, to be there when the door opened.
+
+"I've brought my family, Mrs. Bryan!" said Winona. "I hadn't any
+choice--they simply would come. It's really your fault for being so
+popular with them."
+
+"Your family's very welcome!" said Mrs. Bryan. "If it's willing to be
+useful. What about it, Florence,--will you run errands for us if we want
+you to?"
+
+"Course I will!" said Florence, flinging herself bodily on Mrs. Bryan
+and hugging her hard. "I want to work!"
+
+"Puppums wants to help, too," said Helen.
+
+"Well, you can't help that way, you little villain," said Louise,
+appearing aproned in the doorway and making a dash for the dog. He had
+his paws on the table, and was most ill-manneredly trying to find out
+what was wrapped up in the paper with the lovely meaty smell. Louise
+rescued the package, and carried it out to the kitchen.
+
+"Is everyone here?" asked Mrs. Bryan. "No, I miss Adelaide."
+
+"She's just coming now," said Helen from the living-room window. "I
+wonder if she's remembered to bring her apron?"
+
+"Oh," cried Winona, "I never brought mine!"
+
+"I'll go get it," said Florence. "You see, you need me already!"
+
+She flew off, with the dog at her heels.
+
+"Truly, I'm sorry, Mrs. Bryan," apologized Winona again, "but she would
+have felt so badly if I hadn't let her come!"
+
+"You ought to sit on her more," suggested Louise, popping her head out
+of the kitchen door again. "I do on mine."
+
+"Well, you have such a lot of brothers and sisters you have to," said
+Winona, for Louise was the oldest of six.
+
+"Bessie wanted to come," said Louise, "but I put my foot down."
+
+"On Bessie?" laughed Winona, as she ran to open the door for Adelaide.
+"I hope you didn't hurt her."
+
+"Did you bring your apron, Adelaide?" called Helen anxiously.
+
+"There! She's asked every one of us that question in turn," said Louise,
+coming out into the living-room for the fourth time in five minutes. "I
+do hope you did!"
+
+"Oh, yes, I did," said Adelaide. "I have it here under my arm."
+
+"And here's Florence back with mine!" said Winona. "Now may we start?"
+
+"It isn't quite time yet," said Mrs. Bryan. "If we plan for supper at
+six, one hour is a great plenty of time for supper-getting, especially
+with all of us at it. It's only four-thirty now, and I want to tell you
+a plan I have. Come here, Florence. It's about you and your friends."
+
+"Oh, a plan about me!" said Florence. "That is nice!"
+
+"You see, girls," went on Mrs. Bryan, "there are always little sisters
+or cousins of Camp Fire Girls, like Florence and Bessie and the rest,
+who want to play, too. They aren't old enough to belong to Camp Fires of
+their own, so the way we do is to make them an annex to ours, under the
+name of Blue Birds--the Blue Bird stands for happiness, you know. And we
+help them, and show them how to have good times, too, and--they don't
+have to tag any more."
+
+"I didn't mean to tag," said Florence, looking a little ashamed. "I just
+wanted to--to come, too!"
+
+"Well, if you will go and find Bessie Lane, and--Adelaide, you have a
+little sister about their ages, haven't you?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Adelaide. "Frances is nine."
+
+"Well, Florence, get Bessie and Frances if you can find them, and we'll
+discover something for our nest of Blue Birds to do."
+
+"I think it's lovely, being a Blue Bird," said Florence, very much
+impressed by belonging to a society of her own.
+
+"Well, if you're a bird, fly!" said Louise, giving her a little push.
+
+The girls talked for a while longer, then donned their aprons and went
+out into the kitchen, where they stood and waited for further orders.
+
+"There are four of you," said their Guardian. "There's the table to set,
+salad and dressing to make, meat and potatoes to prepare, and dessert.
+Cocoa and cake, too. You're welcome to anything in the ice-box, but the
+game is to get supper without buying anything extra, unless something
+like bread or sugar gives out--some staple."
+
+"That will be more fun," said Winona, who had had some experience lately
+with cooking. "It's much more interesting thinking out ways to make
+things out of other things, than when you cook straight ahead!"
+
+Adelaide stared as if Winona had said a very strange thing. But then
+Adelaide always did look at Winona more or less that way.
+
+"I think the most fun is eating out of paper bags," said Louise. "No
+washee dishee. However, I only think that--I wouldn't dare say it.
+How'll we divide?"
+
+"Decide that yourselves," said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Let's see what there is in the ice-box, first," Winona suggested
+prudently, when Mrs. Bryan had left them alone. So they investigated.
+
+"Eight large baked potatoes!" counted Louise. "How on earth did you
+miscalculate so badly as that, Helen, or are they there for our special
+benefit?"
+
+"No, it just happened," said Helen. "Father was going to bring a friend
+home to dinner last night, and neither of them could get here after
+all."
+
+There was also a large piece of cooked beefsteak, a head of lettuce, a
+dish of cooked peas and some beets. There were other things in the
+ice-box as well, but these were what the girls chose. They brought some
+apples up from down cellar, too, and stacked them in a row on the table
+with the other things.
+
+"Now, Nannie said that the game was to use as many leftovers as possible
+and do everything as inexpensively as we could and yet have everything
+taste good and not seem warmed over," said Helen.
+
+"That's something a lot of grown-up women never do," said Louise. "My
+aunt----"
+
+Mrs. Bryan came from the living-room to say. "I'll show you anything you
+don't know about, girls, but you must do the actual work yourselves, or
+you won't know how."
+
+"Yes!" said Louise. "Choose your poison, Ladies and Gentlemen!" She
+pulled her cooking-cap close down over her hair. "I'm going to do the
+potatoes. I think I know how to fix them."
+
+"Cold baked potatoes?" said Helen. "There isn't anything, except
+creaming them."
+
+"They're all right that way," said Louise, "but that isn't what I'm
+going to do."
+
+"Well, I'll take the cake," said Helen. "I saw some sour milk in the
+ice-box, and spice-cake is the cheapest cake I know."
+
+"I'll take the meat," said Winona. "There must be something I can do
+with a beautiful piece of steak like that, even if it is cooked."
+
+Adelaide had not said anything.
+
+"That leaves the salad for you, Adelaide," said Mrs. Bryan cheerfully.
+"Louise, you'd better see about some fruit for supper, for your potatoes
+won't take you long."
+
+Then Mrs. Bryan introduced them to the ways of the gas-range, and went
+back to lie in wait for her Blue Birds.
+
+Helen collected spice and molasses and flour and shortening around her
+corner of the table, and went systematically to work on her spice-cake.
+
+"It looks like gingerbread," said Winona, getting the bread-crumb jar.
+
+"It is, really, only it hasn't much ginger in," explained Helen. "Lots
+of people don't like ginger. What are you going to do with your steak,
+Winnie?"
+
+"Frame it!" advised Louise frivolously. "They say they have a four-pound
+steak under glass at the Metropolitan Museum, as a relic of the days
+when each family had at least one in a lifetime."
+
+"If you want to frame your share of it you may," said Winona. "I'm going
+to eat mine."
+
+"They're supposed to be eaten," put in Helen mildly. "But really,
+Winnie, I think you have rather a hard job. There's not nearly enough
+steak there for eight people. It was only intended for five in the first
+place."
+
+"That's the game, isn't it?" said Winona placidly. "Besides, I'm going
+to send Florence home to supper. It's all right for her to attach
+herself to the party for the afternoon, but I draw the line at her
+inviting herself to a meal--don't you think so, Louise?"
+
+"I'm wid yez," called Louise back from the gas-range, where she was
+doing something with sugar and water. "Bessie goes back, too."
+
+Winona got the chopping-machine, divided a big stalk of celery with
+Adelaide, made another excursion to the shelf over the ice-box for some
+peppers and onions, and began to grind her beefsteak.
+
+"Croquettes?" inquired Louise curiously.
+
+"No, scalloped meat," answered Winona. "The croquettes won't go as far,
+and there'll be the cream gravy extra, and we'll need milk for the
+cocoa. Besides, the deep fat to fry them would be another horrible
+extravagance."
+
+She put in a layer of meat as she spoke, then the ground celery and
+peppers and seasoning, and a generous layer of bread-crumbs.
+
+"But aren't celery and peppers an extravagance, too?" put in Adelaide,
+looking faintly interested. She was the only one of the four girls not
+busy. She had not started on her salad.
+
+"They would be if they weren't in the house," said Winona carelessly,
+"though I don't think they are costly this time of year. But I'm using
+them for their bulk. Mother flavors with celery seed when celery's too
+high."
+
+She continued to build up her edifice of meat and crumbs and so forth,
+and finally drenched it with cold water and put it in the oven.
+
+"Be careful of my cake when you look at your meat," reminded Helen,
+coming and tucking her spice-cake in beside the meat as she spoke. "How
+are you getting on, Adelaide?"
+
+"Not at all," said Adelaide ashamedly. "I don't believe I know how to
+make salads."
+
+"Come help me set the table, then," invited Helen.
+
+"All right," said Adelaide, getting up slowly from her kitchen chair,
+and flinging her long, untidy braids back over her shoulders.
+
+"No, Helen, please!" said Winona. "Let me show Adelaide. I think we can
+make a perfectly lovely salad in a few minutes."
+
+"All right, Winnie!" said Helen cheerfully, and vanished into the
+dining-room alone.
+
+"I don't see how!" said Adelaide. "I thought you had to have chicken or
+lobster or such things for salad--and I'm sure I'd curdle the dressing."
+
+"Of course you will if you expect to," said Louise, setting her syrup on
+to boil, and beginning to pare and quarter apples and drop them in cold
+water so they wouldn't brown. "Why don't you make boiled dressing?"
+
+"I didn't know about it," said Adelaide.
+
+"Good gracious!" said Louise. "How on earth do you manage at your
+house?"
+
+"Well, there's just father and Lonny and France and I, and mostly father
+brings home things from the delicatessen. And sometimes we roast meat
+and just eat at it till it's gone. I'm not old enough to know much about
+housekeeping, father says. But Lonny cooks sometimes."
+
+Winona and Louise both stared at her.
+
+"I'd go crazy," said Louise frankly. "I should think you'd get so you
+never wanted to eat anything."
+
+"Anyway, you can 'try this on your piano' when you go home," Winona
+threw in hastily, giving Louise a furtive, if thorough, pinch as she
+passed her, for she had seen Adelaide color up. "Boiled dressing's easy.
+You know how to make drawn butter, don't you--white sauce?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Adelaide, rising.
+
+"Well," explained Winona, "when you melt the butter in the pan to mix
+with the flour, you add some mustard, just a pinch, and salt and pepper.
+Then when you've put in the flour, and the milk, and it's just going to
+thicken, you put in the yolk of an egg. When it's cold you thin it with
+vinegar. That isn't hard, is it?"
+
+Adelaide was swiftly following directions as Winona talked.
+
+"Thin the egg with milk, and beat it a little--that's right," said
+Winona. "There--now take it off. The egg only wants to cook a minute.
+Now all you have to do is wait till it cools and add the vinegar,
+and--there's your dressing!"
+
+"Why, it isn't a bit hard!" said Adelaide wonderingly.
+
+"Nor a bit expensive," said Winona. "As for the salad, you can make
+salad out of any kind of vegetable that will cut up."
+
+"Let me see if I can work it out alone," said Adelaide.
+
+She washed the lettuce and set it on the individual salad plates Helen
+found for her. Then she began to combine peas and beets and celery quite
+as if she knew how.
+
+Winona watched her for a minute, then went over to see what Louise was
+doing. While she had been helping Adelaide Louise's syrup had cooked
+enough to have the quartered apples dropped into it, and now it was
+bubbling on the back of the stove. Just as Winona came over Louise took
+off the apples, cooked through, but not to the point of losing their
+shape, and put them outdoors to cool. Then she turned her attention to
+the baked potatoes of yesterday.
+
+She had heated them through, and now she cut off the tops and scooped
+out the inside, and was mixing it with milk and butter and a little
+onion, and beating it till it was creamy.
+
+"They're harder to do than if they were fresh," she said, pounding
+vigorously, "but I guess they'll come out all right, when they've been
+browned a minute."
+
+"They'll be browned just about the time my scalloped meat's done,"
+responded Winona, dropping to her knees before the oven. "Oh, Helen,
+come take out your cake! It's all done--I've tried it with a straw."
+
+"Oh, it isn't burned, is it?" cried Helen, dashing in.
+
+It wasn't. She put it on the shelf over the range, to keep warm, and
+headed a party bound upstairs to tidy up.
+
+"You didn't set places for those little taggers?" called Louise to Helen
+on the way up.
+
+"Not at our table," said Helen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINE
+
+
+When the four girls came down and put on the supper they found a
+surprise waiting for them. Beside the large table the little
+sewing-table had been moved in, spread with a white cloth and set; and
+around it, very flushed and important, sat Florence, Bessie Lane,
+Frances Hughes, and Edith Hillis's little sister Lucy. Before Frances,
+who was the oldest, sat a big dish of creamed potatoes, a platter of
+Hamburg steak, and in front of each girl steamed a bowl of tomato soup.
+
+"Well, where----" began everybody. All the small sisters answered at
+once.
+
+"We cooked 'em on the gas-stove in the back parlor!"
+
+"All but the soup," added conscientious little blonde Lucy. "We dumped
+that out of a can."
+
+"Well, we cooked it, too, didn't we?" inquired Frances.
+
+"So that was what was in the package Puppums wanted!" said Winona.
+"Where _is_ Puppums, anyway?" she added as she set down her scalloped
+meat.
+
+"I d'no," said Florence carelessly.
+
+But just at that moment Puppums accounted for himself. He came in from
+the direction of the half-open back door, in his mouth a neatly done up
+package.
+
+"_Oh!_" cried Winona and Florence in one despairing voice, "he's been
+stealing again! Drop it, you little wretch!"
+
+Mrs. Bryan went around to Puppums, who was proudly sitting up on his
+haunches over his spoils.
+
+"It isn't ours," she said, opening the bundle.
+
+"What is it?" asked Winona. "I might as well know the worst."
+
+"Chops," answered Mrs. Bryan briefly. "Two pounds of very nice lamb
+chops, with nothing at all to tell where they belong!"
+
+"Oh, Puppums!" said Winona and Florence together tragically. The rest
+were all laughing but to Puppums's family it was far from a laughing
+matter.
+
+Puppums Merriam was a splendid watch-dog. He was sweet-tempered and
+intelligent and obedient and cheerful, and everything a family dog
+should be. But he had one fault. He would occasionally snoop around back
+porches in search of anything the butcher might have left. The fact that
+he got three good meals a day, and was losing his figure far too fast
+for such a young and sprightly dog did not matter to him at all. Neither
+did he mind the fact that he got a good whipping every time Tom caught
+him at it. Happy indeed was the week wherein the Merriams did not have
+to apologetically return roasts or steaks to furious owners; or--if the
+condition of the prey made it necessary--buy new ones. But this last did
+not happen very often, for Puppums rarely brought home the bills with
+him, and it is hard to trace anonymous meat.
+
+So when he proudly presented his contribution to the feast there was
+nothing to do but to pick up the chops and put them away.
+
+"I can't spoil the fun by whipping him, and he always thinks my
+whippings are fun anyway, and wags his tail!" mourned Winona. "And we'll
+never know whose chops they were!"
+
+"They're Puppums's chops now," said Louise. "Go on, give 'em to him,
+Winnie. If you went out and gathered chops you wouldn't want to be
+scolded."
+
+"Well, I suppose he may as well have them," said Winona still sadly. So,
+although it was very wrong, and as she explained to the dog, it didn't
+create a precedent, soon the collector of chops was happily crunching
+them outside the back door, while the Camp Fire Girls ate made-over meat
+within.
+
+"What about our camping out?" Louise demanded, after the first pangs of
+appetite were over. "What's the use of being us if we can't camp?"
+
+"We _can_ camp," answered their Guardian as she helped Helen to some
+more salad. "This is lovely dressing, Adelaide. I didn't know what good
+cooks all of you were. I have been looking things up, and I don't see
+why we shouldn't go in a short time now, if all of your parents are
+willing and can spare you."
+
+There was a great commotion over at the table where the Blue Birds sat,
+and then hurried whispers--
+
+"You ask, Lucy."
+
+"No, you ask, Frances!"
+
+Finally Florence spoke up.
+
+"Can't the Blue Birds go camping, too?"
+
+"Why, of course they can!" said Mrs. Bryan cordially. "That is, just as
+with the Camp Fire Girls, if their mothers are willing."
+
+"Oh, then I can go, if we take Frances," said Adelaide relievedly.
+"Father and Lonny can get along all right by themselves, but Frances
+couldn't. Oh, I'm so glad!" Which was quite a good deal for reserved
+Adelaide to say.
+
+"So are we glad," said Helen heartily.
+
+"I wonder whether we couldn't go to that place up on the Wampoag River.
+Have you thought of any place, Mrs. Bryan?"
+
+"None but there or thereabouts," she said. "It's the best camping-place
+for a long distance, and only about twelve miles off."
+
+"But won't the boys want to camp there, too?" asked Helen.
+
+"There's plenty of room for everybody," said her step-mother. "I've been
+talking it over with Mr. Gedney, the Scoutmaster, and he says their camp
+will be about two and a half miles from the place I'd thought of our
+going. Wampoag River is very long, you know, and there must be five
+miles of woodland along both sides. So we needn't interfere with each
+other at all."
+
+"Then that's all right," said everybody.
+
+"And oh, let's hike there!" cried Louise. "We can do it in two days as
+easily as anything. Please, dear, nice, kind Guardian, let us hike
+there!"
+
+"I think it would be a very good thing to do," approved Mrs. Bryan. "But
+it isn't for me to settle. You'll have to have a business meeting to
+decide that, and to decide another thing that nobody's thought of."
+
+"Ways and means?" ventured Adelaide, perhaps because they had been in
+her mind, too.
+
+"Exactly," said Mrs. Bryan. "We haven't enough in the treasury to pay
+expenses, even if we only stay a little while. It's for you all to
+decide whether you want to get the money from your parents for the
+provisions, or whether you will earn it."
+
+"Earn it?" asked Winona, "How could we, in such a little while?"
+
+"You'll have to work that out yourselves," replied Mrs. Bryan, as she
+usually did.
+
+"Well, I can't ask dad for _much_ money," Louise frankly confessed.
+"Times are hard, and me poor father needs his gold for the lit-tul ones
+at home!"
+
+"Well, of course it's premature," hesitated Helen, looking up, "because
+the rest aren't here."
+
+"Go on, anyway," said the others eagerly.
+
+"Well, I don't see why we shouldn't have a bread and cake and preserve
+sale," she went on. "I'm treasurer, you know, and I'm sure we have
+enough money on hand for materials. People will buy things to eat when
+they won't buy anything else. I'm sure, too, that we could get Black's
+drug-store to sell in."
+
+"We'd need more than one cake-sale, wouldn't we?" asked Winona.
+
+"We could have two--or even four!" asserted Louise boldly. "We needn't
+go for two weeks yet, anyway. It will only be the last of July then. We
+could have sales Wednesdays and Saturdays."
+
+"And get orders beforehand, and make what people want!" said Louise,
+"Oh, I'd love to do that!"
+
+"Will it cost much?" asked Adelaide.
+
+"The sale?" said Louise.
+
+"No, the trip."
+
+"Not a good deal," said Mrs. Bryan. "We have the land free, of course.
+We shall have to buy tents--let me see, there are twelve in the Camp
+Fire, aren't there? And there will be six or eight Blue Birds. We'll
+need ten tents, and then there'll be the provisions. What they cost will
+depend on how long you decide to stay. If you hike there and back there
+won't be any railroad fare. As for clothes, you'll need blouses and dark
+skirts or bloomers, and tennis shoes--but all that can wait till the
+business meeting. Marie is secretary--she and Edith and Dorothy and Anna
+Morris are going to be here getting luncheon to-morrow. There had better
+be a meeting here to-morrow afternoon. I'll telephone Marie after
+supper."
+
+Eight very happy girls of assorted sizes cleared away the supper and
+washed the dishes and made the kitchen shine. Even Puppums, bulging with
+contraband chops, was more amiable than usual, and slept placidly in all
+the places where he was most in the way.
+
+"I'm going to take my banjo," planned Louise.
+
+"I shall take pounds and pounds of modelling clay," said Helen
+enthusiastically.
+
+"Edith has a mandolin," volunteered Lucy Hillis.
+
+"Everybody that has a musical instrument had better bring it," said Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+"We'll contribute a very fine dog with a stunning howl!" said Winona
+mischievously.
+
+"That dog isn't a musical instrument, he's a famine-breeder!" said
+Louise; then paused, for Mrs. Bryan went into the dining-room to
+telephone Marie Hunter. Edith Hillis was at Marie's, and both girls were
+as excited over the cake-sale idea as the rest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next afternoon the whole Camp Fire had a business meeting at Mrs.
+Bryan's. Besides the girls who had originally belonged, five others had
+joined. It was a very pleasant meeting, helped out with afternoon cocoa
+and sandwiches that the lunch-getters had prepared. They discussed ways
+and means till they could scarcely hear themselves think. Never was
+there such an unanimous meeting. For everybody wanted to go camping, and
+to go camping money is needed. So three committees were appointed, one
+to buy materials, another to borrow an eligible drug-store for Saturday,
+and a third to attend to advertising. The girls were to meet Friday, and
+each take home what materials she needed. Saturday morning the materials
+were to be returned to the drug-store in the shape of salable things to
+eat. It even occurred to one genius to allot to each girl a certain
+thing to make.
+
+"It's a good thing to do," she said modestly--it was Dorothy. "Once our
+Sunday-school class gave a sale, and every single girl brought chocolate
+cake."
+
+"I remember that," said Marie. "But it turned out all right."
+
+"Oh, yes," said Dorothy laughing. "We hung a sign in the window,
+'Chocolate cake sale!' and it all went. But it mightn't have!"
+
+So Marie made out a careful list of what each girl was to make.
+
+"I don't see how we'll ever sell all those!" she said, looking worried.
+
+But they did. People always will buy bread and cake and muffins. At the
+end of the first sale, on Saturday, Edith Hillis, who was on duty, put
+seventeen dollars in her hand-bag to take up to Helen.
+
+"There are orders, too," she reported. "We have eight dozen parkerhouse
+rolls and two dozen and a half biscuits promised for different lunches
+and suppers next week, beside jam orders. Here's the list."
+
+"That ought to be five dollars more," counted Helen.
+
+Edith forgot for once to smooth her dress and pat her curls in the
+excitement of success.
+
+"Three more as good and we'll have all the money we need!" she declared.
+
+And, as a matter of fact, the three following sales were better than the
+first. Adelaide developed a real talent for jelly-making, and the orders
+for that alone helped a good deal. At the crowning sale, the next one to
+the last, they made twenty-one dollars, and eighteen and nineteen at the
+other two.
+
+Mrs. Bryan went off to the city to buy tents, and was understood to have
+come back with ten that were marvellous bargains. The Camp Fire darned
+all its stockings, and tidied itself, and was collectively very good at
+home, so as to leave a pleasant last impression.
+
+Mrs. Merriam lamented that she was going to be very, very lonely, for
+Tom was going out camping with the Scouts only a day or so later than
+Winona and Florence were to go with Camp Karonya. As for Puppums, there
+were many arguments about him, for Tom thought he would make a fine
+mascot, and so did Winona and Florence. It was finally settled by the
+fact that another of the Scouts owned a collie and was going to take
+him; and Puppums, while he was a friendly dog in the main, and indeed
+had quite a social circle of his own, bit collies whenever he saw them.
+So there were bound to be fights if Puppums went with Tom, and it was
+decided that the girls should have him.
+
+Nobody thought there were going to be any more members added to the
+Camp. But one afternoon, while Winona was out in her back garden with
+Louise and Helen and a medicine ball, Nataly Lee from next door came
+calling. The three girls were dusty and tousled; Helen's braid was
+half-undone, the ribbon was off Winona's curls, and Louise, who had just
+fallen full-length across the nasturtiums in a vain effort to get the
+ball, had a streak of mould and grass-stain from her shoulder to the hem
+of her skirt. Altogether, they were as badly mussed a trio as you could
+wish to see, when Tom came out the back door toward them.
+
+He said nothing whatever, but he bore high in his hand the very largest
+tray the house afforded, and in its black and banged centre reposed a
+small calling-card which said "Miss Nataly Lee. The Cedars." He made a
+low bow, and held the tray toward his sister.
+
+Winona took off the card, and the three girls looked at it together.
+
+"Where do you suppose she keeps the cedars?" asked Louise in a stage
+whisper. "There aren't any next door."
+
+"Sh-h. That must be her ancestral estate," surmised Helen respectfully.
+"Oh, dear, Winnie, I can't go in this way, to a call that has a card and
+all that!"
+
+"Of course you can," said Winona cheerfully. "I did worse than that when
+I went calling on _her_. I didn't take any card at all. To be frank with
+you, I haven't any. Anyway, she received me with her wrapper on, and
+that's no better than grass-stains."
+
+"Come on--be sports!" urged Tom, waving his tray. "I think she's come to
+say that she's willing to be welcomed in your midst."
+
+"How do you know?" asked all three girls at once.
+
+"I don't know--I only think so, because Billy told me," said Tom.
+
+"We certainly look dreadful!" mourned Helen, but they all brushed each
+other off and straightened each other, and trotted into the house.
+
+Nataly did not look as if she had ever seen a negligee. She had on white
+gloves and a veil, and carried a card-case, and altogether, except that
+her hair was down and her skirt short, she might very well have been
+grown up.
+
+"It's a charming day," she began when she had been introduced to Helen
+and Louise.
+
+"It certainly is," agreed Louise, "and a lot too nice to stay in the
+house. Don't you want to come on out in the back yard with us and play
+ball?"
+
+But Nataly declined. She said she didn't think it would be good for her
+gloves.
+
+Then there was a pause, because nobody could think of anything to say.
+Finally Winona began:
+
+"Tom says you think you might like to join our Camp Fire, after all. Do
+you think you would?"
+
+Nataly looked as if she was about to take a dreadful plunge, but she
+said, "Yes, I believe I would like to. The doctor says I ought to be out
+in the open air, and you are, aren't you?"
+
+"We certainly are!" said Louise. "That's where we were when you came to
+call. Want to come?"
+
+Louise was visibly fretting at having to stay indoors, and finally
+Winona had to lead the way out to the back garden again. And, naturally,
+the first thing to meet their eyes was the big black tray, with Nataly's
+own card fatally conspicuous in the very middle of it. Winona tried to
+steer her around it, but it was no use. Your own name is one thing you
+are sure to see or hear before anything else. Winona, talking sixteen to
+the dozen about everything she could think of, picked up the card
+furtively and put it in her pocket. Unfortunately it wasn't possible to
+pocket the tray.
+
+However, they arranged with Nataly that she go camping with them. She
+could not join till the next monthly ceremonial meeting, but there was
+to be one soon after camp was pitched. So it was settled.
+
+"I wonder who she'll be friends with specially?" said Helen after she
+had gone. "She doesn't seem to fit into us, somehow."
+
+"We'll have to make her fit," said Winona gayly. "To tell you the truth
+Helen, she reminds me of a kitten I knew once. It belonged to three old
+maiden ladies. It didn't know how to be a kitten at all--the poor little
+thing thought it was a cat!"
+
+"Well, perhaps Nataly'll turn out a kitten, but I doubt it, even with
+you helping," said Louise. "Come on, let's finish our game."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TEN
+
+
+As the clock struck eight-thirty Monday morning, on the last week in
+July, one Guardian, one dog, thirteen big girls and seven small ones
+lined up for their long-anticipated hike to Camp Karonya. They planned
+to walk half the distance that day, sleep at a farmhouse about half-way
+to the woods, and finish the next day at their destination. They were
+all in middies, with dark skirts, and the most comfortable slippers
+money could buy--it hurts to hike in tight shoes. They had hats, of
+course, but Edith Hillis, in addition, carried a parasol. Each girl
+carried her own night-things and drinking-cup and luncheon. The
+provisions, and the rest of the baggage, had gone over to the
+camping-place in Mr. Bryan's automobile and Louise Lane's father's
+delivery-wagon.
+
+Early as it was, quite a lot of people were out to see the girls off,
+and even Puppums curvetted proudly as he noticed the attention he was
+getting, for he was a very vain dog. He might well be vain, because
+Louise had attached a large label to his collar which said "Camp Fire
+Dog," and he was not allowed to chew it off.
+
+They walked slowly, and it felt very much like going to a picnic
+guaranteed to last forever. Presently someone started a marching song,
+and everyone joined in. They walked easily on, having a very good time
+as they went; and before they knew it noon had come, and it was time to
+have lunch.
+
+They were near a meadow by this time, a big green meadow with trees at
+its edge, and they all sat down under the trees and unpacked their
+sandwiches and ate. Some of the girls had thermos bottles with them,
+with hot cocoa, but most of them preferred the concentrated lemonade
+Mrs. Bryan had brought along, mixed with water from a nice little brook
+which had been kind enough to flow quite near them.
+
+"If it's all going to be like this, won't it be lovely?" said Winona,
+her eyes shining, as she took a large bite of sandwich, and then fed a
+generous share of the rest to Puppums, who lay quiveringly near her.
+
+"It is nice," said Helen more quietly. "I hope we'll have weather like
+this the whole time ... gracious, what's that?"
+
+"That" was a distant squeal. Winona looked hastily around her to see
+what the Blue Birds were doing. But there were no Blue Birds there. The
+seven little girls were out of sight, but not out of hearing, for it was
+evidently one of them who had made the noise.
+
+Winona and Adelaide jumped up and ran, but Louise and Edith sat placidly
+on.
+
+"They _will_ howl," said Louise. "There's no use always chasing after
+them."
+
+But when Winona and Adelaide arrived at the place the squeals had come
+from they were very glad they had done the "chasing."
+
+Florence, with little Lucy Hillis holding her, was sitting on the ground
+screaming steadily. The other girls were huddled together in a
+frightened group a little way off.
+
+"What is it? What is it, Lucy?" cried Winona, frightened. Florence was
+making such a noise that it was no use asking her. Lucy Hillis, who was
+one of those quiet, old-fashioned little girls who always keep their
+heads, looked up, still holding Florence's wrist.
+
+"Florence's cut herself," she said. "I'm afraid it's a bad cut. I don't
+dare let go of it."
+
+Winona flung herself down by Florence and put her hands above Lucy's
+shaking little ones, which then, and not till then, let go.
+
+"Get me a stick, Lucy, quick--a strong one!" she said.
+
+Lucy was back with the stick before Winona was through speaking. Winona
+pulled off her tie, that useful silk scarf of hers which had helped
+Edith out of the water, and bound it above Florence's cut, twisting it
+tight with the stick. Then she asked Adelaide to tie Florence's wrist
+again, below the cut. She did not want to take any chances, and she did
+not know yet whether it was a vein or an artery that Florence had hurt.
+
+Then she sent Lucy flying for Mrs. Bryan, while she and Adelaide made
+Florence keep still.
+
+"That Lucy child keeps her head," said Adelaide approvingly.
+
+"It wasn't _her_ wrist that got cut!" said Florence indignantly,
+stopping her sobs.
+
+"How did it happen, Florence?" asked her sister. "Tell us--but don't
+stir. Nobody knows what will happen if your wrist starts bleeding
+again."
+
+"Well, we were being Indian chiefs," began Florence, "an'--an' I was out
+on the warpath, going to scalp Molly Green. And I ran, and Molly ran,
+an' I fell over a tree-root and the knife cut my wrist."
+
+"The knife!" said Winona, for nobody had mentioned a knife before.
+"Where did you get a knife?"
+
+Florence hung her head.
+
+"I--I borrowed your penknife out of your knapsack when you laid it on
+the grass to get lunch out of it."
+
+"The knife? I didn't."
+
+"No; the knapsack," said Florence meekly. "An'--an' oh, _dear_ sister,
+I'm so sorry!"
+
+Winona could scarcely help laughing, worried as she was. When Florence
+had been naughty she always became suddenly very affectionate. At other
+times she wasn't, especially.
+
+"I'm sorry, too," she said gravely. "I don't know what Mrs. Bryan will
+say to you, nor mother, when she hears about it."
+
+"Let me see," said Mrs. Bryan behind them. She had hurried over at
+Lucy's summons.
+
+"Oh, is it--is it an artery?" breathed Winona, as Mrs. Bryan bent over
+the wounded arm.
+
+Mrs. Bryan laughed. "Nothing of the sort, you foolish child," she said.
+"It's only a deep cut. It didn't even strike a large vein."
+
+"Oh, I'm _so_ glad!" said Winona, drawing a long breath.
+
+She ran off to get her First Aid kit out of her knapsack, and, coming
+back, presently had Florence bandaged up scientifically, and much
+impressed with the importance of what she had done.
+
+"Will I have to be carried on a stretcher?" the little girl wanted to
+know.
+
+"Not a bit of it," said Mrs. Bryan briskly. "You will have to walk on
+your own two feet, like any other naughty little girl."
+
+"Oh, was I naughty?" said Florence cheerfully. "I forgot that!"
+
+"Yes," answered Mrs. Bryan, "you were very naughty. I think we shall
+have to confine you to camp for two days, when we get there."
+
+"All right," said Florence complacently, "but now please can't I be
+carried on a stretcher? I should think I might!"
+
+"All right, let's," said Louise, who had come up along with the rest of
+the girls, in Mrs. Bryan's wake. "Only remember, Florence Merriam, once
+you get up on that stretcher you have to stay there."
+
+"Of course!" said Florence indignantly.
+
+By this time all the girls were clustered about the interesting invalid,
+and the stretcher idea struck them all as a very fine one. It would help
+them to put the Wood Craft they had been learning into practice. Winona
+picked up her gory penknife, and began to wash it in the brook before
+she started to cut wood with it.
+
+"Oh," said Florence plaintively, "I thought you'd always keep it that
+way, to remember me by!"
+
+"I'll have chance enough to remember you without that," replied Winona
+feelingly, and went off to look for poles with the others. Edith Hillis
+pulled her embroidery out of her knapsack and mounted guard over the
+Blue Birds, who were, however, a rather subdued flock by now.
+
+Meanwhile the rest of the girls picked out four saplings which grew at
+the edge of the wood beyond the meadow, and nicked them at the bottom
+patiently till they fell. The next thing was to tie them together. But
+nobody had anything to do it with, till Mrs. Bryan remembered a bunch of
+leather thongs she carried.
+
+"I always have at least two along for extra shoe-laces, when I'm
+camping," she explained, "and they always come in use for something else
+before the time is over. An old guide up in the Adirondacks told me to
+do that, and it's always a good thing for campers to do."
+
+The thongs bound the saplings into a frame, and Louise secured them to a
+knot that was newly learned, and the pride of her life.
+
+"That can't come out," she said, surveying it with pleasure, for
+learning to do it had earned her a much-valued bead.
+
+For the covering of the stretcher Adelaide produced an old gray shawl
+from her knapsack.
+
+"Father made me bring it," she explained rather shamefacedly.
+
+"Just the thing!" said Mrs. Bryan heartily.
+
+They wrapped it round the frame, and it went around three times, being
+large, so that a couple of pins held it fast. Then they lifted the
+gratified Florence on to it and started off down the road again. They
+had cleared up the fragments of their luncheon first, and buried neatly
+all the scraps and debris, so that there were no excursiony-looking
+boxes and crusts littering their resting-place.
+
+The girls took turns carrying the stretcher, and as there were fourteen
+of them, counting Mrs. Bryan, many hands made light work. As Louise had
+prophesied would happen, after a little while Florence became restless.
+The other Blue Birds were having lovely times frolicking all over the
+road, chasing butterflies and picking flowers and playing with the dog.
+Florence found it rather stupid to sit in solitary grandeur on a
+stretcher, and listen to what Winona and Adelaide, before her, and Marie
+and Edith, behind her, were saying about their own affairs. So at the
+first stop to change bearers she wanted to get down. But Mrs. Bryan was
+firm.
+
+"No, indeed," she said, "the first thing Blue Birds must learn is to
+obey orders and keep promises. You promised to stay up there till
+evening, Florence, and you must do it."
+
+Florence pouted, but she stayed. She really had lost quite a little
+blood in her adventure with her sister's penknife, and, though Mrs.
+Bryan did not tell her so, the walk might have been too much for her.
+She wriggled and yawned, and once sat up straight, till her bearers
+requested her to lie still. But presently she had a companion in misery.
+
+It was nearly the end of the journey, and the farmhouse where the girls
+planned to stay the night was in sight. Winona, strolling on ahead, saw
+a small gray kitten prowling along the side of the road. It was a most
+unhappy kitten; it looked as if it hadn't had a square meal since it
+could remember, and there was an ugly-looking place on its side as if
+something had worried it. It limped a little, too, poor little cat, and
+altogether a more forlorn animal would have been hard to find. But
+Winona pounced on it.
+
+"Oh, you poor little cat!" she cried. "Look, Helen, some horrid dog has
+hurt it."
+
+"Oh, don't pick it up!" said Marie. "It may have something awful."
+
+"Smallpox, maybe?" inquired Winona sarcastically. "Nonsense, Marie, the
+poor little thing's been worried by a dog, and it hasn't had enough to
+eat, that's all. I'm going to adopt it."
+
+And in spite of Marie's protests she picked it up and wrapped it in her
+handkerchief, and carried it back to Florence, who was wriggling on her
+stretcher, and wishing that she hadn't demanded that evidence of
+invalidism.
+
+"Here, Florence," said Winona, "hold this kitty till we get to the
+farmhouse."
+
+"Oh, a kitty! Poor little thing!" cried Florence, adopting the cat on
+the spot, and letting it cuddle down by her, which it was willing enough
+to do, for it seemed to be as tired as it was hungry.
+
+"Are you sure----" began Marie again.
+
+Marie's father was a professor in the high-school, and as a result she
+knew about more kinds of germs than the rest had ever heard of.
+
+"Mother lets us bring in hurt animals, always, and look after them,"
+said Winona. "Germs can't get you if you're careful. We can wash our
+hands in disinfectant as soon as we get to the farmhouse. I have some in
+my first-aid kit."
+
+"And what are you going to do with the cat?" asked Louise, coming up to
+the other side of the stretcher and surveying the much-discussed animal
+without great affection.
+
+"Keep it, if Mrs. Bryan doesn't mind, as it doesn't belong to anyone,"
+said Winona coolly. "It ought to make a good camp mascot."
+
+Louise eyed the kitten again--they were nearly at the farmhouse by this
+time.
+
+"It isn't exactly my idea of a mascot," she said candidly. "What about
+Puppums? I thought he was elected to the position."
+
+"Well, then, the kitty can be the under-mascot," said Winona
+undauntedly. "Anyway, when I get through nursing her she'll be a
+perfectly good cat--see if she isn't!"
+
+"I doubt it!" said Louise and Marie together, as if they had been
+practising a duet.
+
+"Wait!" said Winona as they mounted the steps.
+
+There were plenty of rooms, for the farm people took boarders all
+August; but even so, there were not enough for nearly twenty people.
+However, Mrs. Norris, the farmer's wife, had been prepared beforehand
+for the descent, and she had extra cots made up and ready in all the
+rooms, and unlimited hot water for baths.
+
+Winona did not come in when the others did. She sat down on the porch
+floor, pulled out her first-aid kit for the second time that day, sent
+Florence in for a basin of warm water, and set about doctoring the
+kitten. She sponged off the torn place in its side, and the little hurt
+in one of its hind legs that had made it limp. This last was only a
+scratch, but it had stiffened. She rubbed salve in the hurt places. Then
+she bandaged the cat's leg very successfully. But when it came to tying
+up the side--for the cat would certainly have licked the salve off if
+she could--it wasn't so simple. There wasn't anything to fasten the
+bandage to. Finally she wound it round and round the meek little animal,
+and sewed it up on top. The cat looked as if it had on a large and
+fashionable sash, but it did not object. Then Winona gave it some
+evaporated cream out of a can in her knapsack, watched it while it ate,
+which it did till the belt tightened dangerously, and took it into the
+house with her. Florence took the basin back to the place she had gotten
+it from.
+
+"Does this kitten belong to you?" Winona asked the landlady, who was
+hurrying about a long table in the dining-room, putting dishes full of
+steaming things on the table.
+
+"Bless my soul, no!" she answered, stopping with a pan of baked beans
+poised in mid-air. "Why, I do believe that's the kitten that belonged to
+Medarys, down the road, and they moved away last week. Well, poor little
+thing, the dogs must have got after it. It's a mercy it got away at
+all."
+
+"People who abandon cats that way ought to be left out in a wilderness
+themselves, without anything to eat," said Mrs. Bryan warmly, as she
+came up behind them.
+
+"Ain't it so?" said the landlady. "I'll get somebody to drown the poor
+little thing to-morrow."
+
+"Oh, no! I'll keep it if it's nobody's," Winona said eagerly. "You don't
+mind, do you, Mrs. Bryan?"
+
+"If it hasn't mange," said Mrs. Bryan prudently.
+
+"It hasn't," Winona and Florence assured her together. "It's only hurt."
+
+"Very well," said the Guardian; and the Merriams ran off to wash their
+hands in disinfectant and straighten themselves generally for supper.
+They left the cat in their room.
+
+That certainly was a supper. When you have walked all day in the open
+you feel as if you could eat a house, if nothing tenderer offers itself.
+Even Nataly Lee, who was genuinely tired to death, was hungry. The girls
+stood behind their chairs for a moment, saying one of the Camp Fire
+graces softly in unison. Then they sat down, and ate as if lunch had
+been only a dream.
+
+After supper the hostess showed them her long parlor and invited them to
+make themselves at home. But they were all too sleepy to frolic. Louise,
+who was untirable, did indeed unsling her banjo from across her shoulder
+and try to sing, but she interrupted herself in the middle of "Nellie
+Gray" with a gigantic yawn. The Blue Birds were all asleep in their
+chairs, and had to be marched off to bed half conscious. It was only
+eight, but the elder sisters and cousins who took them up liked the
+looks of the white cots very much, and--well, it seemed so useless to go
+downstairs again, some way. So Winona and Adelaide and Louise and
+Elizabeth, and Marie, who was looking after such Blue Birds as had not
+sisters along, simply went to bed, too, when they had attended to their
+charges. The other girls sat sleepily downstairs for awhile, waiting for
+their friends to come back. And then they, too, came upstairs and went
+to bed--and by eight-thirty there was nothing to be heard of seven Blue
+Birds, thirteen Camp Fire Girls, a dog and a cat, but twenty even
+breathings from as many cots, an occasional snore from the back porch
+where Puppums was tied, and a loud, ecstatic purr from the corner of
+Winona's cot, where the Medary's late kitten was privately spending the
+night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ELEVEN
+
+
+Next morning by eight Camp Karonya was up and eating a large breakfast.
+The girls sang a cheer to Mrs. Norris when they were done, and formed
+for their march again. Most of them had brought enough food for two
+lunches, but Mrs. Norris could not be brought to think so, and insisted
+on piling up provisions enough for a regiment. They compromised, on
+several slices of roast lamb apiece, and enough bread and butter to go
+around and leave some over.
+
+Winona slipped into the little general store near the farmhouse, and
+bargained for some more cans of evaporated milk for her under-mascot,
+the kitten. It was travelling in Florence's knapsack to-day, and
+Florence's things were distributed between Winona and two of the other
+girls. It proved to be a very frisky kitten by nature, now that its
+fears of being hungry and homeless were gone. Winona had to sew its
+bandage on again at noon.
+
+"I don't know how it is," she said perplexedly. "It's certainly a fatter
+kitten, and yet its bandage is too big!"
+
+"Poor thing! Take it off altogether!" advised Helen. "Pussy will get
+well just as soon without it."
+
+So they ripped off the bandage, and the kitten seemed very grateful. Its
+hurt looked like scarcely more than a scratch now.
+
+"If she's going to be a camp mascot she ought to have a name," suggested
+Florence.
+
+Winona laughed. "I'm going to call her Hike," she said. "She was hiking
+when we met her, poor pussy, and so were we."
+
+So Hike the Camp Cat she became. And--to anticipate--when she had been
+living on evaporated cream and other luxuries a few days, she turned
+into a plump and handsome Maltese kitten with charming manners.
+
+The girls arrived at their camping-place at about five that day. The big
+limousine that belonged to Helen's father, and the big electric delivery
+wagon which Louise's father had contributed, stood waiting for them on
+the road nearest the clearing in the woods, where they were to make
+their camp.
+
+"Do you mean to say we're going to eat all that?" asked Edith Hillis
+helplessly, as she caught sight of the piled provisions in the delivery
+wagon.
+
+"Well, we shan't have to eat the tents and cots in the limousine," said
+Winona. "At least, I hope not. But I think we will manage the rest. I
+was on the committee that figured out how much we would want for three
+weeks of camping, and I'm sure there's no more here than we ordered."
+
+"I have the list," said Helen.
+
+"Then check the things off, dear, as the men lift them out," said Mrs.
+Bryan.
+
+So Helen read from her list as the barrels and boxes were carried away,
+and the girls listened in awe, for this is what she read:
+
+ One and a half barrels of flour.
+ Fifteen pounds shortening.
+
+("It's a special kind," explained Helen. "You can use it for cakes, as
+well as frying and other things.")
+
+ Fifteen pounds rice.
+ Fifteen pounds beans.
+ Five pounds baking-powder.
+ Three sides of bacon.
+ Sixty-five pounds of sugar.
+ Ten pounds of cocoa.
+ Case and a half of evaporated milk.
+
+("And the extra cans Winnie bought to support the cat on," interrupted
+Louise. "We can steal those if the worst comes to the worst.")
+
+ Two barrels of potatoes.
+ Six jugs of molasses.
+ One dozen cans each peas and corn.
+ Eight pounds of salt pork.
+
+"All present and accounted for," said Mrs. Bryan, as the men who had
+been loaned with the wagon rolled the barrels and carried the boxes off
+to a little tarred shack near the spring. "We'll have to buy butter and
+eggs and fresh fruit and vegetables as we go along. They'll keep in the
+spring, for it seems to be ice-cold."
+
+"And did just things to eat for us cost all that beautiful eighty
+dollars we made at all the cake-sales?" asked Florence indignantly. She
+had helped make fudge for those sales, and she felt as if they had been
+her personal venture.
+
+"It came to about fifty-five dollars, wholesale," said Helen, looking
+down at the itemized list she held. "We figured out that the other
+thirty dollars would just about keep us in the green things and dairy
+things we had to have. The corn and peas are in case we're weatherbound
+and can't get fresh vegetables."
+
+"And how long did you say we could live on that perfect mountain of
+food?" inquired Nataly Lee's mournful voice from where she was lying on
+the grass with her knapsack under her head.
+
+"Three weeks, no more," said Helen briskly. "If we want to stay we shall
+have to earn more money."
+
+"I think we could," mused Winona thoughtfully.
+
+"But what about the tents?" asked Elizabeth curiously. She was a quiet,
+competent little thing. "I don't see where the money for them comes in."
+
+"That's the most splendid thing of all," smiled Mrs. Bryan, as the men
+began to slide ten dusty-looking tents out of the wagon. "Mr. Gedney,
+the Scoutmaster, called up Mr. Bryan just before I was going shopping
+for tents, and told me about these in case we wanted them. They belonged
+to the National Guard, and the State had condemned them, because they
+were shabbier than some politician or other liked them to be. So the
+Scouts were offered them at a ridiculously low price, if they would only
+take enough. Rather than let such a bargain go by the Scouts took them
+all, though there were more than they needed. And Mr. Gedney says we may
+use these, and needn't pay for them till next winter."
+
+The girls agreed that it certainly was luck, and followed on down to see
+the tents put up--ten little brown tents in a row, with two cots and a
+box-dressing-table in each.
+
+"You'll have to stow your clothes underneath the cots," explained Mrs.
+Bryan. "And I expect each of you to learn how to put up and take down
+her own tent."
+
+"Beads!" exploded Louise.
+
+"Exactly," said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"We only have extra under-things," said Marie, "and one dress-up frock
+apiece, besides our camp clothes and ceremonial dresses. We don't need
+much room."
+
+By the time the tents had been assigned and the cots made up, supper was
+ready, and Mrs. Bryan summoned them to it by blowing a clear little
+whistle she wore. The girls had expected to turn to and get their own
+supper. So they were very much surprised to find Mrs. Bryan's black maid
+Grace, and Mrs. Hunter's Jenny smiling behind the long trestles in the
+mess-tent, setting steaming dishes up and down the table.
+
+"This is a special treat," explained Mrs. Bryan. "We're all tired
+to-night, and we hadn't time to do any cooking ourselves anyway, so I
+let Grace and Jenny do it. But to-morrow morning camp life begins. We'll
+draw lots for assignment to duties, after supper."
+
+The girls stood up behind their seats for a moment and said grace, then
+sat down, and ate as if they had never seen food before. It was a very
+civilized meal, soup, roasts and dessert, all sent over by the mothers
+in the tonneau of the Bryan car, as the cooks and the provisions had
+been. It tasted good, but everyone looked forward with joy to real camp
+cooking.
+
+"Wait till you see how I can broil venison steak," threatened Louise, as
+she ate a very large helping of despised roast beef from a mere
+unromantic cow.
+
+"Where'll you get the venison? Pick it?" called back Winona from the
+other side of the table.
+
+"No, she's going to grow it!" said Elizabeth.
+
+"Nothing of the kind!" said Louise cheerfully. "All you do is to go out
+with a gun, and stalk till you find a magnificent moose feeding
+peacefully among the underbrush."
+
+"Suppose there isn't any underbrush?" inquired Edith's languid voice
+from the table's other end.
+
+"Then you carry some out with you and scatter it around for the deer to
+eat out of," said Louise undisturbed. "Don't interrupt the lesson on
+natural history, please. You stand, moved by the beauty of the sight,
+for a long time. Then, recalled to yourself by the thought of the seven
+starving little Blue Birds at home, you draw your revolver to your
+shoulder and are about to fire."
+
+"Sure it's a revolver?" asked Winona skeptically.
+
+"Well, your pistol, then--they're all the same thing. Just then the
+moose lifts his head and looks at you mournfully out of his large,
+deer-like eyes. You almost relent. But you nerve yourself and fire--one
+crashing shot between the eyes. Then you throw the moose across your
+shoulders and carry it home--and there's your venison steak."
+
+"It sounds more like a venison mis-steak to me," said Winona. "I suppose
+you're going hunting to-morrow morning, Louise?"
+
+But Louise had just arrived at her dessert.
+
+"I scorn to reply," was all she said as she retired into her ice-cream.
+
+After supper the girls lay about on the grass, while Winona and Marie
+and Mrs. Bryan put slips of paper in a double boiler. The girls drew
+lots to decide which should be camp cooks and camp orderlies for the
+first week: four for the cooking, four for buying provisions and
+policing the camp, and four for the dish-washing and preparing
+vegetables.
+
+"That leaves one girl over," spoke up Adelaide, sitting up under a tree.
+
+Mrs. Bryan shook her head. "No," she said, "it doesn't, because somebody
+has to look after the Blue Birds every week. I'm going to appoint Marie
+Hunter, because she hasn't any small sisters, and it won't be such an
+old story to her to look after little girls. So there are just enough
+people to go around. Rise up and draw lots out of the boiler, girls!"
+
+"I'd rather wash every dish in camp than chaperon the infants!" said
+Louise aside; and drew a slip marked "Dish-Washing" on the spot. "If I
+got all my wishes as quickly as that, how nice it would be!" she sighed,
+and lay down with her arm around little Bessie. Louise had not a passion
+for washing dishes.
+
+Then Adelaide drew a cooking slip. So did Winona and Elizabeth and
+Lilian Brown, one of the girls who had joined later. Anna Morris,
+Dorothy Gray and Edith Hillis drew the other dish-washing slips and
+Helen Bryan, Nataly Lee, Gladys Williams and the other Brown sister,
+Gertrude, were assigned the police and provision duty. At the end of the
+week everybody was to shift to something else.
+
+"It seems to me the camp orderlies have the best of it," said Helen,
+yawning. "What do we do, Nannie?"
+
+"You see that everyone remembers to make up her bed in the morning, you
+sweep out the camp, carry water from the spring. You have to see, too,
+that the camp is kept in fruit and vegetables--in other words, walk to a
+farmhouse about a mile away every other day to buy provisions. We
+mustn't break into our canned goods except in an emergency. You are
+really the people who are responsible for the camp's running smoothly."
+
+"Carry water!" said Nataly with a gasp. "Won't we get our clothes wet?"
+
+"Wear a waterproof, love," said Louise. "I'm going to ask to have Nataly
+assigned to bring me all my water for dishes," she whispered to Winona,
+beside her. "I'm sure it will have an elevating effect on her
+character."
+
+"Oh, don't, Louise!" whispered Winona back. "Suppose you'd spent your
+young life on a sofa, reading 'Beautiful Coralie's Doom,' you wouldn't
+feel able to carry water either!"
+
+"Then I wouldn't go Camp Firing," said Louise conclusively.
+
+Next morning the camp cooks were up at six. Breakfast was to be at
+seven-thirty, but the girls were so afraid of being too late that they
+devised an elaborate system of strings, whereby the earliest awake was
+to jerk her strings, and wake all the others. Winona, Lilian Brown and
+Elizabeth were on the ground by a quarter past six, but, although they
+had all jerked their strings faithfully, no Adelaide appeared. Finally
+they descended in a body on the tent which held Adelaide and her little
+sister Frances.
+
+"Well, would you look at that!" said Winona in an indignant whisper.
+
+The other girls cautiously lifted the tent-flap and stuck in their
+heads.
+
+Frances slept placidly on one cot, her little freckled face half buried
+in the pillow. On the other, quite as fast asleep, lay Adelaide--and
+there was not a string tied to her anywhere!
+
+"Well, if that isn't the _limit_!" said Elizabeth and Lilian in one
+breath, and Elizabeth reached down to the pail of water which the
+orderlies had faithfully set outside each tent door before they went to
+bed. She tilted the cold water on her handkerchief, and dropped it wetly
+on Adelaide's face. It wasn't a wet sponge, but it did nearly as well,
+as an awakener.
+
+"What--where--nonsense, Lonny, _don't_!" said Adelaide, waving her arms,
+and finally sitting up.
+
+"It isn't Lonny; it's us," said Winona coldly, "and why on earth did you
+untie the strings, when all the rest of us had them to get up by?"
+
+Adelaide looked ashamed.
+
+"I couldn't sleep all tied up that way," she confessed. "I felt like a
+spider or a fly or something. So I tied them on the cot. But I thought
+when you pulled them the cot would jar, and wake me!"
+
+"It might have," said Winona, "if you'd tied them on your own cot!"
+
+Adelaide, looking in the direction of Winona's pointing finger, found
+out why she had not wakened. In her sleepiness the night before, she had
+fastened her strings to a large twig that grew out of the ground beside
+her bed!
+
+"I ought to be drowned!" said Adelaide ashamedly. "But if you girls will
+wait till I get bathed and dressed, I'll wash all the dishes to pay for
+this!"
+
+"You won't do any such thing," said the others.
+
+So they sat sociably outside Adelaide's tent till she was dressed and
+joined them. Then they started out valiantly for the cooking-place.
+
+When they reached it a very cheering surprise awaited them, for there
+was Mrs. Bryan seated on a pile of kindling, with a box of matches on
+her lap and a pleasant smile on her face.
+
+"I thought you mightn't know just where to begin," she said, "so I
+thought I'd come help, this first morning. The first thing is the fire.
+Do any of you know how to make a cooking-fire in the open?"
+
+Adelaide didn't, neither did Elizabeth. Winona thought she knew, but
+wasn't sure, and Lilian had once seen it done, but had forgotten how.
+
+"I'd better show you all, then," said their Guardian briskly. "The first
+thing you do is to get together two big green logs that won't burn. Roll
+them together so they form a big V."
+
+"Logs that _won't_ burn! What a queer beginning!" said Winona, whose
+idea of building a fire was heaping a bonfire up with sticks till it
+flamed high.
+
+But they tugged and pushed till they had a couple of newly-felled trees
+at angles to each other, in a hollow place protected from the wind.
+
+"Now, you build your fire inside that V," explained Mrs. Bryan, "and,
+you see, you can put the cocoa-pan up at the beginning of the crotch,
+and the portable oven and the frying-pan down where the division is
+wider."
+
+"Simple as anything," said Winona, "once you know how."
+
+And they scattered to find wood. The sticks lay about in plenty--later
+they were hard to find without going into the woods which encircled the
+camping-place--and Mrs. Bryan showed them how to commence a fire by
+laying small pieces of brushwood criss-cross at the bottom, and piling
+on heavier wood till all was aflame. Presently they had a solid, roaring
+fire. They sat back and let it burn down to coals. By then they had the
+flour-barrel opened, the bacon sliced, and the water ready to put on the
+cocoa. Winona made biscuits, it seemed to her, in mountains, while
+Elizabeth got out the butter and knives and forks, and set the table.
+
+"You can't cut out biscuits enough for twenty people with a cutter,
+child!" advised Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Just take the butcher-knife, and cut the whole mass of dough into
+squares, after you've laid it on the floured floors of the oven!"
+
+But the bacon had to be sliced, and this took longer; and Adelaide's
+job, looking after the cocoa, proved nerve-racking, because cocoa will
+burn at the slightest chance. But everything came right, and by the time
+the other girls were astir their breakfast was awaiting them, piping
+hot; crispy bacon, hot biscuits and butter, with jam they had made
+themselves, and cocoa.
+
+"Jam's an extra," Mrs. Bryan warned them. "It happened to be left over
+from the sales, so I brought it. You'll have to go to work and make some
+more out of berries you pick."
+
+After breakfast, Marie, the keeper of the Blue Birds' Nest, said that
+she was going to put two Blue Birds to work at each of the camp shifts,
+and leave the odd one to be Mrs. Bryan's personal Bird and attendant.
+Mrs. Bryan was to choose her attendant, who was to run her errands for
+her and help her generally. But she refused to do it.
+
+"I like them all so much," she said, "that I can't pick out a special
+one."
+
+So they counted out for the honor, and the choice for the first week
+fell on little Lucy Hillis. The others, as far as it could be done,
+worked with their own sisters.
+
+After breakfast, while the dish-washing brigade wrestled with the cups,
+plates and spoons that twenty people leave behind them, the cooks held a
+council. They decided that it would be easier if two girls got each meal
+in turn: Winona and Adelaide the dinner, Elizabeth and Lilian the
+supper, and so on. The camp police divided off the same way, and so,
+eventually, did the dish-washers. Helen, who had the Camp funds in her
+charge, talked with the girls who were going to market that day. There
+was twenty-five dollars for three weeks of camp, she explained, and she
+thought that the safest way would be to allow so much a day, which gave
+them about a dollar twenty a day to spend. They thought so, too, and
+presently Nataly and Helen went off in search of the farmhouse which had
+promised to keep them supplied with perishable provisions.
+
+Winona and Adelaide, freed of any further duties till supper-time, went
+off exploring. It was a perfect day, bright and breezy and not too hot.
+Winona half-danced along, singing under her breath. The sun glinted on
+her pretty hair and lighted up her blue eyes. Adelaide looked at her
+wistfully.
+
+"I do wish I were you!" she said abruptly.
+
+Winona looked at her in surprise. "Wish you were me? Why, on earth?" she
+asked. "Isn't it just as nice to be you?"
+
+Adelaide shook her head. "I don't like it much!" she said rebelliously.
+
+"Why not?" asked Winona.
+
+Adelaide shrugged her shoulders.
+
+Winona slipped her arm about her, and pulled her down on a comfortable
+looking log.
+
+"Let's sit down and talk about it," said she cheerfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWELVE
+
+
+Adelaide turned and faced Winona.
+
+"Well, go ahead and talk," she said. "It won't make things any less so."
+Then suddenly she burst out, "You don't know what it's like. You don't
+know how it feels never to have anything extra. If I go to a party I'm
+likely to be the worst-dressed girl there. If I go to school and the
+girls treat I have to say I don't want any because I can't pay back. I
+can't invite anybody to meals, because I can't give them extra nice
+things to eat. And, anyway, the flat's horrid--even the furniture and
+the carpets are shabby. Lonny and Frances are good, and help, but
+everything drags. And I just hate _everything_."
+
+"Hate everything!" said Winona soothingly. "Why, of course you
+don't--you just think you do!"
+
+"It's all right for you to talk," murmured Adelaide miserably.
+"Everybody's crazy over you--of course they would be. I am myself, and I
+don't like people generally. You have something about you that would
+make people like you even if you weren't sweet to them. Everything turns
+out right for you. I don't see what you wanted to join the Camp Fire
+for--its rules stuck out all over you before you ever joined."
+
+"Oh, _don't_!" said Winona, blushing. "What rules do you mean? I never
+kept any rules."
+
+"You know the Law of the Camp Fire: 'Seek beauty; give service; pursue
+knowledge; be trustworthy; hold on to health; glorify work; be happy.'"
+
+"I don't do all those things," said Winona. "Wish I did! But anybody
+seeks beauty, and as long as you have to work the only way to get fun
+out of it is to glorify it. As for the rest, I think they're only rules
+for getting all there is out of living. I'll tell you,
+Adelaide,"--Winona sat upright, as if a new thought had struck her--"why
+don't you see how many of the rules would apply to getting fun out of
+the things that worry you? When things go wrong at our house mother
+always says to Florence and Tommy and me, 'Can't you turn it into a
+game?'"
+
+"Turn shabby furniture and stews and no money into a game?" said
+Adelaide, as if she thought Winona was crazy.
+
+"Yes!" said Winona undauntedly. "To begin with the stews--well,
+Adelaide, you don't know one single thing about cooking. There's any
+amount of things beside stew that you can make out of stewing meat. And
+don't you remember the cold things we got out of Mrs. Bryan's
+refrigerator? That was a good supper, wasn't it? If you know how,
+cooking's fun, or nearly anything."
+
+"If we have more cooking-classes I suppose I could learn how to do more
+things with the meats and vegetables, or maybe market better," said
+Adelaide. "But that would only help that one thing."
+
+"You can figure out keeping house just like anything else," said Winona.
+"All you have to do's to _think_!"
+
+Adelaide laughed. "Do you suppose I could think the furniture new?" she
+asked. "You ought to see it--horrid old brown rep, and a carpet that's
+worn into white spots!"
+
+But though she laughed, she looked to Winona for the answer with real
+eagerness.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you what I'd do," suggested Winona thoughtfully--"I
+don't suppose you would, you're such a haughty Lady Imogene--I'd make a
+furnishing bee of it, and have a party, and invite all the girls to help
+you do the flat over. Your father and Lonny would help, wouldn't they?"
+
+"Oh, I guess so," she said.
+
+"Well, then, the girls would help you cover the furniture and stain the
+floor, and even paper, maybe. And if your father or Lonny could paint
+the wood-work--or would the landlord?"
+
+"No," said Adelaide, "he won't make repairs. It's not in the lease. And
+where would I get money for the paint and paper and stain and covers?"
+
+"Earn it!" said Winona. "There are lots of ways. That jam you made for
+the sales--you could get heaps of orders for that, I know. Oh, I should
+think it would be lovely to do. I tell you, Adelaide, you may think I'm
+crazy--but everything's fun, if you'll only remember that it _is_ fun!"
+
+"I wonder!" said Adelaide. "But I believe I could make money with jams
+and preserves if I worked hard at it."
+
+"We've all got to earn some more money soon if we want to stay in the
+camp longer than three weeks," said Winona, "unless Louise can feed us
+all on the venison steaks she was talking about last night. If you can
+make money for the camp you can for yourself!"
+
+Adelaide turned impulsively--they had risen and were going on through
+the wood--and threw her arms around Winona.
+
+"You certainly are the most comforting girl!" she said. "I don't wonder
+everybody does what you want them to."
+
+Winona didn't know what to say. It's pleasant to have people say such
+things to you, but it is embarrassing, too.
+
+"People like you just as much as they do me," said she. "Come on, let's
+go see if we can find the river we've heard so much about."
+
+They caught hands and ran on through the trees.
+
+The river was not hard to find. Above them it was a broad stream, but
+just here it wasn't very wide, just a pretty, clear, clean-looking
+stream, with green banks and some sort of a dock to be seen a little way
+beyond them. On the dock, when they reached it, was seen to be an
+elderly native with a pipe, and beside him was moored a rowboat which
+looked as if it could be rowed. He looked up from his fishing as the
+girls appeared.
+
+"Morning," he said sociably, "you little girls going down to the
+village?"
+
+"Good-morning," said Winona. "No, we hadn't thought of it. We might,
+though. Is there anything we could get for you if we went?"
+
+"Well," said the old man, jerking in his line with a good-sized fish on
+it, "ye-es, there is. I want an ad put in the paper. I guess I could
+trust you with a quarter to do it with."
+
+"I guess you could," said Winona, smiling. "Will this afternoon do? I
+don't believe we'd have time now to get there and back before
+dinner-time." She looked at her wrist-watch. "No, we won't," she said.
+"It's eleven now."
+
+"Well, this afternoon would do," he said.
+
+So, while the girls looked at the rowboat wishfully, and wondered if
+they couldn't get enough fish for supper if they had some tackle, the
+old man adjusted his spectacles, pulled an old envelope out of his
+pocket, and wrote on it laboriously.
+
+"Do you mind if I read it?" asked Winona, when he was done and had
+handed it to her.
+
+"Seein's that's what it's for, I dunno's I do," he grunted, grinning
+pleasantly. Winona and Adelaide took each a corner, and read as follows:
+
+ For sale, one rowboat in good condition, with oars. No reasonable
+ offer refused. Apply to John Sloane, R. F. D. 3, village.
+
+They looked at each other, then at the boat. Then both girls exclaimed
+with one impulse, "Is it this boat?"
+
+"This very rowboat," said Mr. Sloane, eying it with affection. "I don't
+use it no more. I've got a motor-boat, and them Boy Scouts up the river
+has got a fine young flock of canoes, so they ain't likely to want to
+hire it. Anyway, she ain't so young as she was. Good boat, though!"
+
+"And what would you call a reasonable offer?" inquired Winona. "The
+reason I want to know is that I have just six dollars, and if I could
+buy a rowboat that way I would."
+
+"Six dollars, hey?" said Mr. Sloane slowly. "That ain't much for a good
+boat."
+
+"It's all I have to spend on rowboats," said Winona placidly.
+
+"We-el," decided Mr. Sloane, "guess I might's well let you have it!"
+
+And he proceeded to make out a receipt on the spot, on the other half of
+the envelope he had used for the advertisement.
+
+"It certainly pays to advertise!" he remarked, as he turned his
+attention again to his fishing-line.
+
+Adelaide and Winona jumped into their boat with delight, and rowed
+downstream for half a mile. There they were stopped by the beautiful
+sight of a lot of huckleberry bushes, full of fruit, along the edge of
+the stream. They both filled their hats, and when these would hold no
+more they pinned up Winona's skirt in front and filled that--Winona
+sitting very still thereafter in order not to smash any berries. Then
+Adelaide rowed back and tied their newly-acquired property to the dock,
+the use of which was thrown in, and went back to camp with berries
+enough for dinner. Just before they came within hearing of the others,
+Adelaide whispered:
+
+"Winona, I'm going to try to--to feel that way about things."
+
+Winona squeezed her hand, but there was no time to say anything more,
+for a horde of small pirates descended on them and carried away the
+berries.
+
+After dinner the girls lay on the grass and made plans, more or less
+wild, for getting money to prolong their vacation.
+
+"We can't have a cake-sale," said Marie practically, "because the
+farmers' wives in the village make all their own baked stuff, and the
+people at the summer-resort are mostly boarders."
+
+"Oh, please don't let's have any more cake-sales, whether they're
+profitable or not," said Louise pathetically. "I sold eats for those
+sales till I used to go to sleep at night and dream I was a wedding-cake
+myself."
+
+"All right, then," soothed Helen, "you shan't ever have such dreadful
+dreams again, you poor little thing!"
+
+"Well, what shall we do, then?" asked Edith Hillis pulling her yellow
+curls over her shoulder and examining them as if she had never seen them
+before.
+
+"When you want money," remarked Mrs. Bryan, "you have to sell something,
+either your services, or your manufactures, or your talents."
+
+"In other words," said Winona, "work for people, or make things to sell
+them, or have an entertainment."
+
+"Precisely," said the Guardian.
+
+"Then let's start at the beginning," offered Winona, "and everybody try
+to think what she can do best in the way of work, and whether anybody'd
+want them to!"
+
+"One thing," reminded Marie, "we can't live by taking in each other's
+washing, so to speak. We'll have to scheme to get some of their
+hard-earned butter-and-egg money away from the farmers' wives, or else
+prey on the summer-resorters."
+
+"We expect to give it right back to them for butter and eggs," said
+Adelaide. "Whatever we do we might as well take it out in trade!"
+
+After that nobody seemed to have any more ideas. Everyone sat silently
+and thought very hard; till Louise jumped up with a yelp of impatience
+that woke Puppums from his after-dinner nap, and made even Hike the Camp
+Cat open one green eye.
+
+"Don't let's waste this gorgeous day thinking!" she said. "My head isn't
+used to it, and it hurts. Come on, anybody that wants to--I'm going to
+walk down to the village to buy something, I don't care what. Who'll
+come?"
+
+Winona, Helen and Nataly dropped into step beside Louise, and the four
+marched off singing "In the Land of the Sky-Blue Water," which they were
+trying to learn.
+
+"That song really sounds better to Opeechee's ceremonial drum than
+anything else," remarked Louise.
+
+"Real Indian music always sounds better if you pound something while you
+sing it, even if it's only a dish-pan," said Winona.
+
+"Please don't mention dish-pans," begged Louise, "they're a tender
+point. I just parted from mine half an hour ago."
+
+"All right," said Winona good-humoredly, "I have something else
+interesting to tell you. I bought a rowboat to-day."
+
+"Oh, good!" cried Helen. "Marie's canoe and mine will be up in a day or
+so, but a canoe wiggles so when you try to fish from it. Now we can all
+go fishing. Elizabeth brought tackle, but we thought we couldn't do much
+good, fishing from the bank."
+
+"And the Blue Birds can go out in it till they learn more about canoes,
+too," said Winona. "I'm going exploring myself in it as soon as I can.
+What are you really going to the village for, Louise--or don't you
+know?"
+
+"Benzine for my burnt-wood outfit," said Louise. "I had some thinks, and
+that was one. Little Louise is going to make some nice burnt-leather
+things for the neighborhood. Pillows and table-covers, and heaps of
+things for the farmers' wives to buy. Lessons in the art if they want
+them. I brought my outfit, and some skins, and colors."
+
+"I thought I'd model some vases and pots and bowls, and fire them," said
+Helen. "They might sell, too. Have you thought of anything, Winona?"
+
+"Not a blessed thing, for myself," said Winona. "You know, I'm not
+particularly clever about doing things like that, except making baskets,
+and Florence does those better than I do. But I have thought of one
+thing--how to sell our wares after they are made."
+
+"That's quite a useful thing to know," said Louise. "About the most
+useful thing there is, in fact. Well, how?"
+
+"We'll have to peddle them," said Winona calmly. "The farmers' wives
+won't come out here to buy unless we advertise a lot, and we can't
+afford that. The thing for us to do is to get some sort of a thing to
+carry the goods in, and make it look awfully arts-an-craftsy, and pull
+it round and sell things at the houses."
+
+"A soap-box on wheels is what I _think_ you're hinting at," said Louise,
+"but I hope not."
+
+"Are you really in earnest?" asked Nataly, who had taken no share in the
+talk so far.
+
+"Why not?" asked Winona. "It's no worse than taking a horse and cart
+down through the Italian quarter and selling rummage things to the women
+there; and that's what the Ladies' Aid at our church did last winter."
+
+"It's different," insisted Nataly, and nothing could shake her in her
+ideas. So Louise poked Winona, as a hint not to argue any more. But when
+Nataly went into the little general store to buy some picture post-cards
+Louise whispered to the other girls, "I have a glorious improvement on
+your soap-box plan, Winnie. If you girls will help me put it through
+I'll tell you all about it."
+
+"I'd like to hear about it first," said Helen doubtfully; for Louise's
+plans were always original, but not always safe and sane. Before Louise
+could answer Nataly was back again, and Louise began to tell her the
+story of the reduced English gentlewoman who had to sell shrimps for a
+living, by calling them up and down the streets. "And she was such a
+perfect lady," finished Louise, "that whenever she called out 'Shrimps
+for sale!' she'd add under her breath, 'I hope to goodness nobody hears
+me!'"
+
+"And did they?" Nataly asked innocently, while Winona tried to keep her
+face straight.
+
+"No, they didn't," said Louise sadly, "so she never sold any shrimps at
+all. And so she died of starvation."
+
+But Nataly, instead of grasping the moral, said only, "Well, why didn't
+she eat the shrimps, then?"
+
+At which Louise grunted disgustedly and went in to buy herself the
+benzine.
+
+After that day there was always a feeling in the village near Camp
+Sunrise that every Camp Fire Girl's first object in life was cat-rescue.
+And it was Winona who was responsible. To begin with, the day the girls
+arrived at camp she had been seen by all the interested villagers,
+walking near the head of the dusty procession, leading a small,
+sash-bandaged gray kitten by a string. Hike had meowed for air and
+exercise just as the village had been neared, and Winona had taken that
+means of giving it to him, without risking his running off. The
+villagers might have let that, by itself, pass. But when it was coupled
+with Winona's performance of this afternoon--well, you can judge for
+yourself.
+
+It was after the girls had bought everything they came for, and were on
+their way to camp. Out of a gate, across their road, bounded two small
+boys, each of whom held a wriggling black kitten.
+
+"Won't you hurt the kitty if you hold it by just one leg?" inquired
+Winona of the nearest boy.
+
+"It don't matter if we do hurt 'em--they ain't any good anyhow," he
+explained. "We're going to drown 'em in a minute."
+
+"Oh, _no_!" protested Winona.
+
+"Well, will you take 'em?" asked the other boy. "Mother says she can't
+keep any more cats."
+
+Winona took the victims on the spot, and put them into the continuous
+pocket all around the bottom of her Balkan blouse. The small boys went
+back into their yard, where they were heard announcing, "Mother! A girl
+took the kitties!" And Winona stood still with a kitten at each hip.
+
+"You'd better give them back," said Nataly, who was afraid of cats.
+
+"Oh, I couldn't!" said Winona. "It's so nice to be alive, even if you're
+a cat--and there isn't really any Cat-Heaven, you know."
+
+"Well, advertise them for sale, then," said Louise impatiently. "Good
+home and kind treatment wanted for two black kittens--salary no object."
+
+She wasn't in earnest, but Winona was.
+
+"I will!" she said. "Not for sale, but to give away. Will one of you
+take this notice to the paper, while I take the kittens to camp for the
+night?"
+
+"I'll take the kittens home!" volunteered Helen, Louise and Nataly with
+a touching oneness of feeling.
+
+Winona grinned. "Why, you very obliging people!" she said. "Please put
+them in a box with netting, then, so they can't get away. I'll go and
+advertise. I'm perfectly sure such good kittens as these will have lots
+of applications!"
+
+Louise and Helen, each with a kitten, accompanied by Nataly, kittenless,
+went slowly campward in eloquent silence, while Winona sped back to the
+office of the village paper. So the next day an advertisement appeared
+in the _Press:_
+
+ Wanted, to find homes for two black kittens, nice purrers, good
+ mousers. Can be separated. Apply Box 2, _Press_ office, or at Camp
+ Karonya, in person.
+
+"I don't care if they do laugh," said Winona when she got back, to find
+Camp Karonya howling at her in rows. "If they laugh they're more apt to
+remember, and come get the kittens. I'll put them out of the way, poor
+little things, if nobody answers in a day or two."
+
+But--whether it was that cats who were "nice purrers" were a novelty,
+whether it is true that there's a place for everything in this world if
+we could only get in touch with it--the very next day there were five
+applicants for those two black kittens. Indeed, Winona had great
+difficulty in holding onto Hike the Camp Cat, who had grown by now into
+a very presentable, if fat, Maltese kitten. People seemed to think that
+it was Winona's duty to distribute cats as long as cats held out.
+
+The only drawback was that for the rest of the time it was there the
+village with one accord used Camp Karonya as a clearing-house for its
+cats!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THIRTEEN
+
+
+A couple of days later Winona took Florence and Puppums, and went
+exploring in the rowboat. Louise and Helen were very busy making a
+tree-house, but they promised to see that Hike the Camp Cat was looked
+after and no belated advertisement answerer got him.
+
+The Merriams rowed about a mile along the river, in the direction away
+from the village, without finding anything more interesting than a
+muskrat, who disappeared when Puppums barked at him. But just a while
+after this thrilling incident they rounded a bend, and there in a red
+canoe, placidly catching fish, sat Tom!
+
+His back and that of the boy with him were turned to them, but there was
+no mistaking him, nor Billy Lee. Neither of them saw the rowboat till it
+was quite close, and Florence and Puppums howled together in greeting.
+
+"Hello, kid! H'lo, Winnie--you've frightened the fish!" was his
+brotherly greeting: while Billy, not being a relation, took off his hat
+and said politely that he was glad to see them, and how was the camp?
+
+"Oh, never mind the fish!" said Winona, when she had answered Billy with
+equal politeness. "You can fish any day, but you haven't seen your
+family since last week. How do you come to be up here so soon?"
+
+"Captain Gedney worked it somehow--I don't know how," said Tom. "Anyhow,
+we're here. Good fishing, too. See?" He held up a string of fair-sized
+fish in proof.
+
+"Where's your camp?" asked Florence, while Puppums almost had hysterics
+and had to be handed into the canoe so that he could love Tom properly.
+"Can I come see it?"
+
+"Sure you can," said Tom. "No charge for the view. It's those tents
+right over there."
+
+"You know I don't mean that," said Florence, pouting. "I mean I want to
+get out and go over."
+
+"Oh, wait a day or so, can't you, Floss?" implored Tom, who plainly
+didn't want to be detached from his fishing. "Wait and come over with
+the rest of the bunch, and we'll give you a grand welcome, fifes and
+drums and things. I tell you, though, girls, why can't you all come use
+our swimming pool? We've just finished damming off a little branch
+stream into a dandy pond--paved it and all. Started it last year. But
+you'd have to give us warning, so we wouldn't be in it."
+
+"Why, how lovely!" exclaimed Winona. "I know Mrs. Bryan will let us, and
+all of us brought our bathing-suits."
+
+"Good enough!" said Tom.
+
+"How was mother--was everything all right at home when you left?" asked
+his sister.
+
+"Oh, fine and dandy. But what do you think, Winnie, that Children's Aid
+child has come. Mother says she's glad it happened while we were out of
+the way, so she'd have a better opportunity to get him running smoothly
+without our help."
+
+"Him!" said Winona. "Do you mean they sent a boy, not a girl?"
+
+Tom laughed. "They certainly did--a darky about twelve, as black as your
+hat, and a regular Topsy."
+
+"Good gracious!" said Winona, laughing.
+
+Mrs. Merriam had written to the Children's Aid Society a little while
+before for a girl of about fourteen--black preferred--who could help
+with the dishes out of school hours. She had heard nothing about it, and
+the family had completely forgotten it till now.
+
+"When did he get there?" asked Winona.
+
+"The day before I came away," said Tom. "It was wash-day, and that
+colored washerwoman mother has opened the door. First we knew she came
+back and said: 'There's a white woman and a young colored gemman to see
+Mrs. Merriam.' So mother went out, and came back in a minute with the
+agent, an awfully nice sort of a girl, and the smallest, solemnest,
+black boy you ever saw. Mother didn't want him at first, but the
+agent-girl swore he had all the virtues, and needed a good home and
+moral training. Then she walked off and left him sitting on a chair,
+staring straight ahead. I tell you, it got sort of embarrassing after
+awhile. So I asked him his name."
+
+"What is it?" asked Winona.
+
+"He said, 'Ah was christen' Thomas!'" returned Tom, grinning. "So mother
+told him that I'd been christened Thomas, too, and asked him for his
+last name. And he said, 'Ma las' name's Clay--but hit ain' ma callin'
+name. Ma callin' name's Thomas. But yo'-all kin call me Mistah Clay if
+yo' want to!'"
+
+"Did mother want to?" asked Winona.
+
+"She nearly exploded," said Tom, "but I think they came to some sort of
+a compromise. I don't think he'll leave her time to miss us, for a week
+or so anyway!"
+
+"Well, I'm glad of that," said Winona. "Tommy, did you ever know of
+anything I could do?"
+
+"What on earth do you mean?" asked Tom, while Billy Lee, who had been
+silently fishing all this time, looked interested.
+
+"I mean something I could do that would earn money," she explained. "We
+want to stay in camp longer than we have money for, so we must earn it."
+
+"The thing you always were best at was darning my stockings," said Tom
+cheerfully, and grinned.
+
+"Oh, dear, I just knew you'd say that!" said Winona. "I can't go round
+selling darns!"
+
+Billy Lee lifted up his head from a tangle in his fishing-line as he
+answered, "I don't see why you couldn't. I mean--why couldn't you do
+mending for the Scouts? If you'd be willing to, I know we'd be glad.
+There's an awful lot of holes in my clothes."
+
+"And nobody to do them?" asked Winona, delighted.
+
+"Not a soul," answered both boys at once.
+
+"Oh, how perfectly splendid!" said Winona. "Mr. Gedney will know how
+much I ought to charge for them, won't he?"
+
+"Yes, or Mrs. Bryan had better tell you," said Tom.
+
+"Oh, can I have them now?" asked Winona.
+
+"Oh, bother!" said Tom. "Won't to-morrow do?"
+
+"I'll get 'em," said Billy Lee, and made a flying leap out of the canoe
+to shore.
+
+He was gone a few minutes, and came back with a clothes-basket full of
+garments of various kinds: also with the Scoutmaster, Captain Gedney.
+
+"Good-morning, girls!" said the Scoutmaster. "This is fine! Billy tells
+me we're going to get our mending done!"
+
+"Oh, is it really all right?" quivered Winona.
+
+"Yes, indeed, it's more than all right," answered Mr. Gedney
+enthusiastically. "I was thinking of taking a trip to the village to see
+if we could find somebody we could put at it, but this is better. Now
+you get your Guardian to put a price on the work, either by the piece or
+by the hour. I can promise you spot-cash, and a great deal of gratitude
+into the bargain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So the end of it was that Florence and Winona rowed happily back down
+the river with what looked extremely like two weeks' wash in their boat;
+also with the joyful certainty that Winona, at least, was going to be
+able to earn her share of the expenses for the extra weeks of camping.
+
+The boys promised to paddle down in a couple of days and get the mended
+clothes, and--most important--the bill for them. Billy Lee wanted to see
+his sister, anyway, he said.
+
+When Florence and Winona got back nearly every girl in camp was seated
+out in the open air, in a big circle, and nearly all of them were
+talking at once, planning the ceremonial meeting for that night. There
+was to be a ceremonial fire, a very high and beautiful one with a
+central pole--this last an innovation which Louise was introducing. And
+Winona and Marie Hunter were going to be made Fire Makers, Louise and
+several of the others were going to be Wood-gatherers, and Nataly Lee
+was going to join.
+
+When Winona joined the circle she found that a good deal of the
+excitement was being caused by the Book of the Count. Marie and Helen,
+with paints and pen and brushes, were making the record of the days they
+had spent in camp a very lively affair.
+
+Winona sat down and looked on at what Marie was doing, and read on the
+page they had open:
+
+ On the second day, Winona,
+ Ray-of-Light, the Cat-Collector
+ Made her way unto the village,
+ To buy post-cards at the village.
+ With her went the cheerful Comet,
+ Ishkoodah with flaming tresses;
+ With her went the Star of Evening,
+ Helen, gentle Star of Evening,
+ And Nokoma, flower-giver--
+ Nataly the flower-giver.
+ Seeking post-cards, thus they wandered,
+ But alas, the Cat-Collector
+ Much preferred to bring home kittens,
+ And to advertise those kittens.
+ All next day the ad-replyers
+ Tracked our camp with questing footsteps,
+ Asked of us--"Where are those kittens?
+ Give us several dozen kittens!"
+ For, alas, those cats had vanished,
+ Gone with the first two replyers
+ To the ad Winona paid for.
+
+ Still about our Camp come wailing
+ Folk who seek the cats they heard of,
+ Seeking several dozen kittens;
+ Still the Ray-of-Light, Winona,
+ Cannot give them any kittens,
+ Cannot stop their wronged insistence
+ On those kittens, on those kittens--
+
+"Oh, good gracious!" asked Winona, beginning to laugh before she read
+any further. "Who _did_ make all that up?"
+
+"I did," said Marie proudly, "but we all helped."
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that any more people have come catting to-day?"
+demanded Winona.
+
+"Only seven," said Helen. "Winnie, you'll never hear the last of this."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Bryan, I've found some work to do that will earn money,"
+said Winona, hastily changing the subject. "Florence and I went up to
+the Scouts' camp, and Mr. Gedney gave us the boys' mending to do. He
+said you were to put a price on it for us."
+
+"Twenty to twenty-five cents an hour," supplied Mrs. Bryan promptly.
+"You'd better have some of the other girls help you, too, dear, for
+there's enough work there to take up a good deal of your time for three
+or four days, and you don't come camping to turn yourself into a
+sewing-girl, even for the good of the camp."
+
+"Very well," said Winona. "Who hasn't picked out any special work to do
+yet?"
+
+"Nataly Lee," said someone.
+
+"Neither have I," said Elizabeth. "I'll help, too."
+
+A half-dozen of them went off to a sunny spot, produced a large
+alarm-clock to time themselves by, and put in two hours of work
+immediately. That is, all but Nataly. She got tired at the end of one
+hour, and went off, she said, to lie down. The others got the mending
+almost done, for many hands make light work. Then they piled up the
+basket again, and went back to camp. It was Winona's turn to get supper
+that night.
+
+"There ought to be about four dollars' worth of work in that basket,"
+said Helen thoughtfully when they all met at supper.
+
+"It's probably more than we'll have next time," said Winona. "But
+anyway, it's a steady income. Let's hope they'll be kind, and wear big,
+awful holes in everything they have."
+
+"They will, unless they've had a change of heart since last week," said
+Louise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After supper was cleared away the girls set about collecting wood in the
+open space on the top of the little hill, for their ceremonial-fire. It
+was the most happy and successful meeting they had had, and also, as
+Louise expressed it, the most beadful. It ended in a ghost-dance around
+the fire. After it was through the girls lay still and told stories,
+which gradually became more ghostly than the dance. It was very pleasant
+till bedtime came. Then even the bravest of them made dashes for their
+tents; and Mrs. Bryan, making her rounds after the camp was asleep,
+found five lighted candles keeping ghosts out of five tents in a row!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOURTEEN
+
+
+There were bathing and boating and tree-climbing in the days that
+followed and there were hikes and folk-dances and various
+entertainments, by themselves, and occasionally with the Scouts for
+audience. The girls canoed all up and down the river, and borrowed the
+Scout swimming-pool with rapture, and learned all sorts of swimming and
+diving stunts. And everybody got brown and husky and cheerful. But in
+between the good times the girls worked on steadily, each at her
+appointed task, and in about ten days there was a promising collection
+of material to be sold, for the virtuous purpose of giving Camp Karonya
+some more weeks of life in the Wampoag woods.
+
+Helen gave up modelling her beloved statuettes, and went soberly to work
+at bowls and vases, and other such things that people would be likely to
+find useful. She decorated them with motives she drew herself, and took
+them up to Wampoag, the summer-resort, where there was a kiln, and had
+them fired. Louise made burnt-leather pillows, which filled her hair
+with such a fearful smell that for awhile she washed it every day, till
+it occurred to her to wear a bathing-cap to work in. She also burned
+mats and table-covers and napkin-rings to the limit of her purchasing
+power; and when that failed she took to carving things out of wood she
+picked up. The Blue Birds wove raffia baskets and table-mats, and Marie
+and Edith crocheted bags and collars. Adelaide devoted herself to
+canning. The rest helped her sometimes, but more of the time she took
+pride in putting up the fruit all by herself.
+
+There were embroidered tea-cloths and runners, and there was hammered
+brass-work. The honor-counts rolled up like snowballs, for the girls
+made nearly everything a girl is capable of making or decorating. There
+was almost enough made to stop.
+
+But still Camp Karonya held nightly discussions, having made these
+various things, as to how to sell them. The plan most of them wanted to
+adopt was that of going from house to house with them. Having a fair
+meant hiring a room or store, or running the risk of having nobody come
+to buy--for the camp was two miles from the nearest point of
+civilization. The only alternative seemed putting them into some of the
+resort shops to be sold on commission, and there was a large risk there
+that the shops might not do properly by them. There was another
+alternative, sending them home to be sold, but that seemed inglorious,
+somehow.
+
+One night, after everything had been argued over until everybody had
+finished from sheer inability to think of anything more to say, and
+begun to discuss constellations instead, Winona, lying on her back, felt
+a pull at her sleeve. She rolled over, to see Louise stealthily working
+herself down the hill, out of the moonlight. Winona rolled as stealthily
+after her.
+
+"What is it?" she asked, when they were at the bottom of the hill, where
+they couldn't be seen.
+
+"Come hither, Little One, and I will tell you!" responded Louise, like
+Kipling's Crocodile. She led the way to the dock, where they sat down in
+the moored rowboat, and Louise began to hold forth.
+
+"We've got more than enough things to sell, and none of those plans are
+a bit of good. What we want to do is to take all that stuff up to
+Wampoag, in this old boat of yours, and peddle them at the big hotels."
+
+"I think so, too," agreed Winona, "but the girls haven't gotten
+unanimous yet. You know Nataly Lee's going to fight to the last ditch
+against selling things that way. I don't know whether she thinks it's
+too hard work or too undignified, but you can see she isn't going to
+stand for it one little bit."
+
+"Oh, that girl makes me tired!" said Louise. "I'm not going to wait for
+their old unanimity. I tell you, Win, I have a plan!"
+
+"Well, go ahead!" Winona encouraged.
+
+"To-morrow morning," said Louise. "You and I will slide off early, like
+the Third Little Pig, and pack the boat with all the junk we have ready.
+It's all in the boxes in the store-place. Then we'll row to Wampoag, and
+just sell things all day!"
+
+"How'll we get them away without anybody seeing us?" objected Winona,
+who liked the plan very much. "It would be gorgeous if we could manage
+it."
+
+"We'll have to go now and sneak the stuff into the boat before bedtime,"
+said Louise. "We can pile them on that amateur stretcher we used to
+carry Florence. I think nobody ever took it apart."
+
+"Hurrah! Come on, then!" said Winona, and the two girls slid off into
+the shadows.
+
+It was not such very hard work. They filled their two suitcases, and put
+what wouldn't go in the suitcases on the stretcher; and had everything
+in the boat and covered up with a waterproof blanket before their
+absence had been noticed. Then they stole back into the circle as
+innocently as kittens, in time to sing "Mammy Moon" at the tops of their
+voices with the rest.
+
+They were both on the policing shift that week, so it was easy for them
+to arrange to get their share of camp-work over early. By half-past
+eight in the morning they were rowing gayly down the river in the
+direction of Wampoag. Florence wanted to come, but they had to repress
+her. She might have been in their way.
+
+When they were around the bend, safely out of sight of the camp, Winnie
+stopped rowing.
+
+"I had an idea, too!" she said. "Reach under the seat, Louise."
+
+Louise pulled out, first, the luncheon she herself had poked under a
+little while before; next, a good-sized bundle that appeared to be
+clothes.
+
+"What's this for?" she asked.
+
+"For us," said Winona.
+
+Louise opened it, and eyed its contents puzzledly. There were a
+dressing-sack made of bandanna handkerchiefs, partly ripped up, two old
+skirts, an old shawl and a checked gingham apron.
+
+"They're to dress up in," explained Winona. "We'll be poor little
+emigrant girls that want to sella da nice-a goods, lady! The women who
+go around selling things out of suitcases always have a foreign look. So
+I fished these out of the box of stuff we had for theatricals. I knew
+just where it was, because we got some things out of it for 'Everygirl'
+last week."
+
+"Oh, gorgeous!" cried Louise, finishing the ripping-up of the
+dressing-sack into its original red handkerchiefs. She dug through the
+pile again and picked out the shortest skirt, for she hadn't her full
+growth yet. "Who gets the little checked shawl?" she asked.
+
+"You do, if you want it," answered Winona. "I'll take the apron."
+
+They both turned in the collars of their middy blouses, and rolled the
+cuffs under. Skirts over them, a bandanna apiece round their necks, and
+the checked shawl over Louise's head and a handkerchief on Winona's--and
+they were very convincing emigrants.
+
+"Our shoes are rather too good," said Winona discontentedly, "but you
+mustn't ask too much in this world. Pin your hair up, Louise. It's too
+red for an Italian, or even a Syrian."
+
+She managed to secure her own on top under her 'kerchief as she spoke.
+They were both so brown that they looked like natives of somewhere else,
+and the dresses were very natural. The long skirts and fastened-up hair
+made them both look eighteen or twenty--for Winona was as tall as she
+would ever be, five feet six, and Louise, though shorter, was plump.
+
+"We can buy long earrings at the ten-cent store on our way up," said
+Louise. "I always did want to."
+
+"All right," said Winona.
+
+"And, for goodness sake, Win, see if you can't get up some sort of an
+accent. Italian would be the easiest, I guess."
+
+"Yes, kinda lady! Sella da fina things--real handa-made!" responded
+Winona, her white teeth flashing.
+
+Then they came to the Boy Scouts' camp, and they had to row very softly,
+and keep as far away from the bank as they could. But luck was still
+with them, and none of the Scouts happened to be fishing that morning.
+
+"If we'd remembered we might have brought back the mending," said
+Louise, with a half-concealed desire to go tell the Scouts about her
+prospective lark.
+
+"Better not go in there!" said Winona. She had a brother in the camp,
+and she didn't care to risk being stopped in mid-career of what promised
+to be a very fine time. So they rowed down the river till they reached
+Wampoag, and tied their boat to the dock.
+
+They took out the stretcher, put a suitcase on either end of it and
+piled the things that were too big for the suitcases in the middle. Then
+they each took an end and started bravely forth.
+
+"Where da gooda hotel for sella da goods?" asked Louise, with a broad
+and friendly grin, of the interested dock-keeper.
+
+"Any at all," he answered. "Just go straight down this road till you see
+a hotel. They're all together."
+
+"Thank you, mister," Louise answered, and they trotted on.
+
+The sight of two young Italian girls carrying a stretcher full of goods
+proved to be a little more of a sensation than the girls had bargained
+for. They felt as if they had never been so much stared at in their
+lives, and they were both grateful when they reached the shelter of the
+first hotel porch.
+
+It was a big hotel that they had come upon, and its wide porches were
+full of women, young and old, rocking, and talking and embroidering, and
+willing enough to look at the things the girls had. The arrangement was
+that Winona should take care of the smaller things, the painted and
+embroidered linens and so forth in the suitcases, while Louise attended
+to the pottery and larger art-craft things, and a row of Adelaide's
+jellies. She didn't expect to sell the jelly to people who already had
+three meals a day, but she was agreeably surprised. Evidently they liked
+to have things to eat in their rooms.
+
+The stretcher and suitcases were set on the porch and Louise, with an
+ingratiating grin under her shawl, went from woman to woman, holding up
+her wares.
+
+"Look at da fine pot--native wares--very cheapa?" she asked. "You not
+have to buy. We lika show. Buy da fine pot cheapa? You nice lady--you
+take real Indian pillow--real pine pillow!"
+
+"I believe I will," said an energetic-looking old lady with white hair
+and a black silk dress. "How much is that pillow, my dear? And aren't
+you pretty young to be out selling things this way? You don't look more
+than seventeen."
+
+Louise swelled with pride at being taken for as old as that, but she
+managed to answer, "One dollar for pillow--very cheap--real hand work!"
+and to the last question, "I lika sella da goods--four little poor ones
+younger as me home. I _very_ old!"
+
+At which the elderly lady bought the pillow on the spot. Louise put the
+dollar in the pocket of her skirt, and went back to the stretcher after
+a big vase of Helen's, which was the pride of her heart, and for which
+she meant to ask at least one-fifty.
+
+"Real pottery pot, lady!" she explained to the nearest woman to her.
+"Real hand-made--see? Real hand-painted--only two dollar!"
+
+Louise had spent a summer at a hotel herself, the year before, and she
+knew all the tricks and manners of the porch-peddlers. She let the woman
+who wanted the vase beat her down to one-sixty, and pocketed the extra
+dime that she hadn't thought she'd get with a sense of duty well done.
+She frisked up and down the porch having a glorious time, while Winona,
+with her open suitcase, sat still by the top step. She did not need to
+move, for the women were as interested in her wares as they always are
+in table-linens. She sold a stencilled crash luncheon set of Marie's,
+five pieces, for five dollars, while Louise was haggling over the price
+for Helen's vase. Several of the bead bags and necklaces woven on the
+little looms went, too. The girls left that porch with nearly twelve
+dollars worth of goods sold.
+
+The next hotel did not do so well by them, for the people there only
+bought a few handkerchiefs and bead chains. Still it was better than
+nothing. They had covered six hotels by one o'clock and made twenty-five
+dollars. The needle-work, much to the girls' surprise, went more quickly
+than anything else.
+
+"It must be the wistful sweetness of your expression, or else they think
+I look too well-fed to be sorry for, Win," said Louise as they munched
+their sandwiches on the dock. The dock-keeper had given them permission.
+"You just sit still and look pleasant, and the sales get made. I have to
+chase all over creation, and tease and joke and cheapen, to get them to
+buy mine."
+
+"I'm afraid to talk much, for fear my accent will break through,"
+explained Winona. "It's the goods, I think. They all seem crazy over
+those stencilled things. I could sell a lot more if I had them."
+
+"Haven't you any more?" asked Louise between bites.
+
+"Only one, and I promised that to your kinda lady that you sold the pine
+pillow to, and told you were the oldest of five. But I'm taking orders,"
+finished Winona with a grin.
+
+"Do you suppose Marie will stand for going on with it?"
+
+"For what--this bandanna party? She needn't--I'll deliver them myself,"
+stated Winona calmly.
+
+"What about the carved frames Elizabeth made?" asked Louise, as they
+rose and took up the burden of life in the shape of their much lightened
+stretcher.
+
+"Pretty well, but nothing like the way Florence's and Frances's little
+sweet-grass baskets went."
+
+"If we sell enough to run the camp another two weeks, I don't see why
+the girls shouldn't keep any money over that they earn," said Winona
+thoughtfully. "The proprietor of that little boarding-house we went to
+last but one says she wants more jelly. _That's_ all gone, thank
+goodness--oo, but it was heavy!"
+
+"The little baskets at a quarter apiece are going off fast, too," said
+Louise. "Hotel Abercrombie-by-the-Water. Don't forget your dialect,
+angel-child."
+
+"E pluribus unum! Panama manyana! Nux vomica!" answered Winona
+enthusiastically as they ascended the steps. "Buya da beada necklace,
+lady?"
+
+"Good!" said Louise under her breath, and herself tackled dialect again.
+"Buya da pot for poor woman, lady? Got thirteen children to keep--no
+money!"
+
+"Thirteen children--really?" asked the woman in horror.
+
+"Thirteen--all girls!" answered Louise mournfully, while Winona bent
+very low over her suitcase, and tried not to laugh. "Unlucky number,
+huh?"
+
+"Very, for her!" said the woman. "Well, I really must buy something to
+help her."
+
+Winona was going to stop her, for she thought it wasn't fair; although
+Louise evidently took it as a lovely joke. But as the woman did not feel
+that her duty to the thirteen went beyond buying one fifteen-cent
+sweet-grass napkin-ring--and she only wanted to give ten cents for
+it--Winona did not intervene. She only whispered, "Don't, Louise!" next
+time she passed her. And Louise, though she laughed, said no more about
+the thirteen poor little Camp Fire Girls starving at home. Then towards
+evening it was Winona who got into trouble.
+
+They had sold about forty-five dollars' worth of stuff in the course of
+the day, and were back at the first hotel, the one they had started
+from, to deliver the stencilled set Winona had promised to Louise's
+white-haired lady. Winona, who felt very tired after her long day of
+tramping and selling, was sitting on the top of the hotel porch in the
+shade of a pillar, her hands crossed on her lap. Her pretty face was
+pale with the long, tiring day, and her eyelids drooped. She was
+figuring out that, what with the Scouts' mending and this day's work,
+and the orders they had taken, the camp could go on three weeks more.
+And she felt a touch on her shoulder.
+
+"My dear," said the brisk voice of the lady who had bought the
+stencilled set, "you seem tired."
+
+"Why, not so very," said Winona, coming out of her thinking-fit hastily,
+and forgetting her accent on the way.
+
+"And don't you find this a hard life for so young a girl?" went on the
+lady. "Wouldn't you rather do something else?"
+
+Winona smiled and shook her head. "I like it," she said.
+
+The old lady sat down by her and took her hand. Louise, meanwhile, out
+of hearing, was trying to sell a very lopsided basket to an elderly
+gentleman.
+
+"My child," she said, "I can't help feeling that you're too intelligent
+and too refined-looking for a life like this. I am sure you are not an
+Italian. Is there nothing I could do to help you?"
+
+Winona felt very uncomfortable. She hadn't bargained for having people
+take a personal interest in her.
+
+"Really there isn't anything," she answered truthfully. "I have a very
+good time. I can't tell you all about it, but indeed, I have a very
+pleasant life."
+
+But the old lady was not to be daunted.
+
+"My dear child, there is something very attractive about you," she said.
+"I believe with the proper education you would become an unusually
+charming young girl. You are young enough still to be trained. Is that
+girl with you your sister?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Winona, wondering what next.
+
+"I thought as much," said the old lady. "You don't look like sisters.
+You're naturally of a better class than she is. Now, supposing that
+someone who could do a good deal for you took you and had you educated,
+do you think you would be a good girl and do them credit?"
+
+Winona did not know in the least what to say. It looked as if the old
+lady intended to adopt her before she could escape.
+
+"It would be awfully nice," she said, uncomfortably, "and very kind.
+But--indeed, I couldn't!"
+
+The old lady had begun to speak again, when a clatter of hasty feet on
+the steps behind them made her and Winona both turn around and look.
+
+[Illustration: "WILLIAM!" SAID HIS AUNT, "DO YOU KNOW THIS--THIS YOUNG
+PERSON?"]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIFTEEN
+
+
+It was only a tall boy in the uniform of the Boy Scouts who was tearing
+up the steps. But both the old lady and Winona uttered a faint squeal,
+the old lady because he kissed her, and Winona because she recognized
+the newcomer. It was Billy Lee, and he was evidently a relative of
+Winona's would-be benefactress.
+
+"How are you, auntie, and how's everything?" he was inquiring genially,
+with an arm still about her. Winona gazed wildly around, meanwhile, for
+a hole to crawl into, but there was none. "You see, I've come to
+dinner," went on Billy cheerfully.
+
+By this time he had swung around, and seen Winona. He took in her whole
+get-up, earrings, 'kerchief, sagging skirt, checked apron; and, further
+off, Louise making change energetically in the same regalia. He began to
+laugh.
+
+"Good for you, Winona!" he said. "Been selling Camp Fire stuff?"
+
+"William!" said his aunt before Winona could answer, "Do you know
+this--this young person?"
+
+Billy looked embarrassed.
+
+"Oh, say, Winnie, I'm afraid I've put my foot in it," said he. But he
+went on telling the truth--Billy was unfortunately incapable of doing
+anything else. At least, it seemed unfortunate to Winona right then.
+"Why, yes, Aunt Lydia. This is Winona Merriam, who lives next door to
+us. She's camping about a mile and a half down the river from us
+Scouts."
+
+The old lady turned sharply on Winona.
+
+"Then what makes you masquerade as an Italian peddler?" she asked
+sharply.
+
+Winona took courage, for though the old lady was cross, she did not seem
+unforgivingly angry.
+
+"We thought if we dressed up perhaps people would buy things quicker,"
+she explained. "But we do really need the money very badly, don't we,
+Billy?"
+
+"They're trying to make enough to stay in the woods all August, auntie,"
+explained Billy. "They've all been working like beavers, making things,
+to do it."
+
+"I don't see yet why the bandanna handkerchiefs," said the old lady
+tartly. "And you, miss"--to Louise, who had come up--"what did you mean
+by telling me that you were the eldest of five, and hadn't slept under a
+roof for ten days?"
+
+"Because it's true," said Louise. "I haven't--we're camping. And I _am_
+the eldest of five, worse luck! I have to spend my whole time at home
+setting an example. That's why I go away to be naughty!"
+
+It was impossible to be angry long with Louise Lane, and the old lady
+did not seem to want to be angry with Winona. So things straightened
+themselves out, and actually ended in an invitation to stay to dinner!
+
+"But we've nothing but our middy blouses, under these awful things,"
+protested Winona, "and Mrs. Bryan will be worried if we don't get home
+till late."
+
+"That's all right," said Billy's aunt Lydia, whose name was Lawrence.
+She was Mrs. Lee's sister. "I'll have them send a man down from the dock
+to tell your Guardian where you are."
+
+"Oh, then thank you!" said Winona radiantly. But Louise still hesitated.
+
+"Well, what is it?" asked the old lady.
+
+Louise hung her shawl-draped head for a moment, then she flung it back
+and answered frankly.
+
+"I may want to come peddling again, and if they see us in our camp
+uniform they'll know who we are!"
+
+"Great Scott!" cried Billy, beginning to laugh, "You _are_ a queer girl!
+I say, Aunt Lydia, let her disguise herself some more, if that's what
+she wants. Give her some of your clothes, or the chambermaid's, or
+somebody's. Would that be all right, Louise?"
+
+"Why, yes indeed!" said Louise, grinning joyously. "Lead on, Desperate
+Desmond."
+
+"I never saw such girls!" said Miss Lawrence. "However, you may as well
+have your play out. William, get a bellboy to put these goods somewhere.
+I'll take these objects of charity to get ready for dinner. Your room's
+next suite twelve, the one I have."
+
+She shepherded the two girls upstairs by the staircase, instead of the
+elevator, as if she wanted them to be conspicuous.
+
+"Now, remember," explained she, "you're two young foreign peddlers that
+I'm giving a dinner to out of the kindness of my heart. I'm loaning you
+clothes out of the same thing. So you can go right on peddling if you
+want to, you with the business instinct--Louise you said your name was?
+Very well, Louise, you can go on selling your potteries and bead bags
+after dinner--if you want to. But I want to talk to Winona myself. I
+don't know but I still want to adopt her!"
+
+Miss Lawrence left the girls alone when she had shown them to a room,
+and went to prepare for dinner herself. There was a bathroom next to
+them, and they made for it--one after another, of course--with gurgles
+of joy. Winona went first, while Louise was doing her hair, which was so
+thick and long it took a great deal of time to arrange.
+
+"Isn't hot water heavenly when you haven't seen it in a tub for a week
+and a half?" said Winona, emerging in a borrowed kimono, which she
+presently passed on to Louise.
+
+"I'll tell you when I've tried," said Louise, disappearing in her turn
+into the bathroom. She turned around and poked out her head to say,
+"Now, remember, we've both got to keep on looking as old as we can. We
+have characters to keep up!"
+
+Winona began to investigate the clothes Miss Lawrence had laid out for
+them. She did not expect to find anything more exciting than a black
+silk with a fichu, or something else elderly of that sort. Instead,
+there lay on the bed two pretty frocks which had certainly been made for
+girls of their age.
+
+She held them both up against her. They were a little shorter than she
+usually wore her skirts, both of them, and a little loose. Evidently
+their owner was of a build somewhere between Winona and Louise. But
+Louise, when she emerged, was quite pleased at that, for what was short
+for Winona was long for her, naturally, and carried out the idea of age
+that she wished to convey. She chose the more elaborate of the two, a
+green silk, because the other dress was pink, which doesn't match red
+hair. But it did match Winona's brown hair and blue eyes beautifully,
+and the wide satin sash was very becoming to her. The girls gave their
+tennis shoes a liberal dose of whitening, and decided that they would
+have to do. There were stockings to go with the dresses.
+
+When they were done dressing they gazed at each other in admiration.
+
+"I never had as pretty a dress in my life!" said Winona delightedly,
+surveying the folds of rose-colored organdy that ruffled about her. She
+reached up as she spoke to fasten back her curls with the shell barrette
+that usually held them at the back of her neck.
+
+"Glad you like them!" said Miss Lawrence, appearing on the threshold of
+the next room. "They belong to my niece Nataly--I suppose you know
+Nataly if you live next door to her--but she hasn't had them yet. I
+brought them to her from my trip abroad. Here, Winona, you haven't any
+hair-ribbon."
+
+"I haven't been wearing any in camp," said Winona, standing still,
+however, while Miss Lawrence unclasped the barrette and supplied its
+place with a rose-colored satin ribbon tied about her head,
+fillet-fashion.
+
+"That's the English fashion," said Miss Lawrence, "wear your hair loose
+till you're sixteen or seventeen, then do it all up at once, instead of
+pulling it up by degrees, as we do here. It's very becoming, my dear."
+
+Winona privately felt that it was a little youthful, but she said
+nothing, and indeed the effect of the shower of curls falling loose from
+under the ribbon was exceedingly becoming.
+
+Louise, over by the mirror, continued to put pins into her hair, and
+Miss Lawrence did not try to super-intend _her_ toilet at all, though
+Louise was getting herself up to look as near twenty as she could.
+
+A knock at the door of the sitting-room, where they went when they were
+dressed, made them all turn.
+
+"Come in," said Miss Lawrence.
+
+"It's me, Billy," said his voice ungrammatically inside. "I say! What
+stunning clothes!" he added frankly as he took in the splendor of the
+girls' attire.
+
+Winona looked at him rather shyly. The small bag he had carried must
+have been well packed, for Billy had blossomed out in a tuxedo and long
+trousers.
+
+"Why," she said, "I didn't know you for a minute--you look so grown up!"
+
+"I've had long trousers for a year now," explained Billy, "only I've
+always had on my uniform when you've seen me before."
+
+"Of course, that's it," admitted Winona. But she continued to stare, for
+this tall young gentleman looked about eighteen in his correctly cut
+clothes, and she felt like such a little girl, looking as Miss Lawrence
+had made her look. What she did not know was that she was looking her
+very prettiest, like a girl in a play or a picture, with her flushed
+cheeks and falling curls and rosy draperies. Miss Lawrence, who seemed
+to have taken a fancy to her, slipped her arm through Winona's, leaving
+Louise to follow with Billy.
+
+Louise was not impressed in the least by Billy's grandeur. It took a
+good deal to impress Louise Lane, and one suit of evening clothes and a
+large hotel weren't likely to do it.
+
+Winona did not look to the right or left as they entered the big
+dining-room, but she knew Louise had seen something, for she heard a
+little squeal of delight close behind her. They were scarcely seated
+when Louise burst out:
+
+"What do you suppose they've done, Winnie? I don't know whether it was
+you or Billy, Miss Lawrence, but thank you both, anyway. Winona, our
+things are all set out in that little sun-parlor sort of place where
+everybody can see them, and there's a bellboy looking after them. I saw
+him selling a bead belt!"
+
+"It wasn't any trouble," said Billy, looking embarrassed. "The
+management lets people use that room for displays, don't they, Aunt
+Lydia?"
+
+He did not explain that he had tipped the head bellboy liberally to have
+the things looked after, and it never occurred to either of the girls
+till long after.
+
+Winona secretly decided that Nataly couldn't be as trying as the girls
+thought her, if this was the kind of a brother she had. So she smiled
+brilliantly at Miss Lawrence and Billy, and felt very happy indeed over
+the bright lights and the elaborate dinner and the orchestra and pink
+dress.
+
+And then something occurred to her. This was Nataly's dress, a brand-new
+present-dress, and so was the one Louise had on. And they were getting
+all the first wear out of them, would Nataly like it?
+
+She looked up, directly, and said what she thought.
+
+"Miss Lawrence, will Nataly mind our wearing her clothes?"
+
+Louise answered before Miss Lawrence had a chance. "You know perfectly
+well she will, Win. Why, she nearly had a fit when I climbed into a
+clean middy of hers day before yesterday. And these are uncommonly glad
+and happy rags we have on."
+
+"If she doesn't like it," explained Miss Lawrence with perfect
+clearness, "she knows just what she can do. My niece Nataly is a spoiled
+young person if ever there was one. But don't worry, my dear"--for
+Winona was looking distressed at the idea of Nataly's objection--"I'll
+see that she's perfectly satisfied."
+
+So Winona did not worry. She talked instead, and told Miss Lawrence
+everything she wanted to know about Camp Karonya and what they did
+there.
+
+"It's a miniature community," said Miss Lawrence approvingly. "I wish
+they'd had them when I was a girl. I suppose you'll have a float at the
+lake carnival, since you're such enterprising young persons!"
+
+"Oh, is there going to be a lake carnival?" asked both girls in a
+breath. Miss Lawrence nodded.
+
+"Why, didn't you know?" asked Billy. "The people here in Wampoag have
+them every year. They give prizes for the best decorated float and
+canoe. I don't know whether it's a cash prize this year or a cup."
+
+"I do hope it's a cash prize!" breathed Louise fervently, while Winona's
+mind began to work at the ways and means for making and decorating a
+Camp Fire float, and the best way to get it up the lake.
+
+"It would be lovely if we could do it," she said. "When is it to be?"
+
+Billy pulled a little calendar out of the one small and concealed pocket
+that his clothes allowed him, and studied it.
+
+"A week from to-morrow," he said. "You have lots of time."
+
+"Then I'm sure we can do it," said Winona. "Marie has a canoe she'll
+probably want to enter, and besides that surely we can get up a float
+among us."
+
+And then something which Louise--so she said afterwards--had been
+expecting, happened. One of the women who had bought pottery from them
+that morning came up, and began to talk to Miss Lawrence, quite as if
+the girls were out of hearing.
+
+"Good-morning," she began, taking everything in as she talked. "Aren't
+these the little Italian vendors that were around this morning? Why, how
+transformed they look! Really, the younger one looks quite refined. And
+what are you doing with them, dear Miss Lawrence?"
+
+Her tone added quite plainly, "And won't they pocket the spoons?"
+
+Louise, the irrepressible, grinned above her salad. "Kinda lady loana da
+cloes," she said glibly; and the waiter, who had heard her discoursing
+in rapid and fluent English of an unmistakably home-grown kind the
+moment before, got behind a palm. If he hadn't he would have disgraced
+himself in a way no well-trained waiter should. Billy, too, dived into
+his napkin and seemed to have swallowed something down his Sunday
+throat. But Miss Lawrence remained quite calm.
+
+"I have taken quite a fancy to them," she said. "They seem like good,
+industrious girls. I am glad to see you are so interested, too, Mrs.
+Gardner. The best way to help them--you were going to ask me that, were
+you not--is to buy their goods. You'll find them on sale in the little
+rose-room."
+
+"Oh--ah, yes indeed!" said Mrs. Gardner, and fled, while the young
+people regarded Miss Lawrence with admiration.
+
+When the meal was over Miss Lawrence would not hear of their going back
+to the camp, or going on with their selling. The bellboy or a maid could
+go on looking after their things, she said, and sent Billy over to see
+about it. Then they went into one of the little dancing-rooms and showed
+each other steps for a long time; that is, Billy and Winona did, for
+Louise said she was tired, and sat thankfully still, listening to the
+orchestra that played in the dining-room. After that Miss Lawrence
+carried them all off to a band concert.
+
+It was ten-thirty by the time they had finished, and all had something
+more to eat--real, grown-up things to eat in a most gorgeous cafe. Miss
+Lawrence wanted them to stay all night, and Winona was willing, but
+Louise insisted on going back.
+
+"If we're here to-morrow morning," she explained, "every blessed woman
+that we sold things to will want to know all about us and our past
+lives, and then the secret will come out. No, thank you, Miss Lawrence,
+
+ "I see by the moonlight,
+ 'Tis past midnight,
+ Time pig and I were home
+ An hour and a half ago!"
+
+"I being the pig, I suppose!" added Winona.
+
+"Well, I won't keep you against your will," said Miss Lawrence, getting
+up from the cafe table. "So you'd better go back to the hotel. They can
+be packing up what's left of your things for you, while you change. But
+what about rowing across the lake and down the river in the dark? Can
+you look after them, William?"
+
+"I should think I could!" said Billy. "Besides--I forgot to tell you,
+girls, or we might have had a grand reunion--Lonny Hughes and Tom are to
+meet me at the dock at about eleven, with one of the camp canoes. Tom's
+Winona's brother," he explained to his aunt. "So we'll take one of the
+girls in the canoe, and one of us will go in the boat, and get them home
+safe as anything. For the matter of that, you can't get hurt on this
+lake unless the fish should jump up and bite you," he added as they
+reached the hotel, and parted to dress.
+
+The girls hurried off their finery, and got hastily into their serge
+skirts and white blouses.
+
+"I feel like Cinderella!" said Winona as they went down in the elevator
+again, only to find that, quick as they had been Billy had been quicker,
+and stood, familiar-looking in his khaki, to take them away. The pottery
+and linen that was left would all go into one suitcase now, so well had
+they and the bellboy prospered. Billy gave them, too, the money that had
+been taken in during the evening. They hurried off, after they had said
+good-bye to Miss Lawrence, and made her promise to come see them at Camp
+Karonya and stay a whole day.
+
+At the last moment she pushed a bundle into Winona's hands.
+
+"Here are your dresses, child," she said. "You looked so sweet it would
+be a shame for you and Louise not to keep them. I'll make it up to
+Nataly."
+
+Winona threw her arms around Miss Lawrence's neck, and kissed her.
+
+"Thank you, dear fairy godmother!" she said.
+
+A more astonished pair of boys than Lonny and Tom it would have been
+hard to find. It did not take long to explain matters. In a few moments
+they had Winona in the canoe between Tom and Billy, while Lonny rowed
+Louise in the boat. The girls held the boat and the canoe together. As
+they went Louise and Winona told the tale of their day's work.
+
+When they were done Louise pulled out the money they had made, and began
+to count it.
+
+"You have some, too, Win," she said.
+
+"I know," said Winona, "I have what Billy gave me, that the bellboy
+made. But I don't believe it's a lot."
+
+"Better count it," counselled Tom, and Winona did. When she was through
+she looked up with an awed expression.
+
+"Nearly ten dollars more!" she announced. "Oh, Louise, there must be
+some mistake! Why, if we both really have made all that, there's enough
+for another three weeks' camping!"
+
+"And orders ahead!" said Louise serenely. "It will take Marie and
+Adelaide more of their time than they'll want to spare from fancy diving
+and telling the birds from the wild-flowers, to make jelly and runners.
+I tell you, folks, I'm going to be an Italian porch-worker from now on.
+It pays. Sella da fina crock--getta da bigga price--blowa it in!"
+
+The boys shouted. "Good for you, Louise!" they cried, and a startled
+bullfrog gave a deep emotional croak at the noise, and jumped into the
+water.
+
+It was moonlight, so the trip home was pleasanter than any they had had.
+They sang till they came close to Camp Karonya, where they quieted down
+for fear of disturbing the sleeping girls. But they need not have
+worried. Camp Karonya was improving the moonlight night by sitting
+around a watch-fire, singing and telling stories. They could hear
+Helen's voice lifted up in "Old Uncle Ned," with a mandolin accompanying
+her that probably belonged to Edith. The boys tied the boat and the
+canoe, and carried the suitcases and stretcher, so pleasingly empty,
+ashore. All five walked over to where the fire gleamed, and were in the
+midst of the girls before anyone had seen them come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIXTEEN
+
+
+The girls jumped up and surrounded them.
+
+"Where on earth have you been? What on earth have you been doing? Where
+in the name of common sense did you get that haughty black person who
+brought us news of you about six?" everybody wanted to know, while
+Adelaide and Nataly held brief reunions with their brothers, and six
+girls at once pressed refreshments on Lonny and Tom and Billy.
+
+"We've sold most of your arts-and-crafts things," announced Winona.
+
+"And every stitch of embroidery," added Louise.
+
+"And we've been to a band concert and met a fairy godmother!" chanted
+Winona in her turn.
+
+"And we have heaps and _heaps_ of money!" finished Louise jubilantly.
+
+Then all the girls cried out, "Oh, tell us about it! Tell us about it!"
+
+So Louise sat down at a discreet distance from the camp-fire, and
+assisted by Winona's quieter voice, told the story. When she got to the
+part where they pretended to be Italian girls Nataly interrupted.
+
+"Oh, that was dreadful!" she said. "Surely you didn't do that?"
+
+"Didn't we, though?" grinned Louise cheerfully; "And your very own Aunt
+Lydia aided and abetted us, and gave us dinner and kind words besides!"
+
+"Aunt Lydia!" exclaimed Nataly.
+
+"She's over at one of the Wampoag hotels, Nataly," explained her
+brother. "You knew she was going to be there, didn't you?"
+
+"How could I when I haven't heard from her?" asked Nataly.
+
+"Oh, that's so!" said Billy penitently. "I ought to have brought you
+down her last letter, but it was addressed to me, and I forgot to pass
+it on."
+
+The fact was, as Winona learned later, Miss Lawrence had very strong
+likes and dislikes, and much preferred her nephew to her niece.
+
+Louise turned round to Nataly.
+
+"You made some things to sell, didn't you?" she asked, "And yet you
+think it was shocking of us to sell them! I don't think that's fair."
+
+"Well, I don't care. I don't think it's nice or lady-like to peddle
+things from door to door," said Nataly stubbornly.
+
+"Maybe it wasn't," said Louise cheerfully, "but it was certainly heaps
+of fun!"
+
+"Oh, we _did_ have fun!" said Winona. "And we have orders for more of
+Marie's stencilled runners, and Adelaide's jelly."
+
+"Did nobody love my pots?" asked Helen sadly.
+
+"Oh, yes, indeed," consoled Winona, "only you were so industrious, and
+made so many, that we have some left. The Blue Birds' baskets went off
+very well, too."
+
+"How much did you make?" asked Mrs. Bryan. "I'm wild to know."
+
+Louise pulled her bandanna handkerchief out of her deepest pocket, and
+Winona produced hers from the bottom of her blouse. They handed them
+over to the Guardian.
+
+"Mine's only what the bellboy took in while we were at dinner and out in
+the evening," Winona explained. "Louise took care of all the rest."
+
+Mrs. Bryan counted it silently, while the girls waited breathlessly for
+the result.
+
+"Fifty-three dollars and forty-six cents!" announced Mrs. Bryan at last.
+"You blessed angels, with what we'll get for the mending, that means
+over three weeks more of camp!"
+
+"By the way," suggested Tom here, "can't you give us what's done of the
+mending, please, Mrs. Bryan? It's time we got back to camp."
+
+She sent Florence and another Blue Bird to get it, and they ran off,
+swinging their lanterns.
+
+"We'll send down the bill by some of your sisters, with the rest of the
+work, by day after to-morrow at the furthest," she promised, as the
+girls stood up to bid the three Scouts good-bye.
+
+They watched the canoe paddle off into the darkness, then settled down
+to hear the rest of the adventure.
+
+"But there's something else we haven't told you!" said Winona, when the
+whole story had been told and talked over for a long while. "There's
+going to be a lake carnival."
+
+"Oh, what fun! Let's go!" said Adelaide, speaking more brightly than
+Winona had ever known her to. "We could hike as far as this side of the
+lake by land, couldn't we, Opeechee?"
+
+"Certainly we could--if we had to," said Mrs. Bryan, who was watching
+Winona. "Wait till Winona finishes. She looks as if she had a plan."
+
+"I was thinking," said Winona, "that it would be very nice if we could
+decorate a float. The boys said they were sure the Scouts would loan us
+enough rowboats to build the float over, if we needed it. And we could
+have tents----"
+
+"Of course we could!" said everybody enthusiastically, and all began to
+plan at once.
+
+Finally Mrs. Bryan rose, and suggested that it was twelve o'clock, and
+that all but the breakfast-getters had better sleep till eight next
+morning. So they put out the fire, and went to bed.
+
+About two o'clock a slim figure in a red kimono stole down the avenue of
+tents with a lantern. About two-thirds of the way there met her another,
+plumper figure, in a blue kimono, also with a lantern.
+
+"Winona!" said the blue kimono.
+
+"Why, Louise!" said the red one.
+
+Then they both began to giggle in a subdued way.
+
+"What on earth are you prowling round for, at this time of night?" asked
+Winona.
+
+"What are you?" returned Louise.
+
+Winona beckoned her friend over to a seat on a fallen log.
+
+"I--well, I've been worrying over our dressing up that way, and fooling
+people, to sell things," she confessed. "I suppose you'll think I'm a
+horrid little prig, but--Louise, I think we ought to go back and tell
+those hotellers that we were just plain Camp Fire Girls, not Italian or
+Dalmatian or anything like that."
+
+"I thought a Dalmatian was a dog," suggested Louise.
+
+"Maybe it is," said Winona sadly.
+
+Louise sat closer to Winona.
+
+"Winnie," she said, "that's just what I climbed out of bed about myself.
+I was coming to look for you when I met you. I've been worrying about
+it, too. It was a lark, but I think it's up to us to gambol over there,
+clothed and in our right minds--and own up."
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad!" said Winona. "We'll tell Mrs. Bryan in the morning."
+
+"All right," said Louise, and she began to giggle.
+
+"And then, while they're thinking how noble it is of us to confess,
+we'll sell 'em more things--real Camp Fire Girls' hand-crafts!"
+
+"Louise," said Winona with admiring conviction, "you certainly _are_ the
+limit."
+
+They both laughed, and felt better. Then they went back to bed and went
+to sleep.
+
+Next morning they rowed duly up the lake, and made a conscientious round
+of the hotels and cottages where they had sold their things the day
+before. But the way of the transgressor refused to be hard. They could
+wake very little excitement on the subject of their transformation in
+the minds of their patrons--who, it is to be feared, either regarded it
+all as a good joke, or did not worry about it at all. Indeed, most of
+the people Louise could find to explain to were more wronged because she
+had no goods with her, than by anything else. So she took a number of
+orders.
+
+"It's no use, Lou," said Winona, as they met at noon by the hotel where
+Miss Lawrence stayed, "I can't get a soul to care whether I'm a Canadian
+or a Hottentot. The only thing they'll say is, 'We'd like some more of
+the baskets,' or 'those runners,' or whatever they didn't get
+yesterday."
+
+"Same here," said Louise. "But I landed some fine fat orders, and if
+you're as clever as I think you are, you did, too."
+
+"Yes, I did," said Winona. "And, anyway," she added, brightening, "when
+we've done this hotel our consciences will be clear."
+
+"I only hope we don't meet that horrid Mrs. Gardner," said Louise.
+
+So they marched up the steps, and tried to pick out the women they had
+sold to the day before, to explain to them. But Winona had scarcely
+begun, "You see, we really weren't Italians at all," when the people she
+was talking to began to laugh. Winona, bewildered and a little cross,
+looked around to see what they were laughing at. She saw Miss Lawrence
+behind her, laughing, too.
+
+"It's no use explaining, my dear," said that lady. "I did it myself.
+Everybody knows that you and Louise Lane disposed of your goods under
+false pretenses by tying up your heads in red handkerchiefs and letting
+your customers draw their own conclusions. I don't know but some of us
+want our money back! Never mind, children, it was very clever of you!"
+she added, seeing that Winona was not sure whether she was in earnest.
+
+And the girls found themselves being questioned and laughed at and made
+much of by a group of women, who wanted to know all about the Camp Fire,
+and the things the girls made, and the ways they earned money, and what
+they did with it, till Winona and Louise were fairly tired with
+answering questions.
+
+They invited everybody to come out to the camp, and set a day. They took
+some more orders, and then they carried Miss Lawrence off across the
+lake and down the river, to see Camp Karonya. When she arrived they
+handed her over to Nataly, as was polite, and she and Mrs. Bryan showed
+her over the camp.
+
+She investigated everything with the same brisk, fairy godmother
+expression that she had had when she took Winona and Louise under her
+wing, stayed to luncheon, and then expressed a desire to be taken down
+to the Scouts' camp, to see Billy. So two of the Blue Birds rowed her
+there.
+
+After they had seen Miss Lawrence off, the girls became busy a little
+way down the river. Winona got there a little late and found that much
+had happened while she and Louise had gone off that morning. At first
+the idea of making the float had been to found it on the rowboats the
+Boy Scouts were willing to lend. But when a deputation, headed by Mr.
+Gedney, paddled down, bringing the boats in question, it became
+painfully clear that four canoes would not support enough planks to hold
+twenty life-size girls. Neither would rowboats. At least, Mrs. Bryan and
+Mr. Gedney agreed that they wouldn't--most of the girls and all the boys
+were willing to take a chance.
+
+When this turn of affairs arrived everyone felt very sad, and for a
+while it had looked as if Camp Karonya wasn't going to have a float in
+the lake carnival.
+
+But just then along came that resourceful old gentleman, Mr. Sloane,
+with fishing-rod and a can of bait.
+
+"Well, what's all the trouble?" he inquired genially of everyone in
+general. So they told him. Mr. Sloane did not hesitate a moment.
+
+"I got a friend that owns some good, water-tight scows," said he most
+unexpectedly. "They ain't doin' nobody any good, and I guess he'd loan
+'em to you, or, if wust come to wust, he'd let you have the use of 'em
+for maybe seventy-five cents apiece. Two scows are all you'd need to put
+the plankin' across."
+
+He gave them directions as to where to go after the scows' owner, and
+ambled on in search of a quieter fishing-place. An embassy was sent
+after the scows immediately, and returned with them in triumph. They
+proved perfectly seaworthy, and quite equal to supporting all they would
+have to. So when Winona arrived on the scene after luncheon the girls
+had reached the stage of nailing the planks across.
+
+They had bargained for the scows at seventy-five cents each, as Mr.
+Sloane had said they would be able to, and promised to give them a coat
+of paint before they returned them. The boards, bought of the village
+carpenter, were more expensive. However, the girls thought they could
+venture to pay for them out of the treasury, on the strength of the
+orders ahead that they had taken. Marie and Edith were supervising
+things.
+
+"Is there anything I can do to help?" Winona asked Marie, who was
+frowning thoughtfully over a hastily-drawn plan.
+
+"Not unless you can help us with this design," Marie answered. "See
+here. The idea is to make a miniature Indian village. How would you
+group the tents so as to take up the least room and show best?"
+
+"Why do you try to draw it?" asked Winona. "Why not do as generals do,
+make little paper tents and move them around till you get a tableau of
+the effect you want?"
+
+The idea was new to Marie, but she liked it, and the three girls fell to
+constructing little paper cones, and arranging them on a square space
+that represented the float.
+
+Presently one of the girls who was nailing dropped out with a pounded
+thumb, and Winona took up her hammer and went to work. She discovered
+that the driving of a nail straight, and making boards lie side by side
+evenly, is more of an art than people know.
+
+They worked on the float most of that afternoon, except for a few of the
+girls who were told off to do the Scout mending, and they sat down near
+the carpenters and sewed sociably to the sound of the pounding. They
+worked till six, and went to bed unusually early.
+
+By the second day the platform was done, and proved to balance very well
+on the water, even with all the girls on it. Next Marie and her helpers
+went to making tents, for their own soldier tents were too
+unromantically shaped to be any good on a float. They wanted real Indian
+wigwams, or as near to them as they could get.
+
+Marie bought unbleached muslin, and they dyed it the correct dark brown.
+They made three wigwams of this, the story-book-picture kind, with the
+crossed poles tied at the top, for a foundation. In each tent a squaw
+was to sit--or rather, at its door, for the tepees, in order to fit on
+the limited space of the float, had to be made rather small, and would
+have been a tight fit for even the smallest squaw. Some of the girls
+were to dress as chiefs, and were working hard on war-bonnets and
+leggings. Even Puppums was to grace the occasion, guarding a
+pappoose--little Lilian Maynard, the smallest Blue Bird. There was some
+idea of including Hike the Camp Cat, now a cheerful and opulent-looking
+kitten, but it was thought better of, because he yowled so when they
+rehearsed him.
+
+When the tents and costumes were done, the brushwood heaps stacked, the
+floor covered with twigs and moss, the girls tried grouping themselves
+as they were to appear on the final night. And it proved that there was
+not room on the platform for three tents and nineteen girls, even if
+seven _were_ small.
+
+Marie stepped off and looked it over.
+
+"There are just two girls too many," she said. "Three, if I were on
+board. I'll eliminate Marie Hunter to begin with. I'm going to decorate
+my own canoe. You'd better draw lots for the other two to stay out."
+
+Everyone on the float looked at everyone else. Nobody wanted to drop
+out, but nobody felt like being selfish.
+
+"I'll drop out!" said the whole of Camp Karonya in chorus, after a
+minute's dead silence.
+
+"I'll go in your canoe, Marie--have you forgotten?" asked Edith. "The
+plans you made included me."
+
+"So they did," said Marie in a relieved voice. "Well, perhaps the rest
+could crowd a little closer."
+
+"I'm afraid not, and be sure that nobody'd tip into the water," vetoed
+Mrs. Bryan. "I'm the one to stay ashore, girls. I'll gaze at you with
+fond proprietorship while you get first prize."
+
+But there rose up a storm of objections to that. "No you won't, either!
+There won't any of us be in it if you aren't, Opeechee!" till she had to
+give up giving up.
+
+Winona braced herself a little, and "I'm out, too," she said gayly.
+"There's no use asking me to stay--I don't like your old float!"
+
+She sprang ashore, and went over and stood by Marie.
+
+The girls protested, and several more volunteered to drop out, but
+nobody meant it quite as hard as Winona did. So the Indian village went
+on being erected, and the girls went on practising an Indian dance which
+should take up the least possible room. Meanwhile Winona rounded up the
+finished mending and rowed up the river to deliver the latest basket of
+mended socks and shirts. She had made her sacrifice in all good faith
+and earnestness, but she felt as if she didn't want to see them going
+gayly on without her--at least, not right _now_.
+
+She wasn't conscious of behaving any way but as she generally did, but
+she must have, for both Tom and Billy watched her uneasily, as she sat
+in the boat and talked to them after they had taken the mending, while
+she waited for the orderly to come with her money.
+
+"What's the matter, Win?" asked Tom bluntly in a minute. "You're down
+and out--I can see that. Who's been doing anything to you?"
+
+Winona shook her head. "Nobody."
+
+"Then what have _you_ been doing?" asked Billy. They stood over her,
+both looking so worried that Winona felt like hugging them, or crying,
+or both.
+
+"It isn't anything," she said. "Except--well, I did it myself. Somebody
+had to stay off the float, because there wasn't room for everyone, so I
+elected myself. And--and--oh, I _did_ want to be in that carnival!
+But"--she straightened bravely, and smiled up into the two indignant
+faces--"I guess it's all right, after all. If I could decorate my
+rowboat it would be all right, but I can't, because they're going to
+need it to carry properties in."
+
+"It's a confounded shame," said Billy Lee, "and after you planned it,
+and all! You ought to have a float of your own. I'll tell you, Winona,
+why don't you decorate a canoe?"
+
+"Only reason is, I haven't a canoe," laughed Winona--they were all three
+sitting in a row in the grass by this time.
+
+"I have," said Billy, "and you're more than welcome to it, and to all
+the help I can give you on it."
+
+"And I've got some change you're welcome to for decorations," added Tom.
+
+"Oh, how perfectly lovely!" said Winona, jumping up with her face aglow.
+"Indeed I will decorate it, and thank you both, ever and ever so much. I
+have ever so many lovely ideas for decorations. Billy!"
+
+She stopped short.
+
+"Well?" said Billy.
+
+"Would you mind being in the canoe with me?"
+
+"Sure, I'd love to," said Billy heartily, whether he really meant it or
+not.
+
+"Oh, thank you _so_ much!" cried Winona again.
+
+"That's the way to take it!" said Tom. "We'll get you up a canoe,
+between us, that'll make your old Camp Fire float look like a bad
+quarter and a plugged nickel--see if we don't!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
+
+
+Winona and Florence paddled back to Camp Karonya with the latest bundle
+of mending, very, very happy. When they came ashore, they were met by a
+committee consisting of Adelaide, Louise, Helen and Marie.
+
+"We've got a plan for your being in the picture," said they very nearly
+in unison. "We can decorate the boat with the apparatus in it----"
+
+But Winona waved a lordly hand.
+
+"Boat me no boats," said she. "I'm going to have Billy Lee's canoe to
+decorate. We're going out this afternoon, or maybe to-morrow afternoon,
+up to Wampoag where the shops are, and we're going to buy out the shops
+with decorations. Going to get honorable mention, anyway!"
+
+"Oh, then you'd really rather!" said Helen. "I'm _so_ glad. But it won't
+seem natural not to have you on the float, Winnie!"
+
+"Just as natural as not having Marie," said Winona.
+
+"No," said Marie quietly, "not exactly. You're like the spirit of the
+whole thing, Win, and I think they ought to have you."
+
+"You can't," said Winona, sitting down on the grass and drawing her
+knees up to her chin.
+
+"We could if we canned Nataly," said Louise the rebel, half under her
+breath.
+
+"Well, you can't do that," said the other girls in a breath.
+
+The truth was, Nataly Lee was the one dark spot--the one cinder, as you
+might say--in the Camp Fire. She did not particularly like doing her
+share of the work, she could not be made to take an interested part in
+the work for honor beads, and she acted generally as if she was a caller
+who was much older and more languid than the others. It was, in short,
+very much as Louise had said when she offered to join--she was like a
+kitten who refused to be anything but a cat.
+
+"I don't know what Nataly's doing here, anyway," Louise went on. "And
+we'd be a lot happier without her. I wish she'd go home and look after
+her complexion. She can't do it properly here--anybody can see that!"
+
+"Can't do what?" said a languid voice. It isn't a good thing to discuss
+your friends too freely if they're anywhere at all around, because they
+are exceedingly likely to overhear or partly hear. And this is just what
+happened now. Nataly herself walked out of the strip of woods that
+separated the camp from the river, and sat down by them.
+
+"I thought I heard you talking about me," she said.
+
+"We were," said Louise, quite unruffled. "At least I was. I was saying
+that you couldn't look after your complexion properly here in the woods,
+and that I thought you'd be happier away from our rude young society!"
+
+Nataly did not see in the least that Louise was laughing at her, but
+Helen did, and gave Louise a severe pinch. "Guying" was something that
+the camp spirit allowed only if the victim knew what was being done to
+her. But where Nataly was concerned it was hard to make Louise behave.
+
+"Well, you know," said Nataly, "I am thinking of going home. It makes me
+nervous, the idea of Aunt Lydia being near enough to pounce down on me
+every minute. She is _so_ energetic. And my nerves are nearly all right
+now."
+
+"Then you really think you will go back?" said Winona.
+
+"I really do, as soon as the carnival is over," said Nataly.
+
+"Well, as I said," said Winona hastily, for Louise looked as if she were
+going to suggest an earlier departure, "I'm going up to Wampoag this
+afternoon to buy things with the boys."
+
+"I have a 'gagement to make baskets with Frances," said Florence, "so I
+can't go with you."
+
+"I will if you want me," offered Louise. "I have various things I want
+to say to you alone."
+
+"That sounds dark and dreadful!" said Helen good-naturedly. "I think
+we'd better not volunteer to go along, Marie!"
+
+"We couldn't, anyway," Marie reminded her. "There's a lot to do on those
+war-bonnets yet."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So that afternoon Louise, Winona, Billy and Tom paddled up to the summer
+resort in quest of decorations.
+
+"Have you any idea how you're going to trim the canoe?" asked Louise.
+
+"I've thought it all out," said Winona. "I found the idea in an old book
+of ballads Marie brought along. It was called 'The Ship o' the Fiend.'"
+
+"Pretty name!" said Louise. "Who's going to be the fiend? Please don't
+all speak at once!"
+
+"I'll be the goat," said Billy. "Winnie told me a little about it. The
+ballad was about a girl who went off with an old fiance, and he turned
+out to be a real live demon."
+
+"Yes," said Winona, "the tall topmast no taller was than he," it says.
+
+"Well, I draw the line at stilts," said Billy sleepily. He was curled
+down in the bottom of the boat basking in the sunshine, for Louise had
+insisted on taking a paddle. "What do I have to do?"
+
+"The first thing," said Winona, "is to wake up enough to sit up and be
+consulted. How much copper wire ..."
+
+The rest was inaudible, for Billy moved closer to Winona, who talked to
+him mysteriously under her breath. The others could hear scraps like
+"Japanese auctioneer ..." "fifty yards ..." "red paper muslin," and such
+illuminating fragments.
+
+"How much money have you got for me to spend, Tommy?" Winona broke off
+to inquire.
+
+"Four whole dollars," he said, "earned by splitting wood for a farmer."
+
+"I certainly am obliged," she said, "and I'll pay it back."
+
+"You'll do no such thing!" he said. "I should hope I could give my own
+sister a lone four dollars once in awhile!"
+
+"All right, you can," said Winona soothingly. She pulled out the paper
+the boys had secured and given her, and began to read it aloud.
+
+"Cash prizes in the canoe class, first, twenty-five dollars, second, ten
+dollars, three third prizes, five dollars each. Now you see, if I get a
+third prize I'll be a dollar in, and all the glory reflected on Camp
+Karonya besides!"
+
+They took a street-car when they got to Wampoag, because the shopping
+district was a long ways off, and it was a hot day anyway. Tom and
+Louise watched the other two with curiosity, as they went from store to
+store, buying things that it seemed impossible could fit into each
+other; copper wire, red tinsel by the box, paper muslin in what seemed
+unlimited quantities, though it was really only a little over a dollar's
+worth. Then Winona went into one Japanese store alone, and came out with
+a bagful of paper lanterns and a knobby bundle which she refused to undo
+or show. They hunted all over three streets for Greek fire, before it
+occurred to Billy to go back to the hardware store where they had bought
+their copper wire. He came out with three boxes of it, labelled "Blue,"
+"Green" and "White," and seemed rather sad because they had no lavender
+or gray fire in stock.
+
+"'They bought a pig and some ring-bo-ree, and no end of Stilton
+cheese!'" chanted Louise softly. "How on earth are you going to connect
+all that crazy stuff?"
+
+"You'll know, all in good time, my dear," said Winona sedately. "We can
+go home now. The worst is over."
+
+"We deserve a soda, at least, for all this," said Billy.
+
+"Marble-dust," said Tom solemnly. "Some day, Bill, if you keep on
+drinking sodas, you'll turn into a statue, and your sorrowing relatives
+will have to put you up in the hall for an ornament."
+
+"Glad I'm as lovely as all that comes to!" said Billy with a grin. "They
+couldn't do it to you, old fellow--you aren't pretty enough!"
+
+"He is pretty, too," said Louise stoutly. "Somebody told me only
+yesterday that they thought Tom was so poetic-looking, and had a
+striking head."
+
+Billy laughed out loud, and Tom wriggled.
+
+"I take it all back, Louise," he said. "He _is_ beautiful."
+
+Tom gave a sort of mournful growl.
+
+"Oh, cut it out, Billy!" he said. "If you really want that soda, here's
+a drug-store."
+
+"A striking head," mused his sister, cocking her own head on one side,
+to look at Tom from this new point of view. "I really think you have."
+
+"If ever I meet the fellow who said that, he'll find out I have a
+striking fist," muttered Thomas darkly, walking into the drug-store
+ahead of the rest, and sitting down at a table in the back. "Four walnut
+sundaes, please. No, I don't want 'em all myself. The others are coming
+in the door now."
+
+For the next few days Winona, at a point half-way between her camp and
+the Scout's camp, worked steadily over the paper lanterns she had
+bought. She covered them all with white paper, and cut out holes in the
+paper after the fashion of eyes, nose and mouth, until, if you were not
+too critical, they looked like big oval skulls. If you _were_ critical,
+they might remind you, it is true, of jack-o'-lanterns, but nobody was
+unkind enough to say so but Tom. There were forty of them altogether,
+and when they were all covered, and brought down to camp out of the
+danger of being rained on, and festooned about Winona's tent, the effect
+was truly awful. Tom, who had been watching his sister's performance
+with interest, came over one day with five little paper-mache lanterns
+which he presented to her, two in the shape of black cats, and three
+like owls.
+
+"I don't know yet what you're going to do," he said, "but if Bill's
+going to wear horns and hoofs, and those things over the cot are meant
+for skulls, I should think these would come in handy."
+
+"They're just exactly what I wanted!" said Winona with rapture, hanging
+them with the rest. "Now I've nothing to do but my dress."
+
+She showed him several yards of black paper muslin and a sheet of gilt
+paper. "It doesn't look promising, I know," she said, "but it will be
+quite nice, I think, when it's done."
+
+And it really was. Helen helped her to fit it, and they made it with the
+dull side out, close-fitting, and covered with the stars and crescents
+of the traditional witch-dress. She was done with it, even to the
+pointed hat and black half-mask, in very good time.
+
+"Now," she said to the boys, standing over Billy's canoe where it had
+been pulled up in the grass, "now comes the tug of war. Tom, you said
+you would help me."
+
+"I did," said he. "What shall I do?"
+
+"Then please nail these poles to the end of the canoe. They're about six
+feet high, aren't they?"
+
+"Yes. Do you want them sticking straight up into the air?"
+
+"Straight up, please," she said.
+
+"Billy's flying around in the town like a hen with its head cut off,"
+said Tom as he proceeded to do what his sister asked, "trying to buy
+something he won't tell about. And I found Louise and Helen up at Camp
+Karonya, winding tinsel into balls like fury. Strikes me you ought to
+share that five you won't get with the whole crowd of us."
+
+"So I will when I get it," said Winona serenely. "Now will you please
+brace those end-poles thoroughly, and nail cross-pieces on them about a
+foot from the top?"
+
+"It's easy to tell people how to do things," said Tom; but he was clever
+at carpentering, and had it done in a very short time.
+
+Then Winona took the copper wire she had bought, and strung it from end
+to end of the cross-pieces, till the effect was something like that of a
+half-done cat's cradle. Then she stood off and looked at her work,
+walking round and round it, as a kitten looks at a mirror.
+
+"That wire ought to bear about twenty pounds, don't you think?" she
+asked.
+
+"I don't see why not," said Tom, sitting down on the grass to watch her.
+
+"Now I'll begin, then," she said. "Thank you for making the foundation."
+
+She took up the copper wire again, and strung more lines of it from end
+to end of the canoe, and one around the gunwale. She laced still more up
+and down in irregular points, up and down the side-wires, till the
+effect was that of an irregularly pointed fence, or crown, as high as
+the end pieces in some parts, and low enough, at the ends, to show the
+people seated in it.
+
+"Looks like a cross-section of Alps," said Tom critically. "Are you
+going to be the Blue Alsatian Mountains?"
+
+"There are two classes of people who should never see a thing
+half-done," answered his sister, standing off again to get the effect.
+
+"Thank you," said Tom.
+
+"Doesn't it look like anything else at all?" she asked, abandoning her
+superior attitude, and throwing herself on his mercy.
+
+"Well, something like a fever-chart," said he.
+
+Winona said no more--there didn't seem to be any use. She picked up her
+ball of red tinsel, and began to wind it around and within, and across,
+every point of the "fever-chart," till there was a solid network. It was
+not a bad imitation of a springing fire.
+
+"Now do you see?" she said. "That's a big, red blaze coming out of the
+canoe, and when we've lighted the Greek fire inside it ought to look
+real enough to burn you."
+
+"Not bad," admitted Tom. "But I don't see its connection with a black
+bonnet and forty jack-o'-lanterns."
+
+"You will by-and-bye," said his sister, going on with her work. It went
+very smoothly after that, except that Puppums _would_ jump inside, and
+then looked at her in a wronged way because the canoe did not float off.
+After the tinsel was on nothing remained to do but to wrap the
+end-pieces with black muslin, so they would not show at night, and to
+cover the canoe with the same material. The lanterns did not need to be
+hung till the last moment.
+
+The night of the carnival Camp Karonya, very much excited, sailed down
+the river in all the glory of its fleet, about six. The Indian village
+was a great success as far as looks went. Whether it would be as
+handsome a float as the ones it would have to compete with nobody could
+tell yet. As a canoe takes less time to engineer than a float, and also
+as the boys hadn't come yet, Winona stayed behind a little while. At
+about seven Tom and Billy came up the river in another of the Scouts'
+canoes. Winona, in her witch costume, with her lanterns, was waiting for
+them by the decorated canoe.
+
+Billy was most gorgeous. He had hired a red Mephisto costume, evidently
+from a real costumer--horns, hoofs and all. His full grandeur didn't
+show till he sprang out on the grass, because he had modestly shrouded
+himself in a raincoat, and his mask was in its pocket. But he snapped
+the mask on, tossed the coat off, and struck an attitude, before he
+helped Tom to lay the canoe in the water.
+
+"You certainly are grand and gorgeous, Billy," said Winona. "All you
+need is a spotlight running round after you to look just like the man in
+the opera."
+
+"I feel like a freak," admitted Billy. "Got everything, Winona? We'd
+better be starting."
+
+Winona veiled her own splendors with an evening wrap of Mrs. Bryan's
+which had, fortunately, been brought along, and stepped in. Tom trailed
+behind.
+
+"I believe I'm frightened," said Winona. "What about you, Billy?"
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of," he said. "We can't very well upset,
+tied to a string of other craft, and maybe we'll get a fourth prize--if
+they only have four entries in the canoe class."
+
+"We'll get one anyway!" declared Winona proudly, throwing her head back
+and forgetting to be nervous.
+
+They were early at the dock. The Camp float was moored quite a little
+way from the place where they had to be, but they could see each other,
+and called across. After that Winona did not feel so lonely. The boys
+helped her to light and tie on the lanterns, all so realistically like
+skulls, and when she saw how very ghostly they looked she felt that she
+hadn't lived in vain.
+
+"Have you the skeleton, Billy?" she demanded anxiously of Mephisto, who
+was wrestling with a bundle in the back canoe.
+
+"Here it is," he said, finally producing it. "I had rather a time
+getting old Hiraoka to rent it, but an auctioneer will do anything for
+enough yen."
+
+As he spoke he unwrapped a neat, papier-mache skeleton of nearly
+life-size, which was of Japanese origin, and which, as he said, he had
+rented from the Japanese store of Mr. Tashima Hiraoka for this night
+only.
+
+"Billy!" said Winona remorsefully, "how much did you pay for Mr. Bones?"
+
+"No time to worry about that now," said Billy. "Where do you want him
+put?"
+
+Winona saw that he was right, and put off insisting on paying for the
+skeleton till time should be less precious than now. They swung it above
+the tinsel flames, on wire loops prepared for it, so that it turned
+gently, as if roasting. Tom looked on in respectful admiration.
+
+"Here's the last thing," said Billy, producing the mysterious bundle
+that had excited Louise so the day they were shopping for decorations.
+
+"Those are Billy's idea," said Winona, pulling the objects out as she
+spoke. "They just put the finishing touch on, don't they, Tom?"
+
+"I should say they did!" said Tom appreciatively. They were twenty small
+red demons rather like Billy, and the same number of tiny skeletons, all
+with waggle-some hands and feet.
+
+"Blessed forever be Japanese stores!" said Winona. "Just hang them
+around carelessly, boys, as if they were hovering over the fire, you
+know. Billy, do you think you can make the demons look pleased and the
+skeletons unhappy?"
+
+"You never know what you can do till you try," said Billy with his usual
+poise. He pulled some wire out of the back canoe, which, like the
+Mother's Bag in the Swiss Family Robinson, seemed to have everything in
+the world in it. The boys set to work with such a will that the last
+demon was wriggling naturally as life, and there was ten minutes yet to
+spare, when they were done.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
+
+
+Billy helped Winona in, felt for the matches, and got in himself. Tom
+pushed them off from shore. It was all done with the solemnity of a
+funeral procession. Winona looked at the boys' excited faces, and
+laughed.
+
+"We're not being rowed off to execution," she explained, though she felt
+a little excited herself. "I'm perfectly calm--O-oh! Gracious! What's
+that?"
+
+"That" was a long, unearthly wail which seemed to come from the inside
+of the canoe itself. It increased and quavered and howled and died down
+again.
+
+"Oh, that's us," said Billy placidly. "Tom and I borrowed Boots Morris's
+father's Gabriel horn and fastened it into the canoe this afternoon.
+Forgot to tell you. Don't you like it?"
+
+"Lovely!" gasped Winona. "Only--only it was a little sudden, the first
+time. I thought Mr. Bones was expressing his feelings."
+
+"It adds to the effect all right," said Billy proudly.
+
+"It certainly does!" said Winona. "Yes, we have a tow-rope, marshal. Tie
+us on, please."
+
+"Well, you do look like you came from somewhere else!" said the
+marshal--he was the dock owner by day--as he fastened the "Ship o' the
+Fiend" into line. "I don't want anything more like D. T.'s than you be!"
+
+"That's what I call a delicate compliment," said Billy, lifting his mask
+so he could grin with freedom.
+
+"M' yes, I suppose so," said Winona doubtfully. "Are we going to start
+soon, marshal?"
+
+"In about ten minutes," said the marshal, seeming to be still entranced
+with the canoe and its decorations. "They burnt one o' my
+great-grandmothers, a couple o' hundred years ago, for doin' not much
+worse'n you be," he added.
+
+"We ought to get something, then," said Winona, thinking more of a
+possible prize than of the marshal's family history.
+
+"You sure ought!" he said darkly, handing them a number and passing on
+to the next boat.
+
+The ten minutes seemed very long and tedious, but between eating some
+sandwiches which Winona had thoughtfully provided, exchanging
+compliments with the neighboring boats, and getting their Greek fire
+ready to set off, they passed somehow. The whistle blew, and the long
+trail of boats, canoes, and floats started on its slow and winding way.
+The float was tied far off, at the beginning of the procession, where
+they could not see it. Marie's canoe was just in sight, but not near
+enough to talk to--a big silver cobweb spotted with lantern-flies, and
+Marie and Edith dressed as the Spider and the Fly, at either end of it.
+
+Finally the whistle blew. Billy tucked a final piece of sandwich beneath
+his mask, and resigned himself to tending the Greek fire for the rest of
+the evening. As for Winona, finding nothing particular to do, she pulled
+a book out from under a cushion and began to read.
+
+"Winona, would you kindly lay away that piece of literatuah and wo'k the
+Gabriel ho'n?" asked Billy in the softest and Kentuckiest of voices.
+Winona had observed that when Billy's Southern accent reasserted itself
+he was generally in deadly earnest. She meekly put the book away and
+began to press the bulb of the horn at regular intervals.
+
+"Oh, I do wish we could see us, and be us, too!" she said in one of the
+intervals.
+
+"M'm! Don't I?" said Billy. "I don't know, though. Maybe we'd be
+disappointed."
+
+"I know we wouldn't," said Winona confidently, and pressed the horn
+again, which put a stop to conversation.
+
+Meanwhile Tom, on the grandstand, was seeing them, and being very proud
+of his relationship to the "Ship o' the Fiend." The black-covered canoe,
+with its belt of shivering fire and its weird occupants, showed up
+gloriously. The irregularly hung lanterns looked more like skulls than
+Winona had dared to hope in her wildest moments. All the little demons
+and skeletons danced realistically on their invisible wires in the air,
+and, crown of all, the nearly-life-size skeleton swung above, with the
+witch and the demon watching him from either end, as he roasted above
+the Greek fire. An occasional shriek from the Gabriel horn gave the
+final touch. The whole thing was like a vision out of a Poe story, or
+some German goblin-legend. The people took to clapping as they went by.
+
+"I believe they're clapping for us!" said Winona awedly, as a burst of
+it came to their ears over the water.
+
+"Sure they are," said Billy. "Shows their good sense, too. It's a mighty
+good looking canoe we have."
+
+"Can we photograph you, please?" said a polite voice before Winona could
+answer--and lo, the reporter's boat!
+
+"This _is_ glory!" said Winona, snapping down her mask, and being
+frankly delighted. "Just think, Billy, we may be in the paper!"
+
+The reporter asked questions and fussed with his flashlight apparatus,
+and finally took two exposures. They kept very still while the
+flashlight was exploding, and answered the reporters in full.
+
+"The designer of your decorations certainly was very clever, and had a
+vivid imagination," ended the smallest reporter as the press-boat went
+on its way.
+
+Winona sat up straight, and looked very proud.
+
+"At last I'm appreciated!" she said. "Don't you wish you had a vivid
+imagination, too, Billy?"
+
+"If you straighten up much more," said Billy, leaning over to light
+fresh Greek fire, "you will certainly hit the decorations, and something
+will bust."
+
+"I don't care!" and Winona laughed excitedly. "It's my first chance at
+being famous, and you can't think how nice it is! Listen to that!"
+
+The applause along the banks was certainly continuous enough to make
+someone older and staider than Winona happy. The canoes were making the
+circuit of the upper part of the lake now. In the centre was the royal
+float, where the king and queen of the carnival sat.
+
+When the procession had gone down one side of the lake and up the other
+it would make a circle about this royal float, and the prizes would be
+awarded.
+
+They were almost through with this, only a little way from the royal
+float, when a small green canoe full of sightseers whirled against them,
+sent by some sudden twist of wind or water. And--neither Winona nor
+Billy could ever understand how it happened--the shock of the blow, or
+perhaps some mischievous person in the other boat, parted the ropes that
+held Winona's canoe lightly to the canoes before and behind it, and sent
+them far to one side of the lake, out of the radius of the lights. The
+wind, naturally, took this particular time to blow hard. The decorations
+made the canoe top-heavy and hard to guide, and they dared not paddle
+fast for fear of upsetting. They could see from their outer darkness the
+canoes they had been between being hastily tied together.
+
+Winona paddled frantically. "Do you think we can get back in time to be
+judged?" she panted.
+
+"We'll try," said Billy, working his paddle more slowly, but with
+greater effect than Winona's.
+
+"No--oh, Billy, Billy! There goes the signal--they've given the launch
+prize, and they are to give the float and rowboat prizes right
+afterwards, and then the canoes! There goes the gun again. Oh, _dear!_"
+
+Winona had really been working harder than she should have over her
+canoe decorations, and helping with the float besides, as well as doing
+her routine camp-work. She had been "all keyed up" by the evening's
+excitement, and her hopes of a prize, and this sudden downfall of her
+hopes was too much for her self-control. Billy saw two large tears roll
+down her cheeks from under her mask.
+
+"Poor Winnie! It certainly is a shame!" he said.
+
+"I suppose that horrid little gunboat canoe named 'Flossie' will get our
+prize," mourned Winona, casting fortitude to the wind--which must have
+carried it quite a way, for it was blowing more and more strongly. "I
+know we'd have had one of the fourth prizes, too!"
+
+"You have the glory, anyway," he said. "Everybody applauded us more than
+they did anything else except that big Queen Elizabeth float."
+
+"But I wanted the money, and I wanted to have the Camp Fire have a
+prize! There, Billy, I won't be a coward any more. I'm tired, I think,
+or I wouldn't have acted like this kind of an idiot," she said bravely,
+pushing up her mask to dry her eyes, and trying to smile.
+
+"You've worn yourself out over this decoration business, that's what the
+matter is," said Billy. "Do you mind telling me what you want the money
+for?"
+
+"No, certainly not. I wanted to get a pair of silk stockings apiece for
+Adelaide and me. I know she wants a pair dreadfully, because she never
+had them, and if I got a pair like them for myself she'd be more apt to
+take them--and--well, I wanted a pair, too!"
+
+Billy registered an inward vow that his Aunt Lydia should manage it just
+as soon as it was humanly possible. He knew that she would do more than
+that for Winona, for whom she had conceived a strong liking.
+
+"Poor kid, she's all worked up about it," he murmured, forgetting his
+own disappointment, for he, too, had hoped that his canoe would get a
+prize.
+
+But help was in sight. About five minutes later (though Winona and Billy
+always swore it was a full half hour) they felt a violent rocking, and
+heard the insistent wuff-wuff-wuff of a steam launch.
+
+"Here, catch a-hold and tie yourself on," said the welcome voice of the
+marshal out of the darkness, without the least waste of words or time.
+
+As soon as Billy's excited fingers could do it they were fastened to the
+end of the marshal's official launch, and bobbing off towards the royal
+float at a tremendous rate of speed.
+
+"How did you come to come hunt for us?" Winona called to the marshal as
+they went.
+
+"You were knocked out o' line an' got blowed away, didn't you?" answered
+the marshal.
+
+"Then we're going to be judged--we're going to be judged!" she rejoiced.
+"Oh, do you think we may get a prize yet?"
+
+"Shouldn't wonder but you got something," said the laconic marshal.
+"Here we be."
+
+He bent over and unfastened them.
+
+"You're late, you see," he said, "and you'll just have to paddle out an'
+get your sentence alone."
+
+Winona's heart beat frantically, but she straightened up in the canoe,
+and she and Billy, standing up at front and back (it was risky work with
+the top-heavy decorations, but they never thought of that till
+afterwards), paddled out into the open space before the royal float. All
+the other entries had been judged. Over in the place where the
+prize-winners were Winona had time to see that the Camp Fire float and
+Marie's canoe were herded with the others. So even if she got nothing
+the glory of Camp Karonya was safe. It was trying to wait there alone,
+with everyone staring, but it did not last long. The red-and-gold herald
+came forward very soon.
+
+"First prize, canoe class!" he said--and Winona almost lost her balance.
+"Awarded to Miss Winona Merriam of Camp Karonya, and Mr. William Lee, of
+Boy Scouts' Patrol Number Six, for their entry 'The Ship of the Fiend.'
+Twenty-five dollars."
+
+The clapping burst out again. When it was done Winona and Billy started
+to paddle back to the prize-winners' enclosure, but a gesture of the
+herald stopped them. They paused, a little puzzled.
+
+"Do they want us to say thank you?" wondered Winona.
+
+Before Billy could turn the canoe the left-hand red-and-gold herald
+walked forth.
+
+"Silver loving cup for greatest originality of conception also goes to
+Miss Merriam and Mr. Lee," read the herald.
+
+They were clapped again--they could see Tom, on the grandstand, standing
+up and waving his hat--and then at last the marshal beckoned them to
+cross to the sparkling ring of other craft in the background. The
+winning launches, floats, rowboats and canoes were to act as a guard of
+honor to escort the royal float back to the grandstand, where the court
+carriages for the king and queen of the carnival waited.
+
+They went to this place at last, and paused by their friends, the Camp
+Fire float and Marie's canoe.
+
+"We got a fourth prize!" called Marie gayly as Winona stopped by her.
+"Oh, Winona, you darling! You always were a mascot!"
+
+"Marie always was an angel," thought Winona to herself. Edith was not so
+selfless.
+
+"Congratulations, Win," she said bravely, holding out a tinsel-wrapped
+wrist across the canoes. "I'm glad you got it--but I wish we could have
+had something better. I think we deserved it."
+
+"You certainly did," said Winona warmly. "But it doesn't much matter,
+you know, Edith. The main thing people will notice is that Camp Karonya
+landed three prizes. And think of that loving-cup sitting up, with 'Won
+by Camp Karonya,' on it!"
+
+"Aren't you going to have your name put on it?" asked Edith.
+
+"Certainly not!" said Winona. "It's a Camp trophy. I shall put my name
+on the back of the check for twenty-five dollars. That is pleasure
+enough."
+
+"I think we've 'done noble,' all of us," said Marie. The canoes were
+paddling off by now, but the going was slow, and they could still talk.
+
+"What did the float get?" asked Winona. "You know we were blown off in
+the dark, and lost track of events till the marshal came after us."
+
+"Second," answered both girls together.
+
+"You were the belle of the ball," added Marie.
+
+"Well, I don't think we did so badly," declared Edith. "A first, second
+and a fourth prize all to one camp. I hope nobody thinks we got more
+than our share."
+
+"We didn't," said Winona. "Oh, I'm so happy!"
+
+"I'm rather pleased myself," said Billy's quiet voice from the other end
+of the canoe.
+
+But it was not until the royal float had been escorted home, and
+everything was broken up, and Tom and Billy were paddling Winona back to
+camp, that he said what he really thought.
+
+"I'm mighty glad you got that first prize," he said. "You deserved it if
+anybody ever did, for being such a little sport about dropping out of
+the float. I'd blow a lot of that money in right away if I were you, to
+congratulate myself."
+
+"After I've paid back what I owe certain people," said Winona, "I shall
+divide with the Camp treasury. Even then I'll have a lot more than I
+ever thought of getting."
+
+"Anyway, you were a real sport, and you deserved everything that was
+coming to you," repeated Billy, in which Tom agreed with him. And when
+your brother approves of you and says so you can generally be sure that
+you have done something remarkably right.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER NINETEEN
+
+
+Next day was the "cold gray dawn of the morning after." Not that it was
+particularly cold or gray, but there was all the unnailing of the float
+to do, and the dismantling of the two decorated canoes. The girls wound
+the tinsel off carefully for use on future Christmas trees, and packed
+away in a box what other decorations were not perishable, for you never
+know when you're going to need things. Otherwise they sat around and
+gloated softly over Camp Karonya's exceeding brilliancy in carrying off
+prizes in large quantities.
+
+Mrs. Bryan would not let Winona divide her money with the Camp, because
+they had enough already to see them through the rest of the time they
+were to spend there; and then, too, the second prize that the float had
+won was fifteen dollars.
+
+Nothing else memorable happened that day, except that Nataly Lee left
+for home. She was thinner and in better condition than she had been when
+she came, but she frankly didn't like the life. To her, carrying water,
+instead of being a lark, was a nuisance. She had no particular pride in
+working for beads, and it was thought she was hungry for paper novels.
+It worried her, too, that she was getting burned brown. So she went back
+to her mother. The girls saw her off, and sang her a cheer, and were as
+good as they could be. But it is not to be denied that Camp Karonya felt
+a little relief at her going.
+
+After that nothing happened but regular camp work for three days. And
+then Louise proceeded to distinguish herself. It was to be expected.
+
+Tom and Billy had taken Winona and Louise off for a day's fishing in the
+canoe. As usual, Winona and Louise provided the lunch, the boys the
+fishing-tackle and the canoe, and the fish were to be divided at the end
+of the day. They had fished most of the lazy, sunny morning, and it was
+noon. They climbed out of the canoe by a spring, washed their hands, and
+set out the lunch; the canoe was too fishy to be used as a dining-hall.
+
+"Do you think that four of us can possibly eat all that?" inquired
+Billy, eying the piles of sandwiches, the veal loaf, the whole cake and
+the can of pears which graced the paper napkins on the grass.
+
+"Well," explained Winona, "the truth is, Louise and I rather doubled up
+on this lunch. We were both afraid there wouldn't be enough, and each
+went separately and brought half a chocolate cake. You see it's cut down
+the middle. I merely joined the twin halves for the sake of looks. But
+do you think that's too many sandwiches for four people with real
+appetites?"
+
+"I don't," said Tom decidedly. "I'll attend to anything that's left
+over. A very nice amount of lunch--just right. Watch me!"
+
+But they did not watch him because they were otherwise engaged. None of
+them had small appetites, and they all did good work. Just the same when
+they were through there were a generous piece of cake, a fat slice of
+veal loaf, and seven sandwiches left.
+
+"I told you so," said Billy. "Here, Tommy, it is up to you. Have these
+seven nice sandwiches."
+
+"Can't be done," said Tom regretfully. "I've had that many. I had three
+pieces of cake, too."
+
+"Doesn't matter!" said Billy. "A gentleman's word of honor----"
+
+He prepared to jump on Tom and hold him, while Louise held a sandwich
+ready to insert.
+
+"Ow!" said Tom. "Help! This is cruelty to animals. Pry him off, Winnie!"
+
+"Oh, let up, please!" said Winona. "You know, he might explode, and
+mother'd feel badly."
+
+Billy took one knee off, and Tom wriggled more vigorously. Louise
+relented, and the two girls were trying to pull Billy off Tom. They had
+almost succeeded, when a little rustle behind them made Winona, whose
+senses were the most alert, let go and turn. The others followed her
+eyes. They sat up and looked, and Tom jumped to his feet and began to
+dust himself off.
+
+The newcomer, who was a most forlorn and bedraggled little girl, spoke
+very welcome words.
+
+"Me's very hundry!" she said pathetically.
+
+"You poor little thing!" said Louise. "Come here, dear; there's lots for
+you to eat." The little girl made straight for her. Louise got out a
+fresh paper napkin, and piled sandwiches, loaf, cake and all on it.
+
+"Wait a minute," said Billy. "Is all that good for so little a
+girl--hadn't you better give her one at a time?"
+
+Louise held the veal loaf poised in air on her fork. "Will your mother
+let you eat this?" she asked.
+
+[Illustration: THE CHILD BEGAN TO EAT EVERYTHING AT ONCE]
+
+The bedraggled small child sat down on the grass, as if the words were
+an invitation. She was a pretty, dirty child of perhaps five, dressed
+only in a soiled and ragged underwaist and petticoat, and with a mane of
+very long and heavy hair, all tangles and elf-locks. Her hair was yellow
+and her eyes big and blue, and she would have been pretty had she been
+cared-for looking.
+
+"Ain't got any mother," she said, "just Vicky. She lets me."
+
+"Poor little thing!" said Louise again, and handed her the veal loaf.
+The child began to eat everything at once, with an eagerness which made
+it certain she had told the truth, at least, about being hungry.
+
+"What's your name, kiddie? You'll tell me, won't you?" asked Billy, when
+she seemed to have taken the edge off her appetite. He bent down to her
+with a sympathetic expression which he possessed at times, and which--or
+something about him--won the hearts of most small children he had
+dealings with.
+
+"Sandy," she said through large mouthfuls.
+
+"Sandy what?" inquired Louise.
+
+"Sandy Mitchell. Gimme more cake?"
+
+As she had had two large slices, it was thought best not to give her any
+more.
+
+"Mercy, no!" said Winona, as Louise was cutting it, in spite of
+prudence. "Not another bit. We don't want her to die on our hands. You'd
+better come over here by the spring, dear, and let me wash your hands."
+
+Sandy got up immediately, with the placid remark, "It might-a given me a
+pain, anyway," and allowed her hands to be washed, and dried on a fresh
+paper napkin.
+
+"Poor little cowed thing!" exclaimed Louise at this instant obedience.
+"Sandy, dear, won't your people be worried about you?"
+
+"Nope," said Sandy.
+
+"And where do you live?"
+
+"Way, way off," she said. "We just comed. I'll show you to-morrow."
+
+"Poor little dear thing!" said Louise. "How pretty she is! Winnie, I've
+a good mind to adopt her."
+
+"Having only five at home," murmured Tom.
+
+"From the way she talks her people wouldn't care," said Louise. "Maybe
+Camp Karonya could take care of her. We will till we go back, anyway."
+
+"She must belong to one of those poor families along the west branch,"
+said Tom. "Three miles away, and we can't possibly get there by
+canoeing, because we'd have to paddle back seven miles before we could
+paddle over the three. Who's going to walk three miles and a half by the
+thermometer to take the lady home? Don't all speak at once."
+
+"Do you live up there?" Louise asked her. "And does your father drink?"
+
+"Yep," said Sandy. "Favver? Course he dwinks. Evvybody dwinks."
+
+"Think of being brought up to think things like that," said Louise.
+
+"Don't you think," suggested Winona, "that we'd better take her back to
+camp? I don't know the way to the place Tom talks about, and maybe it
+would be best for Mrs. Bryan to take her anyway, if they do drink."
+
+"Good idea," said everybody. Sandy herself seemed pleased, and attached
+herself to them as readily as a stray puppy would have done. They
+cleared up leisurely, then got back into the canoe, taking the child in,
+too. It was rather a close fit, though it was an eighteen-foot canoe,
+but they managed it. She was no more trouble than Puppums would have
+been--Puppums, fortunately, had been left with Florence. They had a good
+day with the fishing, and trailed into Camp Karonya at six with fish for
+breakfast; and Sandy.
+
+"Good luck!" were Tom's parting words. "We'll come to-morrow and help
+you take her back, if you like."
+
+"You needn't bother," said his sister. "We'll take the faithful
+rowboat."
+
+"We aren't going to take her back!" insisted Louise. "I'm going to adopt
+her. Sandy, wouldn't you like to live with me? _I'd_ dress you in nice
+clothes and give you a dolly."
+
+"An' five cents?" demanded Sandy, "An' things to eat?"
+
+"Oh, the poor baby!" said Louise. "She's had to think about money and
+food and grown-up things like the poor little children you read about in
+the pamphlets. Yes, indeed, you shall, Sandy."
+
+"She looks well-fed," said Tom. "Well, good luck. Don't get a reputation
+for collecting them--you mayn't be able to dispose of orphans as easily
+as you can kittens."
+
+They parted, and Louise carried Sandy into camp. They arrived as supper
+was about ready. The Blue Birds carried the fish off to the ice-box (it
+was literally a box, a very ingenious arrangement of sawdust and wood
+which had meant a bead for Elizabeth) and the rest clustered about
+Louise's treasure-trove.
+
+"Better find out if she really needs adopting," advised Marie as they
+sat around the long table, and Sandy exercised an appetite as large as
+her noon one.
+
+"With a drunken father, and no mother, and looking like that?" fired up
+Louise. "I'm going to wash her after supper."
+
+There seemed no connection between washing her and adopting her, but
+there evidently was to Louise.
+
+"Want me to help?" offered Winona. "It ought to be more fun than washing
+Puppums."
+
+"I hope she won't howl and try to climb over the side of the tub, the
+way he does," said Louise. "Yes, thank you, I'd love to be helped."
+
+A warm bath in a foot-tub, following directly on a large meal of corn
+fritters, baked potatoes and huckle-berries, ought nearly to have killed
+Sandy, but it didn't.
+
+"I never dreamed you meant to do more than wash her face and hands,"
+protested Marie, who, as the guardian of the Blue Birds, had ideas about
+such things. But it was too late. Anyway, there was no visible effect.
+Sandy awakened next morning, well, happy, and still hungry. They had
+given her Nataly's bunk with Mrs. Bryan. Helen bunked with Elizabeth,
+because Nataly said the girls tossed, and Mrs. Bryan didn't.
+
+While Sandy slept Louise and Winona were busy. Louise woke Winona at
+five, and they heated water, filled the charcoal-iron, and washed and
+ironed and mended Sandy's underclothes. While Louise darned Sandy's
+socks, Winona ironed the garments dry. Then they foraged about the
+store-shed, which was a warm place at that time of year even in the
+early morning, and found a white dress of Florence's which Winona
+thought she had remembered bringing.
+
+When found it proved much too large for Sandy, but Louise was still
+enthusiastic, and took it up with such good will that two of the tucks
+she put in had to be ripped out again when they came to dress Sandy in
+it. They polished the small strapped shoes the child had taken off,
+sewed the button of each on more firmly, and decided that they looked
+almost new.
+
+Then Winona went back to awaken her own little sister. When she returned
+to Louise's tent she found her friend had finished giving Sandy another
+bath. She was just dressing her.
+
+"I don't believe this poor little thing knows what a thorough bath is,"
+she greeted Winona over the child's head.
+
+"Yes, I do, too," said Sandy. "But I had one last night, an' you've been
+an' given me anuvver now!"
+
+"I think I'll box her hair, too," went on Louise. "It is getting rather
+common now, but she has so much, and it's so untidy, that it would
+really be the best thing even if I didn't keep her."
+
+"I wouldn't do her hair till you're sure we're going to keep her,"
+objected Winona. "Her people mightn't like it."
+
+"A dissipated father and a poor little overworked elder sister--Vicky is
+your sister, isn't she, Sandy?--and a home where they don't even wash or
+feed her? Poor people haven't time to take care of hair like this.
+Anyway, they haven't done it, for it was tangled awfully," she finished
+conclusively.
+
+"But it's so pretty!" protested Winona. "Just look at it, nearly to her
+waist, and thick and curly, and such a lovely gold color!"
+
+"So much the worse for her health," said Louise as promptly as
+Red-Riding-Hood's wolf. "Sandy, wouldn't you like your hair cut nice and
+short, so it wouldn't get tangled any more?"
+
+"An' twousers?" demanded Sandy hopefully. "Gee, zat's gweat!"
+
+"I'll have to stop her using slang," said Louise. "No, dear, not exactly
+twousers, but--I could get her some overalls, couldn't I, Win?"
+
+"I suppose so," said Winona.
+
+"Then I will," said Louise.
+
+"You're gweat, too," said Sandy, turning around where she sat on
+Louise's lap, and throwing both little bare arms around her neck and
+kissing her. Louise kissed her back warmly.
+
+"Isn't she a dear?" she said. "Winnie, will you please hand me the
+scissors?"
+
+"No," said Winona, "I won't. It's wicked to spoil pretty hair like
+that." And she walked out of the tent.
+
+"I'll det 'em," said Sandy, slipping down and bringing them to Louise
+from the table at the end of the tent.
+
+"Here's a piece of ribbon to tie it with, if you won't cut it off," said
+Winona, reappearing with a wide length of blue taffeta.
+
+"No, thank you," said Louise, cutting industriously and very neatly. "It
+would just be in her eyes all the time. I'm going to cut it straight
+across her eyebrows, like a little boy's."
+
+"I did it to all my dolls once," said Winona. She sat down, though, and
+watched Louise till she was done.
+
+Louise had washed the little girl's hair when she gave her the second
+bath, and when it was even and short enough to suit her she finished
+dressing the child in her white frock, and set her on the grass outside,
+to dry in the sunshine. She gave her a picture book to look at to keep
+her amused. The bobbed locks, thick and curly, fluffed out charmingly in
+a yellow bush around the sweet little face.
+
+"It's becoming," admitted Winona. "She looks like a cherub, or a
+choir-boy on a Christmas card. There is the signal for breakfast. You
+just got her dry in time."
+
+"Breakfast?" said Sandy, brightening.
+
+"Poor little darling!" said Louise, catching and kissing her. "I don't
+believe she ever had anything to eat before she came here!"
+
+They went to breakfast in state, and Sandy's golden aureole and clean
+white frock made quite a sensation at the table. They piled things up
+for her to sit on, and she was put where Mrs. Bryan could reach her, and
+argue with her easily if she misbehaved. But she acted very well indeed.
+Her table-manners were good, considering, she talked without the least
+shyness, and managed to eat a very large breakfast. Louise beamed with
+pride over the impression her protegee was making.
+
+When breakfast was over, and Sandy turned loose again to play with
+Puppums and Florence, to whom she had taken a violent fancy, Louise
+packed a market-basket with everything a starving family might need.
+Then she found her purse, summoned Winona, and they took the rowboat and
+went forth, Sandy and Puppums in the bottom of it.
+
+They rowed along the west branch, a narrow stream that doubled at right
+angles from the branch the camps were on. It was lined with pretty
+summer cottages for a part of the way, then after that, at the very end,
+came a part that was filled with poor people who had squatted there. But
+long before they came to the poorest part Sandy desired to land.
+
+"Here we is!" she said cheerfully, at a prosperous-looking dock about a
+third of the way up.
+
+"Not here, dearie," said Louise. "It's probably some place where the
+poor child's been fed," she added aside to Winona.
+
+"We may as well get out, though, mayn't we?" suggested Winona. "Maybe
+they can tell us where she comes from."
+
+They tied the boat and got out, and walked down a deep lane for a while.
+Presently they came to a large white house in the middle of a couple of
+acres of half-yard, half-lawn looking land.
+
+The doors and windows were all wide open, but there was no one to be
+seen. Sandy walked into the hall with an assured tread, took a long
+breath, and called at the top of her lungs, "Vicky! Vick-ee!"
+
+The girls stood at the door and waited, ready to apologize for their
+charge's rudeness whenever somebody might appear. In about five minutes,
+during which Sandy continued to shout, they heard a light, slow step
+along the upper hall. Presently a slim, dark, rather pretty little girl
+of about eleven scuffed down the stairs. She had on a kimono over her
+nightgown, though it was quite late in the morning.
+
+"That you, Sand?" she called as she came. "Goodness, you're up early!"
+
+"This is Vicky," Sandy explained to the girls over her shoulder. "Vicky!
+I've had two baths!"
+
+Louise stood, for once, speechless. She hung mechanically to the handle
+of the basketful of provisions, but she was too surprised to move. It
+was Winona who finally took courage to come forward and explain.
+
+"I'm Winona Merriam," she said, "and this is my friend, Louise Lane. We
+are over at Camp Karonya, the Camp Fire, you know. We found this little
+girl yesterday, and we came over to-day to bring her home. Does
+she--does she belong here?"
+
+"Why, of course she does," said Vicky. "Thank you for bringing her.
+She's always trailing off that way, aren't you, Sand? How long you been
+gone?"
+
+"Is she your sister?" asked Louise, who had her breath by this time.
+
+"M'hm," nodded Vicky. "Why--why, Alexandra Mitchell, where's your hair?"
+
+"It got boxed!" exclaimed Sandy gleefully. "Isn't it nice?"
+
+"I'm afraid we'll have to explain about that," said Winona bravely.
+"Your little sister strayed into a little fishing-trip four of us were
+having yesterday, very hungry and rather dirty, and without all her
+clothes on. And from the way she talked we thought she was--well, we
+washed her and dressed her, and--I'm sorry--shortened her hair, it was
+so tangled. I'm ever so sorry. I think it will grow----"
+
+Vicky stared a minute at Alexandra, very proud of herself, neat, clean,
+dressed and bobbed. Then instead of being angry she sat down on the
+floor, where she was, and burst into a fit of laughter.
+
+"You thought--you thought--oh, my _goodness!_"
+
+"Yes," said Winona. She sat down, too, and finally went off herself.
+"Yes--we _did!_"
+
+"And you brought food for the hungry family----" Vicky's eye fell on the
+large basket which Louise still held stiffly before her. "Oh, oh, oh!
+And Uncle Will's pride, Sandy's hair, that he made a picture of that
+sold for ever so much money--oh, my goodness _gracious!_"
+
+She and Winona both began to laugh again. Louise didn't. She stood
+against the wall like a wax statue.
+
+"It certainly is funny," said Vicky at last, mopping her eyes, "but I'm
+good and glad about Sandy's hair. It was an awful nuisance to take care
+of, and Uncle Will _would_ keep it that way so he could paint pictures
+of it. Won't you stay and have some breakfast? We have a cook."
+
+"No, thank you," said Louise hurriedly, "we've had our breakfast."
+
+"What an awful noise, children!" said a voice; and a rather rumpled man
+appeared. He had an absent look, and also gave an impression of not
+having been to bed all night. He had a paint-brush in his hand.
+
+Vicky and Sandy sprang for him, hanging to him.
+
+"Oh, Uncle Will, this is two Camp Fire girls," said Sandy. "They cutted
+my hair when I was lost. Ain't it cute?"
+
+"_Oh!_" said Uncle Will, and looked as aghast as Louise had. "How did
+this accident happen?"
+
+"It wasn't an accident," said Sandy. "Louise boxed my head, an' gived me
+two baths!"
+
+Uncle Will--so far as the girls learned that was all the name he
+had--uttered another faint exclamation. Then he dived back into his room
+as if he wanted to bear the shock alone.
+
+"I'm so sorry!" said Winona, who found she had all the talking to do.
+"I'm afraid your uncle doesn't like it!"
+
+"Oh, he's only got an artistic temp'rament," said Vicky, as if it were a
+disease uncles could not help. "I think Sandy's goin' to, too. Do stay
+to breakfast. We'll have things out o' your basket if you will."
+
+"No, thank you," said Winona. "I think Louise is in a hurry to go home.
+Come over and see us. It isn't far if you have a boat."
+
+"We'll get somebody to bring us," said Vicky. "I'd come now if I was
+dressed."
+
+"It wouldn't be a bad plan if you dressed a little earlier," said Winona
+frankly. "Are there just you two?"
+
+"Nope," said Vicky, "there's Lancy, too. He's eight. Uncle Will tries to
+bring us up, but he don't know how so very well."
+
+"Well, when you come down to camp we can tell you a lot of things if
+you'd like us to," said Winona.
+
+"Maybe," said Vicky indifferently. "But it's all right this way. You can
+try telling us, though."
+
+"Well, good-bye," said Louise--it was all she had contributed to the
+conversation, but she seemed to contribute it gladly.
+
+So they went, still carrying the basket.
+
+"Wait!" called Sandy's voice behind them when they had gone a little
+way. "I'm goin' back wiv you! You said you'd 'dopted me!"
+
+"But we didn't know your uncle wasn't poor then," said Louise. "We can't
+take you away from him."
+
+"You 'dopted me," said Sandy doggedly, "an' I'm goin' wiv you--so
+there!" And she thrust her wet little hand into Louise's and trotted
+along beside them. "Louise--wasn't there cake in the basket?"
+
+"You have cake at home, dear," said Louise. But she looked as if she
+felt a little better. After all, even if an orphan didn't need adopting,
+it was a pleasure to find that she liked it.
+
+"Like you best," insisted Sandy. "Goin' to stay wiv you. They don't
+care!"
+
+"Oh, let's let her, just for to-day, anyhow!" said Winona. "I don't
+believe anybody'll mind."
+
+"All right," said Louise rather as if she wanted to. They got into the
+boat again, and rowed to camp.
+
+"Sandy," asked Louise, "what did you mean by saying your father drank?
+You haven't any father."
+
+"Well, I did have," said Sandy. "And of sourse he did dwink when there
+was a him. Evvybody does. Little flowers do. My governess said so."
+
+"Your _governess!_" said Louise. "Is your uncle rich enough for you to
+have a governess--and you go trailing round in your underwaist and
+petticoat!"
+
+"When he draws pictures an' sells 'em he is. When he don't he don't.
+Gimme some cake?"
+
+Sandy was evidently quite calm about her way of living.
+
+"She mayn't need adopting, but she certainly needs reforming," said
+Louise vigorously.
+
+They were paddling past the Scouts' camp by now. Louise was quite
+willing to go past softly, but Sandy yelled, for she saw Billy.
+
+"Hello, girls!" he called. "Back already? Got all the papers signed?"
+
+"No, I haven't," said Louise. "And, Billy, if you ask me any more
+questions, I'll jump over and drown!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY
+
+
+The Camp Fire might all grin broadly whenever it spoke of Louise's
+adoption--even more broadly than it had at Winona's cat-collection: but
+the adoptee herself was quite serious about it. Adopted she was by the
+Camp Fire in general and Louise in particular, and adopted she meant to
+stay. She went home once in awhile--there was nobody to worry about her,
+it seemed, when she stayed away--but as a rule she considered herself a
+Camp Fire Girl. She was too young to be a Blue Bird, but that didn't
+make any difference. Finally she was given the official position of
+third sub-mascot, ranking after Puppums and Hike the Camp Cat.
+Unofficially, she got better training than she appeared to have had for
+some time, for she knew that to stay in Camp she had to obey rules.
+Vicky never did come over. Once in awhile they would return Sandy to her
+home, just for politeness, but it didn't seem to be specially required
+of them.
+
+"We ought to have a grand entertainment," declared Marie one day, "and
+invite all the summer people who bought our things."
+
+"Yes," Louise approved, "and then, perhaps, if we made them happy,
+they'd buy some more."
+
+"Well, I was thinking of charging for the entertainment," demurred
+Marie.
+
+"But wouldn't it be piling things up just a wee bit too much?" asked
+Louise.
+
+"Perhaps," admitted Marie.
+
+"What were you thinking of having?" asked Winona.
+
+It was at the end of a weekly Council Fire, and the girls were lying
+about, as usual, on the hill.
+
+"I was wondering"--from Marie a little doubtfully--"if we could have
+some tableaux from Maeterlinck, with readings. I could do the readings."
+
+"What's Maeterlinck?" asked Louise cheerfully. "Something good to eat?"
+
+"No, you goose!" instructed Marie. "He wrote the 'Blue Bird,' and--oh, a
+lot of plays."
+
+"Nice ones?" asked Louise. "Lots of people running around doing exciting
+things?"
+
+"No," admitted Marie. "Nothing much happens. But it's very elevating."
+
+"I don't feel as if I wanted to be elevated, somehow," said Louise
+firmly, "and I'm sure those summer people don't; they come here to relax
+and enjoy themselves, and when they want something really high-brow they
+go to the movies and see bears and lions eating each other. They can do
+that right in the place itself."
+
+"I don't believe they'd come to a Maeterlinck show, either, Marie," so
+said Mrs. Bryan. "We can take him up to read this winter, if the girls
+want to know more about him. But he isn't exactly the author for a
+summer entertainment--especially if we want to make money."
+
+"We do," said Marie who had a strictly practical side to her.
+
+"Does it have to be an author?" Helen wanted to know.
+
+"It seems to," said Louise.
+
+"I have an idea!" exclaimed Winona, sitting up.
+
+"Is it an author?" asked Louise.
+
+"Yes!" said Winona, "it is!"
+
+"Well?" from everybody.
+
+"Samantha Allen!" cried Winona eagerly. "My plan's this. Have somebody
+dress like Samantha--you know the pictures--and tell all about herself
+to begin with. Then we could make a big, wooden frame--we have those
+boards left from the float--and Samantha could turn over the leaves of
+the album, and describe the characters in her books one by one, as they
+were shown in the frame. We could call it 'Samantha's Picter-Album,' or
+something like that."
+
+"I saw an entertainment that was something of that sort once," said
+Adelaide. "But it was just a frame with old-fashioned pictures, like
+daguerrotypes. There wasn't any Samantha, or any talking. I should think
+this would be lots better. But would it last a whole evening, and make
+the Wampoag people think they'd had their money's worth?"
+
+"I think so," said Louise. "And anyway, if it wasn't so very long we
+could amuse the visitors by showing them over the camp, and telling them
+all about our customs and habits. Maybe we could do a folk-dance for
+them afterwards."
+
+"Oh, yes, of course we could!" said Edith, whose specialty it was. "We
+could give them an Indian dance as easy as anything, and that Russian
+one I learned before I came. I can teach it to eight of us."
+
+"I know how to dance the minuet," suggested Helen. "How many had it in
+that Washington's Birthday thing Miss Green's class had last year?"
+
+Five had, it seemed. As a minuet only needs ten performers it was very
+simple to polish that up. And all of them knew Indian dances already. So
+a committee was appointed to get up the costumes. The Indian dresses
+were there already. For the Russian dance Edith thought head-dresses of
+paper muslin would do and aprons of colored scrim, over white skirts and
+turned-under, slipped-under-the-skirt middy blouses. For the
+minuet--well, there was cheese-cloth in red and yellow that Marie had
+had on her canoe; everyone could powder her hair and contrive a
+'kerchief. The pannier draperies could be pinned into place, and broad
+bodices of Winona's black paper muslin from the canoe-trimming could be
+cut and pinned into place with very little trouble. Helen and Edith and
+Adelaide were told off to see about the costuming; Edith, as she had to
+train the others in dancing, had nothing but supervision to do. Helen
+and Adelaide did what little actual work was needed.
+
+"The main thing this entertainment needs seems to be pins," said Helen
+the third day after they had decided to have it. It was a Thursday, and
+they planned the affair for the next Monday night. "We're nearly out of
+them."
+
+So eight papers of pins were bought, not to speak of a good deal of
+white paper muslin. The girls were assigned their different characters
+in the Album, and each left to her own cleverness in getting up the
+costume. About midway in the preparations it suddenly dawned on the
+girls, who had gotten all the Samantha books from the Wampoag library,
+and had their families send them on the ones they owned, that boys were
+needed.
+
+So a committee consisting of all the sisters was sent up the lake to
+borrow Boy Scouts. It wasn't the easiest thing in the world, for boys
+seem to dislike "dressing up" as much as girls like it; but Mr. Gedney
+was Camp Karonya's friend, and they went back with all the boys they
+needed promised them--if they would look after the costumes and not
+expect the Scouts to rehearse.
+
+Louise was appointed a Committee of Tickets, with Elizabeth to help her.
+Louise was a born ticket-seller. She loved it. She and Elizabeth put in
+most of their waking hours exchanging bits of ecru cardboard with small
+red things on them (meant for Camp Fires) for thirty-five cents. And
+they did very well. They got permission of all the drug-stores and many
+other stores, to put up posters, which were camp-made, also, of course.
+So by the time the fateful night arrived quite a goodly crowd was
+ferried over to Camp Karonya by the Scouts' canoes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At eight precisely the audience, accommodated on long planks which
+reached from box to box, saw a curtain pulled away from between two
+trees. Nothing was to be seen in its place but a plump red album
+standing out against a background which represented every sheet in the
+camp. They had used Marie's red cheese-cloth after all, instead of
+Winona's black paper muslin. As for the framework, that was a work of
+art for which several of the girls were responsible. It had taken all
+the manual training they knew, and a little bit more--they had had to
+call Tom Merriam, whose hobby was carpentry, before they got it all
+right--but the general effect was gorgeous. The audience was given a
+fair amount of time to appreciate the beauty of the album, which was
+about eight feet high. Then Marie stepped out. She had been elected to
+the very responsible part of Samantha because her memory was good,
+rather than because she looked it. But she had done excellently with
+what means she had. Two small pillows for a foundation, a pink wrapper
+with large black spots, sent on from home, an elderly bonnet borrowed
+from a friendly farmer's wife, a substantial gingham apron, spectacles,
+a Paisley shawl, and a large palm-leaf fan, completed a get-up that
+would have disguised Marie Hunter effectually from her own best friend.
+
+When she thought she had waited long enough to give the audience a
+chance to appreciate her she curtsied, and reaching over, pulled at the
+album cover with the crock of a green-handled umbrella. The inside page
+of the album was imitated by a frame with white muslin tightly stretched
+over it, and an oval hole in the middle for the picture. In the hole
+just now was a meek, chin-whiskered face surrounded by a high
+collar--Mr. Gedney, normally. Samantha pointed to this proudly.
+
+"Brethren and sisteren," began Samantha, after she had introduced
+herself, "this here is my lawful, though sometimes wayward, pardner
+Josiah Allen. I was married to him in a brand-new green silk gown, made
+pollynay, and Mother Jones's parlor, come twenty year ago. Our mutual
+affection has been a beakin ever since, though I can't deny it has
+sputtered some once in awhile, and burned purty low, tryin' times like
+house-cleanin' an' wash-days."
+
+She went on with the famous tale of "How the Bamberses borrowed Josiah,"
+cutting it short when she heard the tiny bell behind the scene tinkle,
+as a signal that another picture was ready. Then she jerked the cover to
+with her umbrella-handle, and operated it again. This time the inside
+leaf had been fastened back with the lid, for this was a full-sized
+picture. The audience, by this time, was laughing at nearly everything
+she said, for Marie was a capital mimic, and she had picked out and
+strung together all the funniest things she could find in the Samantha
+Allen books.
+
+"This here," announced Samantha, "is my step-children, Thomas Jefferson
+and Tirzah Ann. They ain't bad children, if I do say it as shouldn't,
+and I have brung 'em up like they wuz my own."
+
+Winona was Tirzah. She sat stiffly in a high-backed chair (the back was
+pasteboard, covered with black muslin, cut in a Chippendale sort of way)
+and she wore a full, flowered gown, with her hair looped over her ears
+and fastened in the back to a "chignon" with two fat curls hanging from
+it. They had put Tom with her, with a view to mutual support. He, too,
+had a preposterous collar (collars may be made by the dozen if you have
+scissors and patience, and the Camp Fire Girls had both) and a flowered
+vest. His baggy clothes and a tall hat at his feet completed a picture
+that was so much like the ones you do see in old albums that the
+audience began to clap before Marie was through her introduction.
+
+"Woof!" said Tom when he got out of the frame. "Never again for me!" He
+turned to grin at Billy, who had still to go on. Billy was supposed to
+be 'Submit Tewksbury's beau, a dashin' city feller,' and he was trying
+to get an appropriate amount of dash into his mustaches.
+
+"Every time I go up against Camp Karonya," responded Billy sadly, "I
+have to do something that needs a lot of stiffening. I had to work two
+hours over that fiend tail of mine, and these whiskers are just as bad."
+
+"It'll be worse when you have real ones," remarked Louise consolingly.
+She was acting as putter-on-of-finishing-touches. There was a
+dressing-tent apiece for the girls and boys, and Billy was on the
+outside of his, trying to arrange the mustache to his liking by means of
+a small mirror pinned to the canvas.
+
+"At least I won't have to worry about their sticking on," was his reply.
+
+"There," said Louise, "they'll do now."
+
+"Billy and Adelaide wanted!" called Edith.
+
+Adelaide, on account of a mournful expression that still appeared at
+times, had been selected for "Submit Tewksbury," who had a broken heart
+and was good to one relative after another for thirty years or more. She
+had been told to look as sad as she possibly could, and she was posed
+with a medicine bottle and spoon, with which she had just--so Samantha
+explained--been nursing her relatives. Billy, behind her, looked very
+cheerful and debonair with his jaunty mustache and a very gaudy shirt
+which--so he said afterwards--he had bought especially for the occasion,
+for thirty-nine cents marked down from fifty. It had a large, spotty
+pattern on it, and it looked _very_ festive.
+
+The tableaux went smoothly on. Marie remembered all her lines, the
+audience appeared to enjoy it all very much, when suddenly in the midst
+of a speech she remembered something, and halted, secretly referring to
+the list of pictures which was pinned inside her palm-leaf fan. Widder
+Doodle, Submit Tewksbury, Elder Minkley, Maggie Snow--yes, they were
+four past Betsy Bobbet, the crowning glory of the evening, and no Betsy
+Bobbet had there been! Marie pulled herself together and thought a
+minute, talking on meanwhile.
+
+"Brethren and sisteren," she said, "I hope you'll excuse me for a
+minute. My wind's a gittin' low, and my new congress gaiters pinch me
+some. I'm goin' to ask you to wait a bit, till I fetch me a drink of
+water."
+
+The audience laughed, and clapped, as it had been doing most of the
+evening, and Samantha scuttled distractedly behind the scenes, where she
+clutched the nearest person to her. It happened to be Mrs. Bryan, who
+was making up one of the boys under a light.
+
+"Where's Betsy Bobbet--I mean Lilian Green?" she asked hurriedly. "It's
+way past her turn, and she's never been in at all."
+
+"Oh, my dear, didn't anyone tell you?" said Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"They couldn't," said Marie. "I've been out front all this time."
+
+"I'm awfully sorry," said Mrs. Bryan. "Can't you do without her? She
+slipped and tore her costume so badly that it wasn't fit to appear in.
+She could pose, of course, but the tears would show."
+
+"I went right down over a tent-pole," explained Lilian, appearing to
+speak for herself. She was indeed badly torn, not to speak of the fact
+that she was limping a little. Her bonnet and veil--a green
+mosquito-netting veil--were wrecked--and she had managed to muddy
+herself thoroughly, too.
+
+"You certainly made a thorough job of it!" exclaimed Marie. "But oh,
+Mrs. Bryan, what shall I do? I've been talking about her all the
+evening--leading up to her. She's the keystone of the whole
+performance."
+
+"It would be a case of Hamlet with Hamlet left out without her, then,
+would it?" queried Mrs. Bryan. "My dear, I don't know what to say. If
+Lilian were damaged somebody else could supply her place, but we haven't
+any understudy for Lilian's clothes!"
+
+"There's only one thing to do," offered Winona, coming over from a group
+of girls. "Have her go on anyway, Marie, and make up something to
+explain why she looks so funny. Explain why she's so torn and
+crumpled--make a joke of it, so they'll think it was all on purpose."
+
+"Winnie, you're the pride of my life!" vowed Marie. "I'll have to do
+just that. It will be hard," she added doubtfully.
+
+"Oh, no, it won't," and Winona laughed reassuringly, "you're the
+cleverest one of us, and if you can't make up some reason why Betsy
+Bobbet looks mussed, nobody can. Now go on out and do it."
+
+She gave her a little push.
+
+"Ray-of-Light, you're a dear!" Marie said affectionately as she turned
+and went out. "Put Lilian in the frame just as she is, please," she
+said. "I think I can manage it."
+
+Lilian laughed a little at the idea of displaying herself to two hundred
+summer people looking as if she had come out of a subway accident, but
+she got into position like the good-natured girl she was, and Marie
+heard the little bell and began to make her impromptu explanation.
+
+"My friend, Betsy Bobbet, she's a considerable kind of a curis person,"
+she said. "She's sorter sentimental, an' sometimes she's too impulsive.
+Now, just before she had this daguerrotype took that I'm goin' to show
+you, she was writin' a pome to the Muse. This is how it went:
+
+ "Muse of Poetry
+ I would do much for thee
+ And I am full of tears
+ Because I have been writin' so many years
+ And still unappreciated I be--
+
+"Betsy can write pomes like that any time," explained Marie, and the
+audience giggled. "But I always tell Betsy," Marie went on, "that
+walkin' cross-lots ain't any place to compose poetry to Muses. Well, she
+was walkin' 'cross-lots in a brown study an' a red-striped morey waist,
+speakin' this out loud as she went. An' she got to gesturin' before she
+thought. An' Farmer Peedick, him that married Jane Ann Allen, had jest
+let his best bull out in the field. An' whether it was the red morey
+waist or the pome Betsy never did know, but she thinks it was the pome.
+She says she thinks the bull, not bein' used to fust-class poetry, was
+excited. So he just up an' ran after her. Well, she stopped recitin',
+an' ran, too. She jest got over the barb-wire fence in time. But I tell
+you, Betsy Bobbet is a wonderful woman! When she was safe she fixed that
+bull with her eye (it was a poet's eye, she says to me), an' recited the
+remainder of that ode to him. An', ladies an' gentlemen, you mayn't
+believe it, but that bull was cowed! Yes, sir. He looked at her, Betsy
+says to me, as if he was sayin' 'I can't stand that!' an' he ran. Yes,
+sir, he just ran!"
+
+She pulled aside the frame, and there smirked Betsy, very stiff and
+proper, with her bonnet and veil still a wreck and her red morey waist
+very much askew, and with a jagged rent down the front of her skirt. But
+her corkscrew curls twisted gracefully down either side of her face, her
+eyes were rolled up, and her mitted hand clutched a roll of paper. The
+audience howled.
+
+Marie closed the cover, bowed, and went on to the end of the pictures.
+
+The dances--the Indian dance, the minuet and the Russian dance--were
+beautiful and everyone applauded them, though they liked the Indian
+dance best. When they had finished some of the guests, to Louise's great
+delight, demanded Camp Fire work, and bought it, too. After that the
+girls distributed coffee and sandwiches free, and then the Scouts took
+the audience, in relays, up the river to Wampoag.
+
+Before they went somebody said to Marie:
+
+"My dear, you were splendid. I'm going to give that entertainment for
+our church this winter, and write to you for help. But the most
+convincing and amusing picture of the lot was 'Betsy Bobbet.' Do tell me
+how you ever managed to make the thing so life-like?"
+
+But Marie merely looked modest.
+
+"We did the best we could," she said. "It was quite simple, after all."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
+
+
+The next time Billy and Tom and Winona and Louise went off in Billy's
+canoe for the day, they did not take Sandy. She happened to be making
+one of her brief visits home. They took, instead, a shot-gun apiece
+(that is, the boys did), a book apiece (that was for the girls), a
+bagful of socks from the Scouts' mending-basket, and the usual amount of
+lunch.
+
+"We look like an Italian moving," Tom observed critically, looking over
+their joint baggage. "Three fishing-rods, two baskets, two paddles, two
+guns, two sunbonnets. Whew! Louise, I'll trade with you."
+
+"It isn't much at all," said Louise indignantly. "I could carry my
+share, and yours, too, if I had to."
+
+"You may," he returned promptly. "Here's my rifle. It won't go off
+unless you hit the trigger by accident."
+
+"Heap big chief!" said she, not offering to take it. "If I'd remembered
+how you hated carrying innocent little things like this around with
+you"--she pointed to the imposing pile of baskets, books and work in the
+bottom of the canoe--"I'd have telephoned for an expressman."
+
+"Have you a telephone?" asked Tom. "When did you put it in, and what did
+you tie it to?"
+
+"No," said Louise, "but we could have borrowed yours."
+
+The Scouts had just finished installing a telephone from Wampoag to
+their headquarters. They had done nearly everything themselves in the
+way of connecting and so forth. They were very proud of it, and the Camp
+Fire girls were wildly envious, for all _they_ had was a system of
+baking-powder-box-and-wire telephone, worked out from the American
+Girl's Handy Book by two young geniuses. It was all right as far as it
+went, but naturally it wouldn't connect them with the telephones at
+home, or at Wampoag.
+
+"Why, of course you could," consented Tom. "In fact, you can. Shall I
+paddle you that way?"
+
+"You needn't mind," she smiled. "Do look at Winona!"
+
+Winona had one of Marie's books, and she was sitting on the bottom
+reading it, forgetful of the world.
+
+"What does this mean, Billy?" as she looked up suddenly. "Marie has a
+note here in pencil 'But Raleigh was not exclusively Elizabethan!' and
+two exclamation points after it."
+
+"I don't know," Billy answered frankly. "I don't see why Marie wants to
+worry about it."
+
+"Raleigh was Gothic with Queen Anne chimneys," interrupted Tom. "If you
+want information just come to me, little one. Here, Winnie, put down
+that book. It looks too full of useful information for a nice day like
+this. Remember, this is a pleasure exertion."
+
+"All right," and Winona laid down the book. "Only I do wish I knew as
+much as Marie does."
+
+"And yet she never seems to study hard," remarked Louise, to whom
+lessons were a painful grind. "I believe she's like Billy Wiggs of the
+Cabbage-Patch--she 'inherited her education from her paw!'"
+
+"She could!" put in Tom mournfully. "Professor Hunter has enough and too
+much. Just wait till you get under him, Louise!"
+
+"Oh, I can wait. I'm in no hurry at all. He's awfully nice out of school
+hours, but----"
+
+"But why talk about school in vacation?" broke in Billy impatiently.
+"Isn't it a lovely day?"
+
+The girls were curled on the bottom of the canoe, in the middle, and the
+boys were paddling at the ends. The morning breeze, cool and fresh,
+struck their faces, whipping Louise's red hair about her face in little
+curls, and blowing Winona's blue tie straight back over her shoulder in
+the sunshine.
+
+"This is something like living!" Tom declared, spatting the water with
+his paddle because he was so happy. "Pass me about three bananas, will
+you, whoever's nearest the lunch? I feel hungry."
+
+"You aren't," said Louise swiftly. "You just want those bananas because
+you know they're there. Have some poetry instead. I brought a bookful."
+
+"Poetry!" snorted Tom, as she hoped he would.
+
+"Caesar! There's a snipe!" cried Billy, dropping his paddle, reaching for
+a rifle, and taking hasty aim.
+
+"Never touched it," mocked Tom as the report died, and the snipe
+appeared not to have done so at all.
+
+"How do you come to be carrying all these shooting-irons around?" asked
+Louise suspiciously. "I thought Mr. Gedney was pretty strict about it."
+
+"Special permission," explained Tom. "We've both always known how to
+shoot, and old Billy here is supposed to be the most careful thing that
+ever was."
+
+"That wasn't a snipe," said Billy disgustedly. "That was a mosquito, a
+nice tame old Jersey mosquito. I always heard they grew to that size,
+but I never believed it before."
+
+"Don't cast any asparagus," said Louise. "The advertisements say there
+are no mosquitoes here."
+
+Billy eyed the now almost gone snipe.
+
+"Well, he may have been a plain fly," he conceded.... "Let's go on
+hunting. Perhaps we'll find a real snipe next time."
+
+They paddled along lazily for the next three-quarters of an hour,
+talking a little now and then. For the most part, though, they went on
+in silence, except when Louise giggled over "Fables in Slang," which she
+had pulled out of her blouse-pocket, or when someone saw what might be
+game, or especially good scenery. They went, presently, down an arm of
+the river that was scarcely more than a creek, and stopped there till
+afternoon for rest and refreshment. It seemed a charming spot, and
+almost deserted. Only in the distance one red-roofed farmhouse could be
+seen, adding to the picturesqueness of the landscape.
+
+There were three small sandwiches left, and the girls, with the aid of
+paper and pencil, had just worked it out that each person present was
+entitled to three-quarters of a sandwich. They were trying to decide who
+should get the three quarters that were cut out of the three
+sandwiches--it was more a point of honor than necessity, for nobody much
+wanted any of them--when there was a subdued howl from Tom, who had been
+lying on his back in the canoe, gazing up at the sky.
+
+Six stately geese were flying in an arrow-shape across the creek, above
+the canoe. Both boys fired.
+
+"Oh, what a shame to kill them!" mourned Winona; but Tom said hurriedly
+again that they had special permission from Mr. Gedney, and sat up to
+see if he had done anything.
+
+"We each got one!" said Billy in a tense whisper. "They've dropped on
+the farther shore--there by the farmhouse!"
+
+The boys pushed the canoe up close and sprang out. They were dashing
+excitedly across country after their prey. Suddenly the waiting girls
+heard wild howls, and the tall, angry form of a wild-eyed man in
+overalls suddenly appeared from nowhere with a pitchfork.
+
+"Oh, he's chasing the boys!" exclaimed Winona.
+
+"He certainly is!" seconded Louise, and began to giggle. "Listen to
+him!"
+
+It was really impossible to do anything else.
+
+"My geese! My prize geese!" shouted the overalled man, adding what he
+thought of Tom's and Billy's intelligence. "My pedigreed geese, you
+young idiots! I'll teach you!"
+
+"You ought to have made 'em wear their pedigrees around their necks,"
+Tom shouted back at the man.
+
+"Oh, can they get away?" cried Louise. "Look!"
+
+And Winona, looking, saw that their way back to the canoe was cut off by
+a dog--the traditional farmer's dog of the comic papers. He was
+stationed on the bank, eying the canoe and the girls in it in a very
+threatening way, and most plainly only waiting till the boys came back
+to bite them.
+
+Winona gave the canoe a determined push which landed it in midstream,
+and both girls began to paddle back by the way they had come, Winona
+because she had a plan, Louise because she was following Winona.
+
+"We'll meet them around this point, on the other side," she explained to
+Louise. "I saw a glimpse of water on the other side, and I think the
+point of land the farm is on is like a peninsula."
+
+Sure enough, they discovered the criminals crouched romantically behind
+a clump of trees at the other side of the point of land. They were so
+well hidden that the girls would never have seen them if Billy had not
+stealthily waved a red handkerchief which he always carried for
+wigwagging. The girls paddled up as softly as they could, and the boys
+crawled out and waded to the canoe, crouching low. Nobody dared say
+anything till the canoe and its crew was well out and downstream again,
+far from farmers with dogs and pitchforks and no desire to listen to
+explanations.
+
+"And we never even got those geese!" mourned Tom.
+
+"Got those geese!" said Louise severely. "You oughtn't to want to get
+pedigreed geese that belonged to a farmer--especially a farmer with that
+kind of a disposition."
+
+"He hasn't any business to let tame geese go prowling around the country
+that way," growled Billy, "the first day a fellow has leave to go
+shooting food for the Scouts at home! How were we to know they had a
+coat-of-arms and a family tree? They ought to have been kept at home, in
+their ancestral barnyard."
+
+"And we never even got the confounded things!" lamented Tom again. "And
+we might just as well have, too, because we'll have to go up and pay for
+them, of course, when Mr. Overalls has calmed down enough not to bite us
+on sight. They may be worth a thousand dollars apiece, for all we know.
+We were the pedigreed geese, I think!"
+
+"Never mind," said Louise soothingly, "be glad Father Goose didn't get
+you, instead of sorry you didn't get his pets. They probably would have
+been tough, anyway."
+
+"And we can fish," suggested Winona. "Nobody's going to jump out of the
+river and tell us that these are his pedigreed perch."
+
+"The game-warden may, if the river's been stocked lately," said Billy.
+
+"It hasn't," asserted Tom. "Don't you remember? We found out all about
+that before any of us came up here last year. All these fish are old
+enough to die. Pass me the bait, please, Winnie."
+
+"Here you are," said Winona.
+
+She baited a line for herself, dropped it in, and everyone else did the
+same thing. After that nobody said anything for quite a little while,
+unless an occasional "Confound those geese!" from Tom could count as
+conversation.
+
+"Got something!" announced Louise at length, jerking in her line.
+
+"What is it?" asked Tom with interest.
+
+"Feels like a perch--or a trout," said Louise pulling in her line
+rapidly.
+
+"It doesn't _look_ like one," said Winona.
+
+"M'm, not exactly," said her brother. "You ought to be interested in it,
+though, Win--it's a catfish."
+
+"You can eat catfish," said Louise, quite calmly. "In fact, I believe
+they're considered very good eating. I don't know but I'd rather have
+them than trout."
+
+"Especially if you can't get the trout," added Tom.
+
+"If you can't get what you want, you must want what you can get." So she
+baited her line again.
+
+"Well, what is it this time?" inquired Tom next time she pulled her line
+in. The rest had had fair luck.
+
+"Probably another pussy-fish," said Louise resignedly. But this time it
+was a real perch, and after that it was a sunfish, and then two more
+catfish. And presently there was enough for supper, and by the time they
+got back they knew it would be supper-getting time. Winona was cooking
+supper that week. So they put the fish in the empty lunch-basket and
+paddled for home. Louise took Billy's paddle, and Billy trolled all the
+way. He didn't get anything, but he enjoyed himself.
+
+"Who's that on the dock?" asked Tom as they neared the Camp Karonya
+landing. "Are they waiting for us?"
+
+"Tom's afraid the farmer with the ducks has come around the other way,"
+said Louise. "No, Tommy, my dear, that's only Mr. Sloane, who is a sort
+of unofficial uncle to Camp Karonya. We're supposed to have rented that
+dock from him, but he comes there and fishes just as much as if we
+hadn't."
+
+"Sort of a fourth sub-mascot?" said Billy. "Yes, I remember--the old man
+who helped you out about the scows when you were building the float."
+
+"He's the one," said Winona. "He's fishing."
+
+"And there's Puppums, too," said Louise. "Oh, the dear old doggie! He's
+come down to the dock to wait for you, Winnie!"
+
+"So he has," agreed Winona. "I wonder if he's been there long."
+
+Puppums liked canoeing very much, and when he thought Winona ought to
+have taken him and hadn't, he would go down to the dock, trailing her by
+scent, and sit there hours and hours--merely for the sake of looking
+reproachfully at her when she did get in, it was thought. Winona always
+hugged him, and apologized, and took him for a row if possible, and he
+knew it.
+
+When he caught sight of the canoe (like most dogs, he was short-sighted)
+he began to bark excitedly and run up and down the dock, and jump wildly
+about. He did everything but swim out to the canoe. Puppums hated
+water--which gave rise to a theory that there was a little pug in his
+ancestry.
+
+Mr. Sloane, too, rose as the canoe came near the landing-place. He did
+not jump up and down, because he had not been waiting for the canoeing
+party. He had evidently taken their return as a signal that it was time
+he went home himself, for he was collecting his rod and bait-can, and
+his coat, and the other things he had strewn about the dock. Puppums
+still careered wildly around and around. As Winona stepped ashore his
+excitement grew so intense that he ran full tilt into Mr. Sloane, who
+was bending over picking something up, and nearly knocked him over.
+
+"W-u-ugh!" said Mr. Sloane, and began to hunt frantically about the
+dock.
+
+And as the boys and girls gained the shore it became painfully evident
+that the little dog had jarred out the old gentleman's false teeth.
+
+Mr. Sloane had never made any secret of the fact that he wore "bought
+teeth"--indeed, he had told Winona and Adelaide, who were his especial
+favorites, just where he got them and how much they cost, and where
+others like them could be gotten. But still, when your friend's teeth
+are knocked out all at once by your family dog, well, you _do_ feel a
+little embarrassment. With one accord the four looked in the other
+direction, as Mr. Sloane, with a "Drat that pup!" continued to hunt for
+his teeth. The boys fussed with the canoe, and Winona and Louise began
+to hunt for a nonexistent something in the box they used for a locker.
+
+But Puppums was going to be polite at all costs. He trotted over, his
+tail wagging wildly at the prospect of being able to do something for
+his mistress, picked up the teeth, and carried them proudly to Winona!
+
+"Oh, Puppums--you _naughty_ dog!" she said, trying to take the teeth
+away from him as unostentatiously as possible.
+
+But Puppums, realizing from her voice that something was wrong, looked
+up at her depreciatingly, wagged his tail again, suddenly put his tail
+between his legs and started for the camp!
+
+It was no use to try to ignore things any longer.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Sloane," Winona cried. "I'm so sorry! He's a bad dog. I'll go
+straight after him and get them."
+
+"Now, never mind," said Mr. Sloane, kindly if rather indistinctly. He
+began to laugh. "That dog o' yours certainly is a rip-snorter!" he said.
+"Knock a man down an' carry off his teeth!"
+
+By this time the boys had stopped trying not to laugh, and were howling
+in unison in the background. And little Frances, Adelaide's sister, came
+up with a nice birch-bark box. She handed it to Mr. Sloane, dropped a
+pretty courtesy, and ran. And so did the others. The only unembarrassed
+members of the party were Puppums, who wasn't there, to be Irish, and
+Mr. Sloane himself.
+
+"Talk about banner days!" sighed Louise. "I was the only one of us that
+didn't get into trouble----"
+
+"Louise!" called somebody, from outside the tent where Louise was
+washing and getting ready for supper. "Did you know that you left the
+store-shed door open this morning when you came in for supplies, and
+somebody's carried off every bit of bacon!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
+
+
+And in the opulent days which followed the winning of the carnival
+prizes, and the selling of lovely amounts of Camp Fire goods, Camp
+Karonya decided that it ought to own a phonograph. The treasury, which
+was a suitcase under Helen's bed, had money in it, and the girls badly
+needed something to dance by. To be sure, the camp boasted a mandolin,
+two guitars, a mouth-organ and a banjo, to say nothing of Mrs. Bryan's
+Iroquois drum. But all these had to be worked by hand, and the
+orchestra, after performing for several long evenings while their
+friends practised folk-dances with abandon, struck.
+
+"We want to get a chance at the folk-dances, too," they remonstrated,
+very reasonably. Indeed, Louise got up and made a moving speech,
+alluding to her pressing need of folk-dances, and her slender chance of
+being able to do them while she played her instrument.
+
+"Here I am," she said pathetically, "twice as plump as anybody else in
+camp. I need folk-dances more than anybody here does. And I've spent
+this whole blessed evening plunking a banjo while other people got thin,
+people that were thin already! It may be good for my moral character,
+but, girls"--Louise's voice dropped tragically--"it's _ruining_ yours!"
+
+They all agreed that something should be done.
+
+Mrs. Bryan was entirely willing to go on pounding her Indian drum
+indefinitely, but the girls did not think it would be good for their
+moral characters to let her, either. So they held a business meeting on
+the spot, which happened to be the large level place they used for
+dancing ground; and decided to buy a phonograph.
+
+"I think we have catalogues of them at home," said Dorothy Gray. "Shall
+I write and have them sent on?"
+
+The girls considered that for awhile, but they finally decided not to.
+Everyone wanted a voice in choosing the phonograph, or at least in
+deciding on what kind of a phonograph they were to have.
+
+"But we don't want to pay the full price for it," said Helen wisely.
+"What we ought to do is to advertise in the _Press_ in the village. It's
+the country paper. Look at the market Win created for kittens----"
+
+But here Winona sprang for her, and they rolled over on the leaves, and
+the meeting ended in a frolic.
+
+However, they all liked Helen's idea, and two Blue Birds were sent off
+to the _Press_ with an advertisement for a second-hand phonograph or
+victrola in good condition. Next day two other Blue Birds went after the
+answers. There were three.
+
+One offered a fine music-box in good condition, which had never been
+used since the owner's wife died twenty years ago. He lived on the
+Northtown Pike (which nobody present had ever heard of), about seventeen
+miles from the village. The music-box played six tunes and was an
+heirloom, having belonged to his mother, but the farmer on the Northtown
+Pike would part with it for twenty-five dollars for he wanted another
+Holstein cow and this would pay for part of her.
+
+"Horrid old thing!" said Winona when Marie was done reading the answers
+aloud. "If it's an heirloom he hasn't any business parting with it to
+buy a section of any kind of cow--or even a whole one."
+
+"Well, Marie, go on to the next," said Mrs. Bryan. But the next was even
+more hopeless. What this man had was, from his description, a very cheap
+phonograph which was almost as old as the farmer's music-box; but he,
+too, thought he would like to have twenty-five dollars for it.
+
+"He doubtless wants to buy a section of cow, too," suggested Mrs. Bryan.
+
+"Maybe they're buying her together," said Louise brilliantly; and Marie
+read the last letter. This was the only one at all promising. The
+writer, who was a woman with a good handwriting and correct spelling,
+said that she had a two-year-old victrola in good condition, and that
+she would gladly sell it for twenty-five dollars, because she was going
+to be given a new one.
+
+"That sounds better," said Mrs. Bryan. "I would advise a committee of
+you to go and look it over."
+
+"But how badly they all want twenty-five dollars!" groaned Marie. "Do
+you notice it? They all ask for exactly the same amount."
+
+"Probably buying the cow on shares," repeated Louise.
+
+"I vote we make Louise one of the committee to see the two-year-old
+victrola," said Winona. "She has business instinct, and the rest of us
+haven't such a lot."
+
+"What's more to the point, I also have a victrola at home, or Dad has,"
+said Louise, "and I know what it ought to be like to be good."
+
+So it was moved and seconded that Louise, Winona and Helen be appointed
+a committee of three to investigate the victrola.
+
+As early as they could in the afternoon after they had received their
+replies they started out. It was a gorgeous day, not too warm for
+comfort, and they chased each other about the road as if they were
+kittens, instead of responsible Camp Fire Girls out on a very
+business-like errand. After they had gone about a mile, which led them
+nearly to the village, it occurred to some brilliant person that it
+might be a good plan to ask somebody how to get to the address of the
+woman with the two-year-old victrola. It was The Willows, Lowlane, near
+Gray's Road, and so far as the girls knew that might have been nearly
+anywhere. So they did ask at the post-office, where they had quite made
+friends with the old postmaster.
+
+"It's three miles down the pike," said he. "Strike off on the left to
+Gray's Road--you'll see a signpost, I guess--and then turn down the
+first little lane you come to. They call it Lowlane now, the folks that
+own the house, but it was never anything but Low's Lane till they came
+there."
+
+"The first little lane we come to?" repeated Winona.
+
+The postmaster looked thoughtful. "Now, I don't want to be too sure," he
+said. "The first, or maybe the second. Elmer, do you recollect whether
+Low's Lane is the first or second turning on the Gray's Road way?"
+
+"Second," said Elmer the clerk readily.
+
+"There now!" said the postmaster. "I might a' told you wrong. I
+certainly had it fixed in my mind that it was the first."
+
+"Thank you," said the girls. "It won't be hard to find."
+
+It seemed, indeed, plain enough sailing, and the girls went on. The road
+was bordered with trees, and there were flowers they wanted to pick, and
+occasionally rabbits for Puppums to chase. He was not a swift enough
+runner to ever catch any of the rabbits he ran after, and the rabbits
+did not seem to mind, so Winona let him go on chasing.
+
+"We've gone quite three miles, I know," said Louise dismally when they
+had been walking some time. "And there's no Lowlane--not even any Gray's
+Road." Louise had trained a good deal since she had been in camp, but
+she still felt long walks more than the other two did, who were slim. "I
+'don't believe there's no sich animal' as Mrs. Martin, or a victrola.
+There aren't any victrolas or any lanes, high or low, on earth.
+Woof--I'm tired!"
+
+She fanned herself with her handkerchief, and the dog tried to jump at
+it, under the impression that she was playing a game with him.
+
+"It does seem a long way," said Helen sympathetically, "but there is a
+Gray's Road, for I'm sure I see a signpost a little ahead of us."
+
+"It's probably one of those automobile directions that says 'Three miles
+back to the village--seventeen miles forward to Jonesville. Use Smith's
+Lubricating Oil and Robinson Tires!'" and Louise shrugged her shoulders.
+
+Nevertheless, when they came up to the signpost, although it did advise
+automobiles about several kinds of supplies they ought to have, it also
+said that this was Gray's Road. They turned as they had been told, and
+went down it, in search of their second landmark, Low's Lane. This,
+unfortunately, wasn't in sight. "Let's ask," said Winona as they passed
+a little old house by the side of the road, and steered the others up
+the path that led to the porch. It was a ramshackle, unpainted
+packing-box of a place, with an old, old lady, heavily shawled, curled
+up in a rocker, for inhabitant. Helen was pushed forward to speak to
+her. "Can you tell us if we are near Low's Lane?" she asked, politely.
+
+"Hey?" said the old lady. "I'm a little deaf."
+
+Helen said it over again as loudly as she could.
+
+"Rain?" said the old lady. "No, no--it ain't goin' to rain!"
+
+"Low's Lane!" screamed Helen.
+
+"What?" said the old lady.
+
+"Ask her about the victrola," suggested Winona. "Sometimes deaf people
+can hear one word when they can't another. Perhaps she'd know by that
+where we wanted to go."
+
+"We want a place where they're selling a victrola!" shouted Helen.
+
+This time the old lady seemed to hear.
+
+"Victrola, hey? You go right on a piece till you turn to your left. It's
+the first house."
+
+"Thank you," yelled Helen.
+
+They were offered, and took, drinks of water, and went on again.
+
+"I think one of you might have asked some of the questions," said Helen
+indignantly.
+
+"I'll ask one now!" defied Louise. "Far be it from me not to do my
+duty." She turned and ran back to where the old dame still rocked on her
+porch.
+
+"Is it a good victrola?" she shouted.
+
+The old lady shook her head.
+
+"I wouldn't go so far's to say _that_," she answered. "Smart,
+though--awful smart and clever!"
+
+Louise ran back to the others without asking any more questions.
+
+"She says the talking machine isn't good, but awful smart and clever,"
+she panted. "What _do_ you suppose she means?"
+
+"I can't imagine," said Helen. "Anyway, we know how to get there."
+
+The first lane, sure enough, led to a house, but there seemed to be no
+willows anywhere about it. Still houses often have names that have
+nothing to do with the facts, so the girls pressed on. The place had a
+vaguely familiar look to Winona and Louise.
+
+"I'm sure I've come here before, by another way," said Winona.
+
+"I haven't," said Helen. "You must have come by water. I think the
+river's somewhere back of us. If you ask me, I think one way's enough to
+come."
+
+They lined up before the door and rang. But the bell, they discovered
+finally, was badly out of order. A "please knock" sign was blowing about
+the porch, they discovered still a little later. They knocked
+vigorously, and the door was finally unfastened by a draggled little
+girl of about eleven.
+
+"Why--why, how do you do, Vicky!" said Louise in surprise. "Why, of
+course, Helen, this is Sandy's house. Only this isn't the same door, is
+it, that we came in by last time, Vicky?"
+
+Vicky, who was as tousled as usual, shook her head.
+
+"What's the matter?" she asked stolidly. "Has Sandy been naughty?"
+
+"No, indeed," said Louise, "she's as good as gold. Can't we come in?"
+for Vicky didn't seem to feel specially hospitable--she was holding the
+door on a crack, and was not her usual sunny self. "Sandy's around here
+somewhere--at least she's not in camp."
+
+"Oh, yes," she said, and opened it wider. The girls filed in and sat
+down in the square hall, which was as littered as usual with clothes and
+paper bags and everything else that places are usually littered with.
+
+"Look at that hole!" whispered Louise, forgetting her politeness as
+Vicky stood near them, not intending, evidently, to sit down and
+entertain them if she could help it. "There's more hole than stocking!"
+
+It was quite true, but unfortunately Vicky had sharp ears.
+
+"They're my own stockings," she said crossly, "and I like 'em with holes
+in."
+
+"Oh, all right!" said Louise dryly. "Only they aren't usually worn that
+way."
+
+"Can we speak to your uncle?" interposed Helen, for the air was becoming
+stormy.
+
+"Isn't home," announced Vicky. "He had a cross fit and went out
+walking."
+
+"Is anybody home?" asked Winona. "We came on business."
+
+"You can do it with me, whatever it is," said Vicky, sitting down with
+the torn-stockinged leg under her.
+
+Helen plunged straight into the business at hand.
+
+"The old lady down the road said that this was the house where they had
+a victrola----" she started to say--and stopped in dismay over the
+effect of her words; Vicky flew into a temper and began to cry.
+
+"I want you to go away from here--coming to make fun of me!" she sobbed,
+stamping her foot at them. Before they could answer she ran out of the
+room, leaving them staring at each other in surprise.
+
+"Well, what on earth?" Winona slowly ejaculated.
+
+"Goodness only knows," said Louise. "Anyway, I seem to feel that she
+doesn't want to sell it to us."
+
+"Well, no," assented Helen, and the three of them thoughtfully and
+slowly let themselves out at the door they had come in by.
+
+They had gone only a little way back when they heard flying feet behind
+them.
+
+"Wait a minute," panted Vicky, catching up to them. "I
+guess--perhaps--I'd better explain. I'm sorry I got mad. But--but my
+_name's_ Victrola!" She flushed painfully. Evidently it was hard for her
+to tell. "I thought you were just making fun of me, but I thought about
+it, and I guess you weren't. I know the place you want--it's a little
+further, up the next lane."
+
+She started to run back, but Winona caught her hand and held her.
+
+"Why, you poor dear!" she said. "I don't see why you mind. It's a very
+pretty name. But we weren't trying to make fun of you. We really want to
+buy a phonograph for the camp."
+
+"They laugh at me--everybody does," faltered Vicky. "They were this
+morning--the boys down by the landing. That's why I was so cross. They
+pretend to wind me up, and--and I _hate_ it!"
+
+"So would I," comforted Louise. "But you mustn't mind, Vicky. All my
+life the boys have called me 'Carrots,' and 'Reddy,' and things like
+that. There's no use caring. Look here, honey, I'll tell you what to do.
+See if you haven't got a middle name you can use, or even one you ought
+to have had. Ask your uncle if there wasn't a middle name somebody
+almost gave you once, and if there was use it."
+
+"I wonder if I could!" said Vicky, brightening. She reached down and
+pulled up one of her stockings, as if the prospect of a better name made
+her want to be tidy.
+
+"Anyhow it's a pretty name," said Louise cheerfully. "I wouldn't worry
+about it."
+
+"Yes, you would," said Vicky, as she turned back. "There down this
+lane's the place you can get--it."
+
+It was Louise's turn to detain her this time.
+
+"Vicky! Vicky!" she called. "Won't you and Sandy come down to Camp
+Karonya and stay overnight, to-morrow night? We're going to do some
+stunts--just to celebrate. The Scouts are coming over, and one or two of
+our pet particular friends."
+
+"I don't know the way," said Vicky.
+
+"Sandy does," said Louise and Winona together.
+
+"Thank you," said Vicky sedately. "We'll come. And--please don't tell
+the others my name. I'll have the real one thought out by that time."
+
+"Of course we won't," they promised.
+
+"It _was_ mean to name her that," Helen declared as they went down the
+lane.
+
+"Maybe it was before there were machine victrolas, and her mother just
+thought it was pretty," suggested Louise. "The other children have fancy
+names, too; Alexandra and Lance. Remember Vicky told us there was a boy
+named Lancelot, the day we went up?"
+
+"To return your orphan?" said Winona. "Oh, yes--we all remember. Never
+mind, Ishkoodah dear, perhaps next time you'll find a real one."
+
+"Wouldn't it be fine if Camp Karonya _could_ look after some little
+girl--one of the Children's Aid children, for instance?" said Helen
+thoughtfully.
+
+"It would take a good deal of money," spoke practical Louise, "if we
+didn't one of us have it in the family."
+
+"Not such a lot," said Winona. "Oh, it would be lovely! A nice little
+orphan with blue eyes and curly hair, and we'd name her ourselves----"
+
+"We'd call her Gramophone!" suggested Louise; and, tired as they were,
+they all began to laugh. But by this time they were nearly at the house
+the machine's namesake had directed them to, and it was the right one.
+
+The owner had a fairly good victrola and six double-faced records, and
+she finally consented to let it go for twenty dollars. The girls paid
+down the money on the spot, and constructed a carrier for it out of two
+pieces of board which the machine's owner threw in.
+
+There were no adventures whatever connected with this end of the
+happening. Helen took the front end and Louise the back, and Winona
+steadied it. Then they set it down, after they had walked awhile, and
+changed places. It seemed rather a long way home, and they were
+exceedingly glad when they reached camp--that was all. Their sympathetic
+comrades attended to their routine duties for them, and all the
+adventurers had to do was to lie on the grass and tell about their
+travels--everything, that is, but Victrola's name and her grief over it.
+
+After supper the whole camp assembled to enjoy the machine, and danced
+to everything on its disc, even the sextette from Lucia, given as a
+vocal selection. But Louise did not do any folk-dances that night. She
+was so tired that she curled up on a soft spot and fed the machine till
+it was time to go to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
+
+
+"Did you dye that old petticoat and underwaist pink?" demanded Winona,
+sticking her head into Marie's tent.
+
+"Yes, I did," said Marie promptly, "and it's starched, and ironed with
+the charcoal-iron."
+
+"And did Adelaide borrow her brother's bathrobe for Louise?"
+
+"No, she didn't, but I did--at least, I sent Frances over for it," said
+Marie. "It's here, and safe."
+
+"And did Louise sew the hood on it?"
+
+"She did," said Marie resignedly. "Every single property for 'Gentle
+Alice Brown' and the 'Oysterman' is in a mound in the dressing-tent. Go
+look, for goodness' sake, or you'll have nervous prostration."
+
+Winona, property-woman and general manager of the performance, pulled
+back her head with a sigh of relief, and went to find the girl who had
+promised to straighten out the fishing-tackle necessary to the Ballad of
+the Oysterman--for they were to present that classic of Holmes's in a
+very few hours.
+
+The performance was to be at eight, and it was a strictly complimentary
+one. The Scouts were invited, and various special friends from Wampoag,
+most of them made over dealings in Camp merchandise. A committee had
+been appointed to see about illuminations, and another to attend to the
+refreshments. They were amassing honor beads by doing it. Marie's Blue
+Birds were busy everywhere. Camp Karonya was dazzlingly clean, and
+everyone was getting out the one dress-up frock she had brought along,
+and giving it attention. There was to be an exhibit, also, as the
+flaring posters Helen had prepared said, of "potteries, embroideries,
+jellies, hand-carvings, pickles and other objects." It had been going to
+be "other objects of art," but Winona pointed out that jellies and
+pickles _weren't_, no matter what the rest might be. So the poster
+stopped abruptly at "objects," and the space was filled up by a
+life-like portrait of a jelly-glass.
+
+Camp Karonya took a very brief meal of bread and milk and cookies, and
+the dish-washers hurried through their tasks. For eight o'clock has a
+way of coming long before you expect it. About seven-thirty the paddles
+and oars and motor-boats of the audience began to be heard, and the
+reception committee scurried down to the dock to meet their guests.
+First came their friends the Scouts from down the river, about thirty
+strong. After them, in little groups, came the summer people, including
+Billy's Aunt Lydia, who never missed a Camp Fire function if she could
+help it.
+
+The audience was seated, as usual, on planks laid from box to box and
+nailed. They did not have to sit there long. After a great deal of
+giggling and rustling behind the big green curtain that had been made of
+sacks, pieced together and dyed, Winona came out to announce the
+beginning of the entertainment.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," she commenced, "to-night we are going to have,
+beside several musical selections, some moving pictures with explanatory
+recitations--some _very_ moving pictures. After the opening song we will
+have the first one, 'Gentle Alice Brown.'"
+
+The audience applauded, and then the girls sang a Camp Fire song in
+chorus. After that Louise and Edith played a conscientious
+mandolin-banjo duet. Then Marie, who was the reader of the evening, came
+out with a copy of Gilbert's Bab Ballads and very slowly began to read
+"Gentle Alice Brown."
+
+At the first line the curtain was pulled back, revealing Winona alone
+against a sheet background. She was in an 1860 costume made from an old,
+full petticoat and tight underwaist, dyed pink, and helped out with
+small puffed sleeves and a sash. Her curls were bound with a wreath of
+artificial roses from the ten-cent store, slightly over one ear. She sat
+on a chair with her head on her hand, and she was looking mournfully
+over the chair-back. Marie began,
+
+ It was a robber's daughter, and her name was Alice Brown,
+ Her father was the terror of a small Italian town;
+ Her mother was a foolish, weak, but amiable old thing,
+ But it isn't of her parents that I'm going for to sing.
+
+As Marie went on, across the stage galloped ferociously Helen, who had
+been given the role of Robber Brown because she was one of the tallest
+of the girls. A red flannel shirt of Tom Merriam's, topped by a fishing
+hat and black mustachio, were most convincing. Her short kilt, which
+gave her rather the look of a Greek than an Italian bandit, was met by a
+pair of fishing-boots, and she wore three carving-knives and a cartridge
+belt. She strode ferociously across the stage, looking neither to right
+nor left.
+
+Edith Hillis, trotting meekly behind her as Mrs. Brown, wore a baggy old
+long skirt, a bandanna tied around her waist, one around her neck and
+another on her head. She only had one carving-knife. But the lovely
+Alice did not deign to look at her parents. She gazed sadly out over the
+audience, while Marie went on to tell how--
+
+ As Alice was sitting at her window-sill one day
+ A beautiful young gentleman he chanced to pass that way,
+ A sorter at the Custom-house, it was his daily road--
+ (The Custom-house was fifteen minutes walk from her abode).
+
+At this point the hero crossed the stage dashingly, with a cane under
+his arm. It was Adelaide, in a plaid cap, a waxed mustache, and a very
+precise duster which reached her heels. A pipe (she said afterwards it
+had a dreadful taste) stuck from one corner of her mouth.
+
+Gentle Alice sighed deeply, and so did her lover, who became aware of
+her presence with a tragic start. He halted, waved to her, sighed with
+his hand on his heart, and looked altogether very lovelorn. Gentle Alice
+did not notice him at first, but she gradually seemed to yield, and
+finally languished softly at him--and winked. So did he. Then he kissed
+his hands at her and went off reluctantly to work, while Alice wiped
+away her tears with a large bandanna such as her parents had worn. (They
+were the historic bandannas which had served Winona and Louise so well
+on their peddling trip.)
+
+The ballad went on to relate how presently Alice's conscience bothered
+her. So she asked the Brown's family confessor about it,
+
+ The priest by whom their little crimes were carefully assessed.
+
+Here Louise appeared, in the brown bathrobe, with its hood pulled up
+over her head, and sandals on. Alice threw herself at his feet, and
+waved her hands in grief.
+
+ "Oh, father," Gentle Alice said, "'Twould grieve you, would it not,
+ To find that I have been a most disreputable lot?"
+
+Louise assumed a benign expression and listened while Alice confessed
+her sins. Marie stopped, while Winona herself spoke:
+
+ I assisted dear mamma in cutting up a little lad,
+ I helped papa to steal a little kiddy from its dad--
+ I planned a little burglary and forged a little check
+ And slew a little baby for the coral on its neck!
+
+But Father Brown seemed inclined to be forgiving, and with a few
+remarks, ended,
+
+ We mustn't be too hard upon these little girlish tricks--
+ Let's see--five crimes at half a crown--exactly twelve and six.
+
+Alice thanked him in a few grateful couplets, and pulled out another
+bandanna with money tied up in it from which she paid him. The ballad
+went on to relate how Alice tremblingly confessed her last sin, about
+the beautiful gentleman, who passed every day:
+
+ I blush to say, I've winked at him--and he has winked at me!
+
+This shocked Father Paul for, as he explained,
+
+ If you should marry anyone respectable at all,
+ Why, you'd reform, and then what would become of Father Paul?
+
+So he pulled up his cowl, the ballad went on to state--and Louise went
+on to act--and trotted off to tell the news to Robber Brown.
+
+They came on together, while the Father repeated the news, and stood
+consulting in the corner, while Alice, from her actions, seemed to be
+thinking still of the sorter.
+
+Robber Brown took it quite calmly. He decided to be quite kind to Alice
+about it--merely to
+
+ Nab that gay young sorter, terrify him into fits,
+ And get his wife to chop him into little bits.
+
+He argued that Alice, after that, would not love him any more. So, while
+Father Paul exited, Robber Brown lay stealthily in wait, assisted by his
+wife. Presently along came the gay young sorter again, waving his hand
+jauntily to Alice. Robber Brown sprang out, crossed directly in front of
+the sorter, who appeared not to see him at all, and proceeded to track
+him up and down the stage two or three times, with Mrs. Brown trailing
+in the rear. After the three had gone up and down twice (Alice, also,
+oblivious to her parents' presence, and throwing kisses to the sorter)
+Robber Brown finally "took a life-preserver" in the shape of a
+stout-looking stick, and pretended to fell the gay young sorter.
+Immediately Mrs. Brown bounded up with a piece of chalk, and proceeded
+to mark him off in pieces for dissection, for, as Robber Brown remarked:
+
+ I have studied human nature and I know a thing or two--
+ Though a girl may fondly love a living chap, as many do,
+ Yet a feeling of disgust upon her senses there will fall
+ When she looks upon her lover chopped particularly small!
+
+Indeed, this terrifying sight as far as it went, seemed to have the
+desired effect on Alice. To be sure, she fell in a dead faint, and
+Father Paul had to catch her, while Mr. and Mrs. Brown, and two more
+bandits (in bandannas) carried off the late sorter; but immediately
+afterward a young bandit, very much like Robber Brown except that he was
+smaller, came in and was patted with obvious admiration by Mr. and Mrs.
+Brown, who led him up to Alice. She recovered slowly, sat up, and
+presently accepted his attentions with pleasure. Father Paul gave them
+his blessing, while Marie said:
+
+ And gentle little Alice grew more settled in her mind,
+ She never more was guilty of a weakness of that kind,
+ Until at length good Robber Brown bestowed her little hand
+ On a promising young robber, the lieutenant of his band!
+
+After that the curtain was drawn again, while the girls dressed for
+Holmes's "It Was a Gay Young Oysterman." This, while it was good, was
+not the hit with the audience that "Gentle Alice Brown" had been. When
+it was finished, and the oysterman and his bride were seen "keeping a
+shop for mermaids down below," the girls took down the curtain, and
+while more music was played the performers hurried into their pretty
+dresses. Then they came out, and strolled about the camp with the
+audience.
+
+"Where are Vicky and Sandy?" Winona remembered to ask Helen, as they met
+after the curtain was down. "Did they come?"
+
+"I think so," said Helen, rubbing hard at her cork mustache. "Adelaide,
+did you see Sandy anywhere?"
+
+Adelaide, who was just braiding her hair, turned.
+
+"Yes, I did," she said. "She's here somewhere, with another little girl.
+I saw them not long ago."
+
+Winona went in search of them, for when you ask a guest to an
+entertainment it's only polite to hunt her up. It was not hard to find
+the sisters. They were sitting with Louise, eating home-made ice-cream.
+
+Winona sat down by them.
+
+"I'm awfully glad you came, Vicky."
+
+"So'm I, too," said Vicky. She seemed rather shy here in the camp, but
+she looked happy. "I'm having a nice time."
+
+"I'm glad," said Winona. "Did you like the moving pictures?"
+
+"Yes," said Vicky, "they were awfully funny. And--oh, Winona, I've
+picked out a name."
+
+"What is it?" asked Winona.
+
+"Janet. Of course people can call me Vicky still, if they want to, but
+my real name will be Janet. I asked uncle, the way you said, and he said
+I did have a middle name, Janet, after my grandmother."
+
+"Oh, that's splendid!" said Winona. "I'm named after my grandmother,
+too."
+
+"That makes us a sort of relation, doesn't it?" asked Vicky.
+
+"Why, I hope it does," was the hearty reply.
+
+"And there's something I wanted to ask you about," said Vicky--now
+Janet--shyly. "Alone, I mean."
+
+"Come over here with me, and we'll walk up and down and talk about it,"
+invited Winona.
+
+Vicky took her hand, and they strolled off down one of the wood-paths.
+
+"I'd rather not ask Louise," explained Vicky, "because--well, she laughs
+so about everything. She might laugh at me. And that other girl is sort
+of grown-up talking. But--well, it's--I'd like to be like the rest of
+the people--other little girls, you know--and it's dreadfully hard when
+you haven't any father or mother, and your uncle's an artist with a
+temp'rament. Sometimes he gets us governesses, and they say we're queer,
+and sometimes we just do as we please. But--well, there isn't anybody to
+show us things."
+
+She looked at Winona wistfully, as if she thought she could show her how
+to be just like other children all at once.
+
+"Why do people always come to me to show them how?" wondered Winona to
+herself. "I don't know any more about how to do things than the other
+girls."
+
+She did not realize that it was her sunniness and sympathy--her
+Ray-of-Lightness, as Louise called it--together with a certain
+straightforward common sense, that made girls who wanted help come to
+her. They could be sure that she would not laugh at them, or tell anyone
+else what they had said, and they were sure of advice that had
+brightness and sense.
+
+"What sort of things do you want me to tell you?" asked Winona. "I'd
+love to help you, but some of the others know lots more about things
+than I do."
+
+"It's you I want to ask," said Vicky decidedly. "It's my clothes, to
+begin with. Are they right?"
+
+Winona stopped and looked Vicky over. They were out in the open by now,
+and it was bright moonlight, so she could see plainly what the little
+girl had on. It was a blue taffeta, very stiff and rustling, trimmed
+with plaid taffeta and black buttons. By its looks it had been bought
+ready-made, for it had a sort of gaudy smartness. It was of good
+material, but somehow, it was cheap-looking. Also by its looks,
+bread-and-butter had been eaten on or near it.
+
+"You mean your dress?"
+
+"Yes," said Vicky. "It isn't right, is it? But I don't know what to do
+about it. I bought it myself."
+
+"You mean your uncle gives you the money, and you go and buy your own
+things?" asked Winona.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Vicky. "But the ones the governesses used to get weren't
+much better. There was one governess who always picked out bright green.
+I hate green, anyway. And sometimes the cook used to. She would yet if
+I'd let her. But I won't. I don't think it's any of her business."
+
+"Well----" Winona hesitated.
+
+"Well, what had I better do?" demanded Vicky.
+
+"I don't know!" said Winona frankly. "But I do know that that silk dress
+is wrong. Why don't you get summer dresses, chambrays and ginghams and
+organdies?"
+
+"I don't know," said Vicky. "I never thought about it. Silk is better,
+isn't it?"
+
+"I don't think so," said Winona. "It doesn't wash. You see this dress
+isn't very clean."
+
+"No," acknowledged Vicky. "Does being clean count such a lot?"
+
+"Goodness!" Words failed Winona. "I tell you," she said finally. "Why
+don't you come over here and join the Blue Birds, Vicky? Marie could
+tell you a lot of things and it would be the quickest way to learn a lot
+about being like other people, if that is what you want."
+
+"I'd like to," said Vicky, "but I sort of keep house."
+
+"I have an idea, then," said Winona. Now, when Winona had ideas her
+friends usually waited to hear what she had to say. "Why couldn't some
+of the girls come up and stay with you, after Camp is over? It will be
+quite awhile even then before school opens. We could help you--show you
+how to do things."
+
+"Oh, I'd like that," said Vicky. Then she stopped, doubtfully. "That is,
+if I could pick out the ones."
+
+"Of course, you'd invite your own guests," Winona assured her. "And we'd
+pay what we cost your uncle extra.... But what about him? It's his
+house, and he mightn't like it."
+
+"Oh, he'd never care," said Vicky. "He never knows much about what goes
+on, anyway! And I know he'd like to have me learn how to be a well-bred
+little gentlewoman, because he talks about it sometimes. And anyway he's
+going off somewhere where he can't take us some time soon."
+
+"Then I don't see why we can't manage it!" said Winona enthusiastically.
+"But I can tell you now about the clothes. You want to buy dresses that
+will wash. And you don't ever want to play in silk dresses, or even
+organdies or batistes--tree-climbing, and things like that, I mean."
+
+"I might get some middies, like you wear," said Vicky thoughtfully. "And
+I suppose, long's I'm going to reform, I might as well get Sand to keep
+her dresses on. She goes chasing out in her underwaist and petticoat
+sometimes."
+
+"Oh, that was why she hadn't any on when Louise found her!" said Winona,
+seeing a light.
+
+"Yes," confessed Vicky. "What's that noise?"
+
+"That's the horn," said Winona. "It must mean that it's bedtime. She's
+playing 'taps.' Mrs. Bryan signals us with it, always."
+
+"I think I'd like to be a Blue Bird," said Vicky. "But I like the other
+plan better," she added quickly.
+
+"We're going to be here quite a while longer," said Winona, "so you'll
+have lots of time to think whether you want us and whether your uncle
+will be willing."
+
+"Oh, that's all right!" said Vicky as the two went back to camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
+
+
+It was quite true that the Camp was not to break up for some time, owing
+to the Wampoag people's appetite for Camp jellies and linens; but so far
+as Winona was concerned, life under the greenwood tree received a sudden
+check.
+
+It was a harmless-looking letter enough that the detachment of Blue
+Birds brought up from the post-office. Winona pounced on it with a cry
+of joy. "Oh, a letter from mother!" she said. "And we only had one
+yesterday, Florence!" So she tore it open.
+
+"Dear Little Daughter," it said, in a rather shakier handwriting than
+was usual with Mrs. Merriam. "I am sorry to have to tell you, as you are
+having such a splendid time, that we need you here at home. Yesterday,
+just after I had mailed my last letter to you, I slipped on the wet
+cellar stairs, and went down from top to bottom, and the result is a
+badly wrenched ankle. The doctor says that it is a severe sprain. Clay
+is a good little soul, but he can't do very much more than the helping
+out, and your father has to have his meals and everything. So I shall
+have to ask my little girl to come home and keep house for me. I will
+expect you the day after you get this. Your loving mother."
+
+"_Oh!_" cried Winona. "Oh, poor mother!"
+
+"What's the matter!" asked Florence.
+
+"Mother's sprained her ankle on the cellar stairs," said Winona, "and I
+have to go home. You needn't, Floss."
+
+"I shall, though," said Florence--and the younger Miss Merriam was a
+very determined little person. Her eyes filled with tears. "Frances and
+Lucy and I had a secret hike all planned," she said. "Oh, dear, it is so
+nice in camp! But I won't let you go home and nurse mother all alone,
+and you needn't think it!"
+
+Winona didn't argue. She gave the letter to her little sister to read,
+and went off in the woods to be by herself. She climbed up to the
+platform that two of the girls had built, and sat there. There was no
+use denying it, she did not want to go home. She was going, of course,
+and going to nurse her mother just as well as she possibly could, and
+look after her father with all the powers she had learned in the Camp
+Fire activities. And she was sorry her mother's ankle hurt her--very,
+very sorry. But--oh, dear! There was a beautiful new dance that Edith,
+who went into Wampoag and got lessons, which she passed promptly on, had
+been going to teach her. There was a new kind of cooking she had been
+going to teach a group of Blue Birds. There was a new dive--well, there
+were any amount of things, that if anyone had asked her about, she would
+have said she simply _couldn't_ break off. But she had to. And cooking
+at home in August was very different from doing it in the woods with a
+lot of other girls--and everyone she knew well was going to stay here--
+
+Winona sat up and mopped her eyes.
+
+"This isn't the way to follow the law of the Fire!" she reminded
+herself. "I can glorify work just as well home as here--better, in fact,
+for it's pretty certain there'll be more work to do!" She laughed a
+little.
+
+"Coming up, Winona!" called Helen from below.
+
+"Come on!" called back Winona.
+
+"What's the matter?" inquired Helen when she gained the platform.
+"You've been crying."
+
+"I've got to go home." Winona gave the news briefly. "Mother's sprained
+her ankle."
+
+"Oh, what a perfect shame!" said Helen.
+
+"I know I'm taking it like a baby," said Winona with a gulp, "instead of
+being noble and acting as if I liked going home. And of course I'm
+going. Only--only I do wish mother had picked out any time but this to
+sprain a perfectly good ankle!"
+
+"Can't she get somebody else to come take care of things?" asked Helen.
+"I don't know how on earth we'll get along without you, Win. You never
+say much, but somehow you're the centre of things. We'll miss you
+awfully!"
+
+Winona blushed at the compliment, and reached down to pat Helen's hand.
+
+"You're a dear, Helen, to think so. But you'll all get along all right.
+It's I that will have most of the missing to do. No, there's nobody
+mother could get. Aunt Jenny's off in the White Mountains, getting well
+from something herself. And all we have at home is Clay--the little
+colored boy mother got at the Children's Aid. From what Tom said he's a
+regular Topsy. No, I have to go home. Oh, think of it, Helen! Hot
+housekeeping all August and half September, with every single girl I
+know well up here, canoeing and swimming and folk-dancing and all sorts
+of splendid things! You'll all have beads down to your feet."
+
+This time it was Helen who patted Winona.
+
+Presently Winona mopped her eyes again and threw back her shoulders.
+
+"Come along, Helen; I've had my little weep out. Now I'm going to tell
+Mrs. Bryan about it, and trot off home looking pleased to death at the
+prospect."
+
+They swung themselves down from the tree-house, and started back to camp
+at a slow run. There was a good deal to do. There was everything of
+Winona's to pack, and Florence's, too, if she was really going, and she
+insisted that she was.
+
+"I won't be a bit of trouble," she said, "and I'll be a real help.
+You'll see!"
+
+So they packed everything, and said good-bye to everybody, and were
+paddled up the lake to Wampoag, where they were to take the train for
+home. They had to stop over at the Scouts' camp and break the news to
+Tom. But Winona invited him fervently to stay where he was. She knew
+that with the best will in the world to be useful a boy makes more work
+than he does, and has to be cooked for to quite an extent. Tom said he
+would be down the next day to see his mother, but he would go back
+again.
+
+"Good-bye, dears," said Mrs. Bryan, who was seeing them off, when she
+parted from Florence and Winona at the dock, "I know you'll be happy.
+Remember we'll miss you all the time, Ray-of-Light. And I don't know
+what I'll do without Florence to run errands for me. Come back as soon
+as your mother can spare you."
+
+"We will," said Winona. "Only it feels like the poetry--don't you
+remember?
+
+ "Remember what I tell you, says the old man to his son--
+ Be good and you'll be happy--but you won't have any fun!"
+
+"Just the same," said the Guardian, "being what you are, Winona, I'd
+venture to promise you that in the long run you will get more happiness
+out of being happy than out of having fun."
+
+Winona laughed as she kissed her good-bye.
+
+"I'm going to plan ways for glorifying work and being happy all the way
+down on the train," she said, "but I haven't any--well--thoroughly
+planned--yet!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was nearly nightfall when Winona reached home, for she had not
+started till a late afternoon train. She found her mother established in
+the living-room, where a door opening on the hall gave her a good view
+of the kitchen, and Clay in it. She looked well, but tired, and her foot
+was bandaged and on a pillow.
+
+"You're sure you didn't mind coming home, dear?" was the first thing her
+mother said. "It was a shame you had to!"
+
+Winona had to reassure her mother so fervently about her being willing
+to come back, and even liking to, that she began to find she really did!
+It was pleasant there, after all. The garden was full of blooming
+flowers, and it was a cool, pleasant day.
+
+"What shall I do first, mother?" she asked, as she and Florence sat each
+with one of their mother's hands, and tried to tell her all about
+everything at once.
+
+"The first thing for you to do," said Mrs. Merriam, "is to get baths and
+put on cool dresses, both of you, and come down to dinner. Your father
+and Clay are getting it. You aren't to do a thing till to-morrow, dear.
+You must be tired with your trip."
+
+"I don't think anything could tire me!" said Winona blithely. And she
+and Florence, as each of them in turn took baths in the one thing a camp
+doesn't possess--a bathtub--felt that it was good to be home and have
+mother pet you, after all!
+
+"It certainly is good to have you back, children," said their father, as
+he sat with a daughter on each side of him after dinner. They had their
+mother out on the back porch with them. It was nearly as large as the
+front one, and she could be moved, couch and all, through a front window
+with very little trouble. "Now I can have an afternoon off from
+housekeeping. But I've done well, haven't I, Mary?"
+
+"You certainly have," said Mrs. Merriam, "and it's been hard for you,
+too. But now that I have my Camp Fire Girls back nobody's going to need
+to do one thing."
+
+"Not a thing!" said Florence. "We've learned ever so many things,
+mother. We're going to house-keep better'n you ever did!"
+
+The family shouted. It was so like Florence.
+
+"I don't think quite that," said Winona modestly. "But we're going to
+have a lovely time running things, anyway!"
+
+So next morning the "lovely time" began.
+
+It seemed queer to waken on a mattress instead of on a pine bed; still
+stranger to hear the alarm-clock go off. Winona did not like
+alarm-clocks, and she threw a pillow at it before she stopped to think.
+But she got up as it told her, for all that, and was downstairs in
+twenty minutes. She had put on a blue ripplette work-dress, fresh and
+pretty. It was pleasant to have on a pretty frock instead of the camp
+uniform.
+
+"There are lots of nice things!" she said to herself sturdily. "I'm
+going to enjoy myself every minute, if I have to tie a string to my
+finger to remind me!"
+
+She found Clay, whose acquaintance she had made the night before,
+already down. The cereal was in the double boiler and the coffee in the
+percolator, already.
+
+"Hit ain' much to do fo' breakfast," said he encouragingly. "Ah do it
+maself, mos'ly." And indeed he proved so expert that all Winona found
+left her to do was gathering the flowers for the table, and cutting the
+oranges. Breakfast had more frills than usual, though--Winona had come
+home prepared for work, and she found some to do. The oranges were
+loosened back from their skins like grape-fruit, there were finger-bowls
+with flower-petals floating on top, the cereal dishes had little plates
+underneath, and even the hot corn-bread, which Winona, by the way,
+discovered Clay did not know how to make, was stacked in a highly
+artistic log-cabin pattern. Winona, with a little white apron over her
+fresh blue dress, sat and poured the coffee importantly. Her father
+smiled with pleasure, as she sat opposite him, flushed and pretty and
+dainty.
+
+"Well!" he said. "This is certainly a fine beginning, Winnie! Did you
+learn all this in the woods?"
+
+Winona colored with pleasure.
+
+"No, I think I knew most of it before I went," she said. "That is, all
+but the corn-bread--that was an experiment."
+
+"And see!" said Florence. "Flowers in the finger-bowls!"
+
+"But you mustn't work too hard, little daughter," said her father, as he
+went into the living-room to bid his wife good-bye before he went to
+business.
+
+Winona followed him closely with her mother's tray. Mrs. Merriam was
+dressed, and Mr. Merriam had helped her downstairs and to her couch. It
+had been rather fun to arrange the tray with doilies and the daintiest
+china. She carried it in as her father came out.
+
+"Good-morning, mother!" she said gayly. "Things are going beautifully,
+and housekeeping's fun!"
+
+"That's my brave little girl!" said her mother. "But I must warn you,
+Ray-of-Light, that you'll get over-tired if you try to put on too many
+trimmings. The trouble with housekeeping is, you never get a vacation.
+It keeps on all day long. Simplify all you can."
+
+Winona laughed. "I refuse to start on your tray!" said she.
+
+She made her mother as comfortable as she could, then went back to the
+kitchen.
+
+"Now, Clay," she said, "Mrs. Merriam's sent for me to come home to run
+things. You and I are going to get as much fun out of the work as we
+can, and do it just as well and as fast as we know how. Aren't we?"
+
+"Yas'm," said Clay doubtfully. "But dey ain' no fun to be got outen
+washin' dishes," he added with conviction.
+
+Winona looked thoughtful.
+
+"No, I suppose there isn't," she admitted. "But there ought to be. Up at
+the Camp we got credit for what we did, if it was done right. I
+wonder----"
+
+"You mean dem credits what folks buys groceries with?" interrupted Clay.
+
+"No," said Winona. "But--I'll tell you, Clay, I have a plan! I'll put a
+chart up here on the kitchen wall. Every time you get the dishes washed
+and put away in half an hour, without breaking them, three times a day
+for a week, you get credit--for fifteen cents. What do you think of
+that?"
+
+"Ah like it!" said Clay. "But Ah rather have de two cents a day."
+
+"All right," promised Winona rashly. "Now go ahead with the dishes while
+I put fresh paper on the shelves."
+
+"Don't take it too hard, dear," Mrs. Merriam warned her once more, when
+Winona ran in, breathless from vigorous bedmaking, to report progress.
+"What are you going to do now?"
+
+"Now? Nothing till lunch time. I'm so glad we have dinner at night.
+It'll be lots easier to get the hardest meal when it's cooler, and
+there's been a rest between."
+
+"You dear child!" said her mother, reaching out her hand to Winona where
+she sat by the sofa. "You're bound to look on the bright side."
+
+"I'm bound to glorify work and be happy," said Winona gayly. "Now,
+mother, I'd like some money. I'd rather not start with a regular
+housekeeping allowance till Monday. But right now I want a dish-mop, and
+a soap-maker, and some new white oil-cloth for the kitchen dresser. Can
+I have all that?"
+
+"Certainly," said her mother. "Keep the kitchen as spic and span as you
+can. The fresher the surroundings, the easier it is to work."
+
+So after luncheon, which wasn't much trouble because there was no man to
+cook for, Winona and Florence went shopping, leaving Clay singing "Ma
+Honey Man" cheerfully over his dishes. The money their mother had given
+them bought not only the things Winona went after, but pink and blue
+chambray for aprons for herself and Florence, and red for Clay.
+
+"The pretty aprons will make it more fun to be in the kitchen--don't you
+think so, Florence?" asked Winona.
+
+Florence, naturally, thought so, too, and they bought them and made them
+up before the day was over. Florence asked of her own accord for
+definite things to do. And an idea came to Winona--that they start a
+system of home honor-beads.
+
+"Of course they won't really count," she explained to her little sister,
+"but they'll always be there to remind us of our work."
+
+"That will be lovely!" said Florence, "but what will they be like?"
+
+"Wait and see," said Winona.
+
+That day was all used up making the new long aprons and the mob-caps to
+match, dainty and Kate-Greenaway looking. But the next morning after the
+beds were done they went to sit with their mother. She said they could
+make the beads there with her. Winona ran out into the garden and
+brought back a handful of flowers that she put in water, and set beside
+her mother's couch.
+
+"How do you feel, mother?" she asked.
+
+"It doesn't hurt badly at all," said her mother cheerfully.
+
+Winona carried out the tray, and moved about, straightening her mother's
+room a little more before she sat down to her work.
+
+"You're sure we're not in your way, mother?" she asked.
+
+"Indeed you aren't!" said her mother. "You don't know how lonely I've
+been with all my children gone. And do let in all the air and sunshine
+you can, dear. It may be hot later, so that we'll have to shut out the
+light a part of the day."
+
+"All right," said Winona, doing it. Then she called to Florence.
+
+"Florence, will you get the oil-paints that we use for stencilling?" she
+asked. "I can borrow them, mother, can't I?"
+
+Mrs. Merriam was perfectly willing, and while Florence was getting the
+tubes of paints, and the brushes, Winona brought out a jar of ordinary
+kidney-beans from the kitchen. She spread newspapers on the floor and on
+the table, and when Florence came back with the paint she set to work.
+
+"Just beans!" said Florence scornfully. "You can't make beads out of
+_them!_"
+
+"Can't I?" said Winona, "Well, if you don't like them when they're done,
+I'll buy you a string of any kind of colored ones that you want."
+
+"Thank you," said Florence, settling down to watch her sister.
+
+The first thing Winona did was to pierce each of the beans lengthwise
+with a steel knitting-needle, which she heated in the alcohol lamp's
+flame. This was the longest part of the work. Next she strung them all
+on a long piece of cord. Then while Florence held one end of the cord
+and she the other, Winona dashed each bead in turn with touches of
+color, one after another--rose, blue, green and violet. She finished
+them with little flecks of gold paint, and fastened one end to the
+chandelier, where the beads could swing free and dry soon. The girls got
+luncheon while the beads were drying.
+
+After luncheon was eaten and cleared away the girls went to work on
+their beads again. Florence held the string while Winona went over them
+with shellac.
+
+"I think we'd better put them outdoors this time," she decided. "The
+smell of the shellac may worry mother."
+
+So they swung the beads from the hammock rope.
+
+"Do you think you will want to wear them?" she asked Florence, as she
+came back and began to clear away the paint-spotted newspapers.
+
+"I should just think I would!" said Florence enthusiastically. "Why,
+they look just like the ones in the Wampoag stores, only lots prettier."
+
+"Who told you how to make them, Winnie?" asked her mother. "They are
+certainly lovely."
+
+"Nobody," said Winona. "I saw some like them, and thought I could do
+it--that's all."
+
+"I think you ought to get a real honor-bead for that," said Florence.
+"I'm going to put down everything you do that I think might get honors
+for you."
+
+"I'll keep track, too," said Mrs. Merriam. "That's a good idea,
+Florence. Then perhaps Winona's having to leave the Camp won't be such a
+setback. Give me a pencil, dear, and that little black notebook by it."
+
+They wrote down the making of the beads.
+
+"We must keep watch, you and I, Florence," Mrs. Merriam said.
+
+Winona looked radiant.
+
+"I'm going to write to Camp now, mother," she said, "and I'll ask Mrs.
+Bryan about counting things like this. It would be lovely if I got on as
+fast here as there--but I don't believe it's possible."
+
+"Wait and see," said Mrs. Merriam.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
+
+
+Of course, things didn't always go smoothly, even with Winona's young
+energy and good-will hard at work. "Accidents will happen in the best
+regulated families" was a proverb whose meaning Winona learned
+thoroughly before she was through. There was, for instance, a tragic
+Saturday when she made ice-cream with most of the ice in the ice-box,
+and forgot to telephone for more. A sizzlingly hot Sunday dawned, with
+no ice to be had. So the Sunday chicken and lettuce were badly spoiled,
+not to mention various tempers. Winona, tired, hot, and with a
+consciousness of guilt, spent most of Sunday afternoon in the kitchen
+trying crossly to invent a Sunday night supper which did not need milk,
+eggs or salad. The day ended with a found-at-the-last-minute meal of
+potted tongue and canned peaches, and a general forgiveness all round,
+but it was a long time after that before Winona forgot it; indeed, she
+was known to get out of bed to take final peeps at the ice-chest and
+make sure it was filled.
+
+Nevertheless, and in spite of all the mishaps that are bound to worry
+housekeepers, a light heart, a strong body and the fixed intention to
+make the best of things carried Winona triumphantly past her worries.
+Presently she found that things were settling into a regular routine,
+and that housekeeping was more interesting than hard. Best of all, she
+found she had a great deal of time to herself.
+
+Then Tom came home. The Scouts had had to break up earlier than they
+expected, for two or three reasons. One was that Mr. Gedney had to get
+back to his business, another was that several of the boys worked, and
+had to get back, too. So Tom descended on his family, and Billy appeared
+next door. And things began to happen.
+
+Tom tried faithfully not to be any trouble, and succeeded pretty well.
+And Mrs. Merriam's ankle got better, slowly, as bad sprains do.
+Presently she was well enough to be taken in a wheel chair to see her
+friends. She usually went to spend the day.
+
+One day everything seemed particularly calm and serene. Tom had wheeled
+the mother to the other end of town, early in the morning, and she was
+going to be taken for a long automobile ride by one of her friends. Tom
+had taken a pocketful of sandwiches, and gone off for a fishing-trip. So
+Winona built a mound of more sandwiches for herself and Florence, and
+prepared to take a day off.
+
+She was curled up on the front porch in a hammock, reading, when the
+first thing occurred.
+
+"Does Miss Winona Merriam live here?" inquired a familiar voice; and
+Winona, looking up, saw Louise, dusty and beaming.
+
+"Oh, Louise, you angel! How lovely it is to see you!" she said, jumping
+up and hugging her friend.
+
+"Yes, isn't it?" said Louise, hugging back. "I came down on the train,
+and I'm here to spend the day, if you want me."
+
+"Want you! I should think I did!" said Winona. "Come in and get cool."
+
+"I'm not hot," said Louise, "but I _would_ like a drink of water."
+
+They were in the kitchen, fussing about pleasurably together, when they
+heard steps clattering up the porch.
+
+"It's the ice-man," said Winona. "I must pay him."
+
+She ran upstairs, and Louise went on helping herself to sandwiches. She
+had eaten three, and was considering whether she really wanted anything
+more till lunch-time, when a large, fishy hand dropped over her shoulder
+and took a handful of ham-and-lettuce ones.
+
+"Tom Merriam! There won't be enough for lunch if we both eat them! I
+thought you'd gone off fishing for the day."
+
+"So did I," said Tom leisurely, "but I found I hadn't. Where did you
+blow in from?"
+
+"Camp," she said. "Winona's upstairs hunting for change. She thought you
+walked like the ice-man."
+
+"Poor Win! She has that ice-man on her mind," said Tom. "Nay, nay,
+little one. For far other reason am I here."
+
+He struck an attitude, with the sandwich he hadn't finished waving over
+his head.
+
+"Got hungry?" asked Louise prosaically.
+
+"Not at all," said Tom. "It was this way. As I was purchasing bait, I
+met my father."
+
+"Well--did he send you home?"
+
+"Not exactly. Only--there's a convention in town. A ministers'
+convention. And father's met two long-lost college chums, which--or
+who--are coming here to dinner to-night. One has a wife. Better tell
+Winona, and have Clay put on some extra plates. And--I forgot--here's a
+fish I caught before I used up my bait and met father. Have him boiled
+or something for dinner with some of that stuff like mayonnaise dressing
+with green things in."
+
+"Your father?" asked Louise frivolously.
+
+"No, the fish!"
+
+Tom rushed upstairs to change his clothes, while Louise thoughtfully ate
+another sandwich and called Winona.
+
+Winona came running down the back stairs.
+
+"Did you keep him?" she said. "I couldn't find where I'd put the
+change."
+
+"It wasn't the ice-man," said Louise, "it was Tom."
+
+"Tom?" asked Winona. "But he was gone for the day."
+
+"Anyway, he's back. And--Winona Merriam, we'll have to make more
+sandwiches for supper, or dinner or whatever it is. Two ministers and
+one wife are coming here to dinner to-night."
+
+Winona sprang to her feet and snapped her book shut.
+
+"_Sandwiches!_" she said scornfully. "Don't you know you have to _feed_
+convention people? Mother would die, and the Ladies' Aid faint in a
+body, if we gave them sandwiches for dinner. No. They have to have a
+course dinner!"
+
+"Where are you going to get it?" asked Louise meekly.
+
+"Here!" said Winona. "I found one in a magazine the other day. Let's see
+what we can do with it."
+
+Louise looked at Winona with respect. "Do you often rise to occasions
+this way?" she asked.
+
+"This is the almost human intelligence that I have sometimes," said
+Winona.
+
+"Sure it's intelligence?" asked Louise doubtfully.
+
+Winona led the way upstairs toward her scrapbook without deigning to
+reply. Both girls bent eagerly over the course dinner she had pasted in
+on the last page.
+
+"Shellfish, soup, fish, salad, roast, entrees, vegetables, dessert,
+black coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins," she read. "These, in the order
+named, constitute a simple dinner."
+
+"I'd like to know who brought up the woman who wrote that," commented
+Louise. "The Emperor of Russia, I should think."
+
+"Anyway, I am going to try to have it," said Winona. "We can have
+oysters to begin with, because Tom always has some around for bait."
+
+"That kind mayn't be good to eat," objected Louise.
+
+"Never mind. Perhaps these people won't know the difference, just think
+they're a brand-new kind."
+
+"You don't open them till the very last thing, and then you serve them
+with ice on their heads to keep them cool, and lemon slices. I know that
+much," said Louise, following Winona downstairs again.
+
+"Then we won't open them till the very last thing, and forget all about
+them till Tom comes downstairs again," said Winona with decision.
+"Soup--let's see. Oh, I know! Mother had me make some bouillon this
+morning, for old Mrs. Johnson down in Hallam's Alley. We'll serve that
+in the bouillon cups, and make Mrs. Johnson some more to-morrow, or take
+her chewing-tobacco instead. She'd much rather have it, she says."
+
+"All right. And Tom brought some fish in," supplied Louise.
+
+They went out to inspect the fish, and found that there would be plenty,
+if it was carefully distributed.
+
+"Doesn't everything dovetail beautifully?" said Winona thankfully.
+"What's next?"
+
+"Salad," said Louise, consulting the scrapbook. "Haven't you any lettuce
+in the garden?"
+
+"Of course we have!" said Winona. "All there is to do is to pick it."
+
+"Well--the roast?"
+
+But here there was a deadlock.
+
+"There isn't a thing in the house to roast," said Winona, "and this time
+of year you have to telephone early to get things." She moved to the
+telephone, and pulled herself back in dismay. "This is Wednesday!" she
+said. "And all the shops are closed Wednesday afternoon!"
+
+"It isn't afternoon, yet," said Louise.
+
+"Look at the clock," said Winona.
+
+And it was afternoon--one o'clock.
+
+"Perhaps that's a stray butcher," said Louise, as they heard a long,
+loud knock at the kitchen door.
+
+But it was only Billy Lee, who explained that he had tried every door
+but this in vain. He had a note to Winona from his sister. He perched
+himself on the stationary tubs while she read it, on the chance that she
+might want to write an answer.
+
+"Come over and stay with me this afternoon," it said. "I have a
+headache."
+
+"Oh, I can't, Billy!" explained Winona, looking up from the note. "We
+have dinner to get for two ministers and their wife, and--Billy, you
+have a great deal of steady common sense. I heard father say so. What
+would you do if there wasn't any meat, or any time to get any, or any
+place to get it?"
+
+Billy tucked his foot under him, and looked serious, mechanically taking
+a sandwich as he thought. The girls were eating them, too, for it had
+been silently agreed that that would be all the lunch they would bother
+with.
+
+"Why not try Puppums?" he suggested. "If they're missionaries they're
+used to roast dog. Every missionary has to learn to like it in the last
+year of his course."
+
+"Yes, or we might roast Clay," said Louise scornfully. "Why don't you
+suggest that? He isn't any use, goodness knows, and they may have been
+missionaries to the cannibals!" She glanced at the small darky, who was
+sitting on the cellar door in happy idleness, singing fragments of
+popular songs to himself.
+
+"You ought to make him useful," said Billy. "Here, Clay, get up and help
+your young ladies."
+
+"Ah _is_ helpin' 'em," said Clay with dignity; nevertheless he rose and
+came in for further orders.
+
+"Down home," continued Billy, "we always kill a chicken when we expect a
+minister."
+
+"But we haven't so much as a papier-mache Easter chick," objected
+Louise.
+
+"The people next door but one have," said Winona excitedly, starting up.
+"It's against the law to keep chickens within the city limits, but they
+do it. But they're away for the day."
+
+"They're always getting into your garden and tempting poor old Puppums
+to chase them," said Billy sympathetically.
+
+Winona, acting on his suggestion, went to the door and looked out.
+
+"Yes," she said. "There's one there now. There nearly always is."
+
+Louise lifted one eyebrow. "Well?" said she.
+
+"Very well," said Winona. "Come on, ladies and gentlemen. We are going
+to catch a next-door-but-one chicken, and pay the Janeways for him
+to-morrow."
+
+"When Puppums caught one last week," said Florence, appearing suddenly,
+evidently in full possession of the conversation, "you tied it round his
+neck!"
+
+She went down under the tubs to extract the wronged animal and
+sympathize with him on the injustice of life. But only Puppums heard
+her, for Billy and Winona, hindered by Clay, were careering wildly about
+after a vociferous, very agile fowl. It was finally captured with a
+crab-net, and led away to execution by Clay. It appeared that he, also,
+had had experience in chicken-killing for clergymen. He had often done
+it, he said, very artistically.
+
+As he and the rooster passed on their way to the scaffold, Winona ran
+into the kitchen, and out again with a scream.
+
+"It's Henry!" she said wildly. "It's Henry! We've caught the Janeways's
+pet rooster! Clay! Clay!"
+
+"Yas'm!" said Clay, appearing with Henry's head in one hand and his body
+in the other. "Dis heah roosteh she certn'ly is good an' daid! I c'n fix
+'em!"
+
+"And they loved him so!" said Winona tragically. "They were telling
+mother only yesterday how intellectual he was. 'Not clever, merely,'
+Mrs. Janeway said, 'but really intellectual, my dear Mrs. Merriam!'"
+
+Billy clutched the tubs in order to laugh better, and Louise sat down
+just where she was, on the floor.
+
+"What's the matter?" called Tom, running downstairs very clean and tidy.
+
+"Winona's murdered the Janeways's intellectual rooster!" explained
+Billy; and lay back on the tubs again.
+
+Tom, too, began to howl.
+
+"What--Henry?" he said, when he could speak. "Oh, Winnie, you _have_
+done it! They've had him in the family since their grandfather's time
+anyway. Well, you'd better make the best of it, and have Clay take out
+his interior decorations. Maybe we can eat him if you boil him long
+enough. I could have robbed the Martins's tank of their tame goldfish if
+I'd known you wanted a dinner of household pets." He sat down on the
+tubs by Billy and went off again.
+
+"I suggested Puppums in the first place!" gurgled Billy.
+
+"Never mind, Win," said Louise, going over to Winona, who stood
+mournfully by the window, "I'll attend to Henry. We'll boil him first
+and then bake him, and he'll be quite good. I'll make the stuffing for
+him, too. I know how quite well."
+
+"Oh, thank you, Louise!" and Winona brightened up.
+
+"Oh," teased Billy, "then the remorse isn't because he's Henry, but
+because he's tough?"
+
+"It's both," said Winona, "but there's no use being uselessly remorseful
+when you have work to do. I can feel ever so badly about it when I go to
+bed to-night. I often do. The fish is all right, anyway, and I'm going
+to make some sauce hollandaise for it out of the cookbook. Really all
+you need to know how to cook is a cookbook and intelligence."
+
+"I see the cookbook, but where----" began Tom.
+
+"Billy Lee," said Winona firmly, "if you came to see Tom, won't you
+please take him out on the front porch and see him?"
+
+"I didn't!" said Billy coolly. "I came to bring Nataly's note, and I'm
+staying to see you invent a ten-course dinner, if you'll let me. Let me
+stay to dinner, Henry and all, and I'll make your fish-sauce. All you
+need is a cookbook and intelligence----"
+
+"Two clergymen," counted Winona, "one wife, father, Louise, Tom,
+me--Florence is going out to supper, she said this morning. You'll just
+make eight, Billy. Come and welcome, only please leave the fish-sauce
+alone."
+
+But Billy had already tied himself into a big pink apron, and was mixing
+butter and flour in a saucepan with every sign of knowing what he was
+about.
+
+There was a brief, tense silence while the chicken, some white potatoes
+and onions, were put on to boil, sweet potatoes laid in the oven to be
+baked, and Clay sent into the garden for lettuce and radishes. They did
+not light any of the gas-stove burners except the one under the late
+Henry, because the afternoon was yet long. They went out on the porch
+and talked for a couple of hours. There was a general feeling that they
+mustn't get too far away from the dinner.
+
+About four Winona remembered to say to Tom, "Have you any bait-clams or
+oysters? We need them for our first course."
+
+"Bait!" said Tom. "Considering we've stolen the meat from the neighbors,
+and robbed the poor of the soup, and I caught the fish, we can afford to
+buy a few blue-points. I'll go down and get them. Is there anything else
+you'd like while I'm down town?"
+
+"Is it too late to order ice-cream?"
+
+"I'm afraid so," he said. "The ice-cream places won't be open till
+five-thirty, and then only for an hour, you know."
+
+"The dairies are," Winona remembered. "Please buy some cream on your way
+back, and we'll find a receipt and make it. There are nuts and raisins
+in the house. Crackers--cheese.... I think we'll have enough for
+dinner."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder!" said her brother thoughtfully, as he walked away
+to get his wheel.
+
+The others went back to the kitchen, and Billy went on with his sauce
+hollandaise--that is, he took it out of the bowl of water where it had
+been cooling, and put it in the ice-chest.
+
+"Why, it's good!" said Winona, rather impolitely, having sampled it on
+its way.
+
+"Of course it's good!" said Billy serenely. "Didn't I ever tell you
+about our old cook down south, and how I adored her? I used to tag round
+after her all the time when I was small--never would stay with my
+nurse--and I learned a lot of things. And seeing I'm going to be invited
+to this banquet, looks like I'd better make the ice-cream for you."
+
+"Oh, can you?"
+
+"Watch me!" said Billy for all answer.
+
+As a matter of fact, when Tom got back with the blue-points and the
+cream, he and Billy went to work together, and they compounded a
+pineapple ice-cream that was fit for the gods. Louise, meanwhile,
+stuffed the parboiled fowl and put him in to roast. The boys captured
+Clay, who had gone back to his cellar door and his songs, and set him to
+crushing ice. Winona sat down on the tubs where Billy had been, and gave
+herself up to deep thought. The entree had not yet been solved.
+
+"Pancake batter?" she said aloud at last, in a mildly conversational
+tone.
+
+"I'm sure of it," said Billy, poking his head in from the back porch.
+
+"If I take that pancake batter I got ready for to-morrow morning,
+sweeten it, and put butter and eggs and peaches in it, I don't see why
+it wouldn't be peach fritters. Anyway I can try ... then you drop them
+in the lard...."
+
+She thought it over a little longer silently. Then she jumped down, and
+went into the cellar for the batter and the peaches, and brought them
+out on the back porch, near the ice-box, to experiment with. Tom had
+gone back to the pantry to see if there was cake enough, but Billy was
+still packing ice and salt around the ice-cream.
+
+"Dear me!" said Winona, setting down her load on a low shelf. "I hate to
+see you doing all this. You're company, you know, and here we're letting
+you get a lot of the dinner. It worries me!"
+
+"Don't let it," counselled Billy, tossing a lock of hair out of his eyes
+and going on with the packing. "I'm having a good time. To tell you the
+truth, I always have a good time over here. I rather feel as if I
+belonged to the family--and that's a nice feel to have. You're a good
+little chum, Winnie.... If you don't let me pack all the freezers and
+things I want to I'll just have to go back to merely being let in once
+in awhile, like company."
+
+"I feel as if you belonged to the family, too, Billy," said Winona
+sincerely, "and if your packing freezers is any sign you do, go right
+on, please."
+
+"I am," Billy assured her with his usual placidity.
+
+"The lard's hot, Win! Come see if they'll frit!" called Louise from
+within; and Winona dashed off with her batter. But it was nice to have
+Billy feel that way about things. He was certainly the nicest boy she
+knew....
+
+They began together, she and Louise, to drop the yellow batter into the
+fat, while Clay and the boys turned the freezer by turns. Louise and
+Winona had become so excited about their dinner by this time that a mere
+fritter-sauce was nothing. They made one, it seemed to them afterwards,
+looking back, without knowing how they did it, and it was very good at
+that.
+
+"Oysters, soup, fish, salad," muttered Winona for the twentieth time. "I
+believe everything's ready but the cream, and that must be almost
+finished. Boys!" she called out through the back door, "will you please
+go and deck yourselves for the feast? Wear your tuxedos, please. We're
+going to keep up the Merriam reputation for hospitality, or die in the
+attempt!"
+
+"All right--just wait till we pack it," Tom called back.
+
+But she saw that they had separated in quest of their evening clothes
+before she left. Tom had just acquired his first set, and wasn't
+particularly fond of them. But he put them on meekly, just the same.
+
+"We'd better dress, too," said Louise. "I'll run over home and slip some
+things in a suitcase, and be right back again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
+
+
+Louise was as good as her word. She was back in a very few minutes, and
+in Winona's room again. She found her friend standing in the middle of
+the floor, her dress exactly what it had been when she left.
+
+"Better hurry," warned Louise. "We haven't overmuch time."
+
+"Hurry!" said Winona despairingly. "How can I? Do you know what I've
+done? I've hung away every single thin dress I own in the wardrobe,
+instead of putting them in the wash. I knew there was something I'd
+forgotten, and I couldn't think what it was."
+
+"Oh, how dreadful!" said Louise. "You'll have to put on something
+gorgeous, to match the boys' clothes."
+
+"What can I do?" asked Winona sadly, and swung open the doors of her
+wardrobe. There, crumpled, forlorn, dejected, hung a line of dresses
+each hopelessly past wearing in its present state.
+
+"Isn't that a nice trick for a Camp Fire Girl?" inquired Winona
+scornfully. "It's the kind of thing you'd lecture a Blue Bird kindly but
+firmly for doing, and make her see what a wreck she was going to make of
+her whole life if she kept on."
+
+"Never mind," said Louise soothingly. "You've had so many other things
+to do, it's no wonder you couldn't remember that. Haven't you anything
+but wash dresses? Where's your yellow silk voile?"
+
+"I _did_ remember that!" said Winona with a reluctant grin. "I sent it
+to the cleaner's day before yesterday. It won't be done till Saturday."
+
+"What about your flowered dimity? Is all the freshness out of that? You
+don't wear it often."
+
+"I sent for it from camp, for one of the girls to use in the Samantha
+tableaux, and the girl still has it, I suppose. She never gave it back.
+I forgot to ask for it, in the hurry of getting home. There's no use
+trying to think. I've thought and thought, and everything else is too
+hot to wear, or soiled. There's nothing for it but a shirtwaist and
+skirt."
+
+"Anything of mine would be up to your knees, and baggy," said Louise
+thoughtfully. "Wait a minute, Win, till I think."
+
+"I'll do my hair while you're at it," said Winona.
+
+"Why couldn't you borrow something of your mother's?" was Louise's next
+thought.
+
+"Mother wears long dresses," said Winona. "If she didn't I could--I'm
+nearly her build."
+
+"Couldn't you pin them up?"
+
+"I declare, I believe I'll try," exclaimed Winona daringly. She ran out
+of the room, while Louise went on with her own dressing, and came back
+in a minute with a fresh, silk-lined black organdy over her arm.
+
+"This is all there is for it," she said. "Mother would be willing, I
+know, if she were here. She always wants me to wear her things."
+
+"It's lovely," said Louise admiringly, as Winona's pink cheeks and blue
+eyes appeared above the soft black, "but I'm afraid we'll hurt it if we
+put pins in it."
+
+"I won't pin it up, then," said Winona. "The guests will never know the
+difference. I don't suppose father has mentioned my age."
+
+"You'll look awfully old!"
+
+"I don't care! Have you any black hair-ribbons you could let me have,
+Louise? I see where I never get the honor bead for not borrowing, by the
+way!"
+
+"You won't lose it on account of my ribbons," said Louise, "because I
+haven't any. But I don't believe hair-ribbons and your gown would match.
+Did you know you had a train?"
+
+"No!" said Winona joyfully. She loved "dressing up," and this was
+beginning to look very much like it. "I'll do my hair up on top of my
+head, and nobody'll think I'm younger than twenty!"
+
+"Good!" said Louise, and helped. They wound the goldy-brown mass up on
+the very top, and completed the effect by hunting out a pair of plain
+glass eye-glasses, which Tom had brought from the ten-cent store once
+long ago.
+
+"You look twenty-five anyway!" exclaimed Louise, and Winona fitted the
+glasses on her nose and assumed a severe expression to match. "Put your
+hair back off your forehead--that way.... That's splendid!"
+
+"I do look old!" said Winona, with a pleased expression. She trained up
+and down the room and looked at herself in the glass. "I'll go down
+now."
+
+"I'll be there in a minute," said Louise. "Don't wait for me."
+
+When Winona sailed down in her disguise to put the finishing touches to
+the table she found that Tom was already dressed, and was standing
+meekly at the head of the board. And also he had found time to decorate
+it.
+
+"How do you like it?" he asked in a tone even meeker than his attitude.
+
+Winona looked, pulled off her glasses in order to see better, looked
+again--and dropped down in a hopeless heap in the opposite chair. She
+did not say anything--the situation was beyond words.
+
+"Don't you like it?" said Tom again sweetly.
+
+"Like it!" said Winona, beginning to giggle.
+
+Four half-barrel hoops had been wreathed in smilax, and arched across
+the table at regular intervals, one at each end and one between each two
+places. In the middle of the table, completely hiding the olives, lay a
+half-opened gridiron, also wound with smilax. It was all very neatly
+done, for Tom was very neat-handed; but the general effect was rather
+startling.
+
+"It--why, it looks like somebody's grave!" said Winona protestingly.
+
+Her tone was so stern that Puppums rose from beneath the table and tried
+nervously to hide under the sideboard, revealing as he went a decoration
+of smilax round his neck, continued in a garland down his spine,
+fastened at the tail. He did not seem to like it.
+
+"That's what it is!" said Tom complacently, as Winona pounced on the
+abject dog and unwreathed him. "Here's the magazine I got it from. You
+said to. All there was in this month's copy was a page of neat and
+inexpensive grave decorations. I copied the handsomest one in the bunch,
+'William R. Hicks; complete cost of decoration three dollars and twenty
+cents.' That thing in the middle's a Gates Ajar, or the nearest I could
+get to it. It got a prize, too."
+
+"Do you suppose I want William R. Hicks's grave, or anybody's grave, on
+the table when we're having a special hand-made dinner that I've spent
+most of the afternoon on?" demanded his sister, laughing in spite of her
+objections.
+
+"What's the row?" asked Billy cheerfully, appearing in the door with an
+armful of roses and ferns.
+
+"I followed Win's directions about the table, and she doesn't seem to
+like it," said Tom in a voice that was intended to sound injured.
+
+"What's the gridiron for? A gentle reminder of the Cannibal Isles? We
+don't really know yet that they're missionaries!" said Billy.
+
+"Sorry you don't know a Gates Ajar when you see it," said Tom, grinning.
+
+"I do," said Billy decidedly. "That isn't one. Here are your roses,
+Winnie. You look like somebody's step-mother in all that train and
+glasses. Where did you get them?"
+
+"Winona!" called Louise, tearing downstairs, "I've just remembered that
+Clay has been calling the fritters 'crullers' ever since we made them.
+He'll send them in with the ice-cream if he isn't told not to."
+
+She fled to the kitchen.
+
+"Step-mother.... M'm," said Tom with a light of mischief in his eye; and
+followed Louise.
+
+"_Look_ at the table!" Winona implored Billy.
+
+Billy looked, took in the whole effect, and, as Winona had done, sat
+down to laugh in comfort.
+
+"It's not so bad, after all," he said comfortingly when he was through.
+"Let's take the bones out of these green wicket-things, and lay the
+vines straight across the table. They'll get into the eats, likely, but
+we can't stop for that. Can't you do anything with that gridiron ajar? I
+should think the stuff on it would look all right around a low bowl of
+roses."
+
+"Maybe it would," said Winona with renewed courage, and set to work
+stripping it while Billy took the supports from the smilax arches, and
+laid it flat, with an occasional rose at intervals. They found a low,
+wide bowl that, filled with roses, and wound with smilax, made an
+excellent centerpiece.
+
+Winona stepped back to view the general effect with a sigh of
+satisfaction.
+
+"Billy! I'll remember this afternoon of you to the longest day I live!"
+she said.
+
+"Billy! We want you!" called Louise from the kitchen in a smothered
+voice. Winona would have gone, too, for she was sure she heard giggles,
+but just at this moment Clay came in, and his inability to understand
+why he shouldn't add a wide red cheese-cloth sash to his white apron
+drove everything else out of her head. By the time she had argued him
+out of it the others were back, suspiciously grave.
+
+"Not here yet!" sighed Louise. "I feel as if I couldn't wait to have
+them taste my stuffing! Let's go into the living-room and sing, or go
+out back and play tag, or something."
+
+"Dar dey is!" shouted Clay, running to the window.
+
+The rest rushed, too, and looked over his woolly head.
+
+"A big one and a little one and a middle-sized wife, like the Three
+Bears," commented Winona. "They're coming in by the front way. Oh----"
+
+That was because the fritter-sauce boiled over just as the guests were
+ushered in. Both the girls forgot their manners, and ran to the kitchen
+to rescue it. So only Tom and Billy were in the living-room to be
+introduced.
+
+"My wife and daughter will be here presently," said Mr. Merriam, who had
+evidently forgotten that Mrs. Merriam was expected to stay away till
+about nine. "Tom, will you run up and tell your mother and Winona that
+our friends are here?"
+
+But even as he spoke Winona, a little breathless, but trained,
+psyche-knotted and eye-glassed, appeared in the doorway with Louise
+behind her. She came in with an air of dignity which her mother could
+not have bettered, and greeted her guests regally, in her excitement
+forgetting to wait for an introduction.
+
+Not so Tom.
+
+"My step-mother, and my sister," he whispered in the ear of Mr. Driggs,
+the tall minister, who promptly addressed Winona as "Mrs. Merriam."
+Winona thought he said "Miss," and went on talking excitedly about
+everything she could think of. Her father was deep in conversation with
+Mr. Donne, the other guest, who was a classmate of his. Tom's murmured
+"Mother isn't home yet--Winona's managing things----" scarcely stopped
+the flood of reminiscences.
+
+"I never heard that your father had a second wife," remarked Mrs. Driggs
+to Louise, who had selected her to talk to.
+
+"It's quite recent," said Louise sadly; and Mrs. Driggs did not ask any
+more questions.
+
+Before things got more complicated Clay announced dinner in an awestruck
+voice, and fled instead of holding aside the portieres for the guests,
+as he had been instructed. He had a good deal on his mind, for he could
+not read very well yet, so they had had to sketch each particular thing
+with a pencil, and pin the series of pictures against the wall in their
+order as they were to come. The pictures of the oysters and the sweet
+potatoes were very much alike, and, as Clay confided to Winona
+afterward, they worried him considerably.
+
+Winona seated her guests with the same dignity which had been hers ever
+since the train had; and led the conversation in the ways it should go,
+nobly assisted by Billy. It appeared Billy could talk like a grown-up
+person of forty when he wanted to--which wasn't often, for Billy was a
+rather silent person ordinarily. Tom and Louise were never, either of
+them, troubled by shyness, and except that they seemed to laugh a little
+more than the facts warranted they were just as usual.
+
+Every course, from old Mrs. Johnson's stolen bouillon to the black
+coffee, came on in its proper place and was eaten with enthusiasm. As
+the third course came on without mishap, Winona began to relax, and by
+the end of the dinner was quite at ease. Mr. Donne, beside her, was
+liking his dinner so much that for quite awhile Winona did not have to
+do any talking. When he did talk it was about Ladies' Aid Societies. Now
+Mrs. Merriam was the President of the Ladies' Aid of her church, not to
+speak of various things that she held minor offices in, and she was
+quite an authority. Mr. Donne had been told this, and he thought he was
+talking to Winona about something she was an authority on. Winona was
+rather bewildered, for she had never attended a Ladies' Aid meeting in
+her life, and like the inventor of the Purple Cow, till she was grown up
+"never hoped to see one." Nevertheless she struck out valiantly, and was
+getting on fairly well when Mrs. Driggs's voice struck across the
+general tide of talk.
+
+"Mrs. Merriam," she said, "I'm sorry to trouble you, but I never can eat
+fish without a sprinkle of nutmeg. Could you have a little grated on
+this delicious bit for me?"
+
+"Why, yes!" said Winona cordially. "Clay----!"
+
+"Hit ain' none, Miss Winnie," interrupted the small servant in a
+distressed whisper.
+
+"Then go borrow one at Mrs. Lee's, and hurry!" whispered Winona.
+"Anything, so you only get it and have it for Mrs. Driggs's fish."
+
+Clay looked black for a moment. Then a comprehensive grin dawned on his
+face. He trotted out with Mrs. Driggs's fish, and brought it back again
+a few moments later, liberally nutmegged and very much to the lady's
+taste. She ate it all and was happy.
+
+"You seem to have no difficulty in keeping discipline in your family and
+among your step-children, Mrs. Merriam," said Mr. Donne, almost directly
+after the nutmeg episode. "You must seem more like a sister than a
+mother to these tall young people."
+
+Winona was struck dumb with astonishment for a moment. She looked across
+at Tom, who looked back at her imploringly. She could see what had
+happened out in the kitchen, that time that the three others had been
+there alone and giggling. But this was no time to have a scene. She
+braced herself and settled her glasses more firmly, after one
+reproachful look at the three culprits, whose faces were tense with
+apprehension.
+
+"Yes," she replied quietly, talking, as Tom afterwards said, like a
+seraph, "They do seem like that. They are charming children, really."
+
+Mr. Donne went on talking about it. Winona went on replying with serene
+dignity. Even when he praised the cook she took it serenely, and when
+the Ladies' Aid came in sight again she called to mind a visit from the
+secretary at which she had been present, and quite overwhelmed Mr. Donne
+with particulars.
+
+Mrs. Driggs had been a little quiet and hard to talk to at the beginning
+of the meal, but Billy--Billy the quiet, Billy the shy among his own
+kind--proved to have the art of talking to grown people down to a fine
+point. He not only kept his end up, but he steered nobly away from risky
+questions of relationship, and other such perilous topics.
+
+"It certainly gives you confidence to be a married woman!" thought
+Winona, as she excused herself and went to see about unpacking the
+ice-cream. Clay's performance so far had been perfect, but she did not
+trust anybody but herself to get the cream successfully out of the
+freezer, without getting salt into it.
+
+"Where did you find that nutmeg, Clay?" she asked curiously, as they
+arranged the cakes and ice-cream, and put melted chocolate in a pitcher.
+
+"Law, Miss Winnie," said Clay, his smile nearly coiling itself around
+his ears, "I done tole you hit wasn't none. I des took dis yere ole
+wooden button-hook what hangs on a nail here, an' grate a li'l bit of it
+off. De minister's wife she never know de diffunce."
+
+Winona caught her breath, but this was no time to be overcome. The
+dessert had to be served. They were all laughing at something Louise was
+saying, when she came back. "I wonder if they would look so happy if I
+told them about the nutmeg!" she couldn't help thinking, but it did not
+seem a very good thing to tell anyone, just then--although it was too
+good to keep always. The Camp Fire heard about it afterward.
+
+Coffee, cheese, nuts and raisins, all appeared and disappeared, and then
+Winona led her sated guests out on the porch. She felt triumphantly
+virtuous. The dinner had been good straight through, the talk had gone
+smoothly, and the company seemed very happy and pleased. She sat down by
+Mrs. Driggs and went on talking. She was going on prosperously when Mr.
+Donne's voice, from the other end of the porch, stopped Mrs. Driggs's
+account of her last maid.
+
+"How long did you say you had been married, Mrs. Merriam?" he inquired.
+
+"Married?" echoed Winona desperately, trying to think of a way out.
+
+She was spared giving her answer. There was a sound of footsteps and
+wheels within the house, and Mrs. Merriam's wheel-chair, propelled by
+Florence, appeared in the doorway.
+
+"I got back sooner than I thought I should, Frances," said the real Mrs.
+Merriam's cheerful voice. "Florence came over and told me that our
+friends were here, so I had her wheel me back as soon as I'd had my
+supper. We didn't get home from the ride till a little while ago, and I
+couldn't get here for the meal."
+
+Winona did not wait to hear more. There was a long open window at her
+back. One spring--and all that remained to tell the tale of "young Mrs.
+Merriam" was an overturned porch-chair and the distant sound of a
+tearing garment. Up in her room, pulling down her hair and slipping on
+her fresh middy-blouse and white skirt, Winona heard the laughter, and
+knew the others were being forgiven, and the whole tale told.
+
+"Anyway!" she said to herself as she took off her glasses, shook down
+her hair, washed her hot face and prepared to walk downstairs and meet
+the family. "Anyway, that couldn't have been a better dinner if I'd been
+married sixteen times!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
+
+
+"This paying for deceased poultry," said Tom, "is getting monotonous.
+First there were those pedigreed geese up on the river, and now Henry. I
+know Henry never cost as much as the Janeways say he did."
+
+"I think we're paying for all it cost to send him to prep school and
+college," suggested Louise, who was staying over a day. "You forget that
+Henry was intellectual."
+
+"He was tough," agreed Tom, "if that's any sign! So was paying for him."
+
+"Oh, Tommy dear!" said Winona penitently. "Henry was really my fault. I
+oughtn't to let you join in with me. I can pay for Henry very well
+alone."
+
+"I think I see you!" said Tom. "No, Winnie, united we stand, divided we
+fall. I help pay for Henry--see you later--just remembered how late it
+is."
+
+He bolted upstairs, leaving Winona, Louise and Billy on the porch
+staring at each other.
+
+"What's struck Tom?" asked Billy. "First time I ever knew him to be in a
+hurry."
+
+"Why, I don't know," said Louise. "I thought you two generally hunted
+together."
+
+"Not to-night," said Billy. He vaulted the railing casually, and walked
+out into the middle of the lawn, where he could see Tom's lighted
+window. "He's up there with all the lights on, walking the floor as if
+he had something on his conscience, trying to tie all his neckties, one
+after another," reported Billy. "There--there goes the third one. He's
+going to try a red one now."
+
+"I know what it is," said Winona, seeing a light. "I've just remembered.
+He's going to call on a girl. He's been going to for all week, and just
+got braced up to it. He's been wearing me out all day, asking me for
+things to talk to her about. I suppose he's trying to decide on the
+necktie that matches his socks best."
+
+"But, great Scott, he's been to see girls before!" protested Billy.
+"I've been along when he's been seeing girls, and fellows, and even old
+gentlemen, and he never took it so hard."
+
+"It's a very particular, grown-up call," explained Winona, "with a
+card-case and a cane, and everything like that."
+
+"What's the cane for?" asked Billy, who had come back to his seat on the
+porch. "Girl collecting them?"
+
+"I think it must be for moral support," put in Louise.
+
+"I didn't know he had one," said Billy. "Where did he get it?"
+
+"Christmas present last year," explained Winona briefly. "Billy, don't
+you wish we were all back at Wampoag, having a moonlight swim?"
+
+"I certainly do," said Billy. "Not but that your porch is nice, too," he
+added with the politeness he never seemed to forget.
+
+Before they could lament camp life any further, Tom rushed down the
+stairs.
+
+"Winnie! Winnie! Where's my blue scarf?" he called from inside the front
+door.
+
+"On Louise," Winona called back promptly. "Don't you remember, you asked
+her if she didn't want to wear it with her sailor-suit?"
+
+"Can I have it, Lou?" he asked, coming out. "I wouldn't ask you, but it
+just matches my hatband."
+
+"Certainly you can have it," said Louise, with chilly politeness,
+unfastening it and handing it to him.
+
+"Good-evening, Mr. Merriam," said Billy, grinning, and rising in order
+to make a very low bow. "I never thought you were this far on the way to
+being a perfect lady, old boy--Mr. Merriam, I mean."
+
+"Going to call on an awfully correct girl," said Tom off-handedly. "I
+say, Lou, can I have that blue class-pin of yours?"
+
+"Certainly," said Louise again, still more coldly, detaching it and
+holding it out. "Anything else you think you'd like?"
+
+"Not that I can think of," said Tom, taking the class-pin. "That's a
+good old Lou," he ended, adding insult to injury. Then he sat down and
+pulled out his mother's celluloid memorandum tablets. He laid them on
+his knee and looked at them earnestly, as he adjusted the tie and the
+class-pin.
+
+"Did you think of any more things for me to say after I landed the
+California Exposition on her?" he asked his sister.
+
+Winona looked over at Billy to see if he saw the funny side of it. There
+was no use looking at Louise, for in her present sulky frame of mind she
+would not have seen anything funny in a whole joke-book.
+
+"How would the next election do?" she suggested gravely.
+
+"M-m--all right," said Tom, entering it. "That won't last forever,
+though, because all you can ever do is guess which man will get it. I
+think you might help a fellow out, Lou. You're generally so clever."
+
+"Ask her how she likes her hats trimmed," said Louise scornfully,
+without turning around to him.
+
+"Oh, no," said Tom, "that's too silly a question." But he put it down
+just the same. "Let's see. That ought to carry me on till nearly
+nine.... Caesar! It's time I went! Don't mind if I go off and leave you,
+do you Bill?"
+
+"Not a bit!" said Billy calmly. "I'm all right. But"--Billy's eyes
+twinkled--"don't you really think you ought to wear your tuxedo, old
+fellow? Much more correct, you know. I saw it in a Hints to Best
+Dressers' column awhile ago. It said that no true gentleman was without
+evening clothes in the evening."
+
+Tom looked uneasy, but he was firm.
+
+"I won't get into that thing for anything less than a dance or a
+hand-made clerical dinner," he said, thoughtlessly jamming his hat down
+over one ear the way he usually wore it, then putting it straight with a
+jerk. "Great Scott! I must hurry!"
+
+"My ears and whiskers! The Duchess! Won't I catch it if I'm late!"
+quoted Louise scornfully from Alice in Wonderland, as Tom dived down the
+steps.
+
+"What on earth's got into Tom!" asked Billy. "The idea of doing that
+because you like it!"
+
+"I don't know," said Winona. "It is queer, isn't it?"
+
+"Going off acting like he was all grown up!" mused Billy, still lost in
+wonder at such a waste of a perfectly good evening.
+
+"I do wish you wouldn't always say 'like' for 'as if,' Billy,"
+interrupted Louise sharply. "I hate it."
+
+"We always say it that way down home," said Billy.
+
+"That's no reason for your doing it here! Being born in China doesn't
+make it good manners for you to eat with chopsticks," said Louise,
+walking into the house and slamming the screen-door behind her.
+
+"Can't Ah help yo' find yo' tempah, Louise?" Billy called teasingly
+after her, with a purposely exaggerated Southern accent. There was no
+answer.
+
+"You'd be cross, too, if you were Louise," Winona defended her friend.
+"One of the things she stayed down from camp over to-night for was that
+she and Tom were going off to kodak some cloud effects for a magazine
+prize. And she was going to try to get some photographs that would count
+in Camp Fire work, too. And Tom's walked off, forgetting all about it."
+
+"Why didn't you remind him?" asked Billy sensibly.
+
+"Louise wouldn't let me. She said she'd go straight back if I did."
+
+"Well, she needn't have taken it out on me," said Billy plaintively. "I
+didn't break any engagements. I suppose she has a red-haired temper."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile Louise, after she banged the screen-door, had gone straight
+through the house to the back. Mrs. Merriam was in the living-room,
+which prevented her crying there. She was very much hurt at Tom's
+forgetfulness. They had been chums for a long time, and this particular
+expedition after cloud effects had been something they had planned long
+before the Scouts' camp broke up. And now Tom had gone gayly off,
+forgetting all about it. It really was horrid.
+
+Crying on a bed is hot work in summer, so she decided to go out back and
+do it. She sat on the porch, put her arms on the back of a chair and
+began to cry.
+
+But circumstances seemed to be against her. Puppums, who had been asleep
+under a chair, got up, yawned, sauntered across the porch, and sat down
+by her. Then he proceeded to whine for her to turn around, make a lap,
+and take him up into it.
+
+"Oh, do stop!" said Louise indignantly, when the whining had gone on
+steadily for some minutes. But if you took any notice of Puppums he
+merely argued that a little more work would get him what he wanted, and
+went on begging. In the present instance he answered Louise by lifting
+his nose further up in the air, and howling, as if he wished to assure
+her that he felt for her.
+
+"You mean old dog!" said Louise, jumping up. "I'll settle you!" Puppums
+was very much pleased. He had an optimistic disposition, and he thought
+it was a game. He ran around and around the porch, finally, when he
+began to see that Louise was in earnest, hiding under the ice-chest,
+where he knew nobody could follow him. Louise stopped short, and eyed
+the ice-box. It occurred to her that she was thirsty.
+
+"This is what you might call being guided," said she, and opening the
+lid, looked in. She found a bag of lemons, a bunch of bananas, and she
+thought she remembered where Winona kept the bottled cherries and the
+cookies. She went into the kitchen and began work, and in a very little
+while was on her way back to the front porch with a tray, designed to
+show her remorse for being cross, piled with cookies and fruit lemonade.
+Mrs. Merriam, to whom she offered the first glass, pronounced it very
+good indeed, and sent her on her way. Puppums danced wildly about her,
+with the idea that she was clearing a table, and he might get bones.
+
+Winona and Billy were still talking as placidly as if Tom had not been
+wrestling with a formal call, and Louise with a bad temper, for the last
+twenty minutes.
+
+"Cookies--oh, and fruit lemonade! Louise, you dear!" cried Winona, while
+Billy took the tray and put it on a table.
+
+"Won't you have some, Billy? I know you like it, and--and I _do_ like
+your Southern accent," she added in a rush.
+
+"Thank you, Louise," said Billy. "I like your accent, too--and your
+fruit lemonade--very much."
+
+They both laughed. "Let's bury the hatchet," he added. "Louise, these
+certainly are fine cookies."
+
+The three were still sitting comfortably over their refreshments, even
+Puppums crunching cakes contentedly in a corner, when Tom hurried up the
+steps and banged himself down in a chair. His hat was jammed to one side
+in the old unceremonious fashion, his gloves had vanished, and even his
+cane was nowhere to be seen.
+
+"Have some," said Billy tactfully before Tom could say anything. They
+pushed the cakes toward him, and poured him some lemonade in Winona's
+glass, and after he seemed less gloomy they got him to talk.
+
+"Tell us all about it," said Winona soothingly.
+
+"Nothing to tell!" said Tom in something rather like a growl.
+
+"Have another cooky, and tell us all about it," repeated his sister in a
+persuasive voice. And after awhile, when he had had some more cookies
+and another glass of lemonade, he told them, gradually.
+
+"Well, I sent in my card, of course," he began. "Asked for Miss Davis."
+
+"Of course!" said Winona; for her brother's usual custom was to call up
+from the sidewalk, "I'm coming over to-night," and then to walk
+unceremoniously in whenever he thought of it, that evening.
+
+"I did that all right, thank goodness!" said Tom. "The maid kept me
+waiting about a year, with a copy of Snowbound, and a Gems from
+Shakespeare, and a pug-dog made out of plaster, to amuse me. The Davises
+never seem to sit around in their rooms and on their porches like other
+people. Just as I got to the point of thinking I'd better go back home
+_Mrs._ Davis walked in. I was so surprised at seeing her, instead of
+Elsie, that I couldn't think of a blessed thing to say--so I fished up
+this!"
+
+He jerked the tablets out of his pocket and threw them to Winona.
+
+"Keep 'em away from me," he said. "I never want to see the blessed
+things again. First thing I found was 'Civil War.' I'd picked out that
+for a start anyway--thought it would be nice and general, and we had it
+in History last term, so I knew a lot about it. You'd have thought that
+would have lasted awhile, wouldn't you?"
+
+"Seeing that the real thing lasted four years or so, I think it might
+have," answered Billy.
+
+"Not a bit of it!" said Tom mournfully. "Mrs. Davis turned out to have
+had a grand-uncle or something in it, and she said it was a painful
+subject. I don't think she ever had a grand-uncle. I believe she didn't
+know anything about it, and just invented the old fellow to get out of
+talking about it!"
+
+"Mercy, what suspicions!" said Winona, laughing. "You certainly have
+nearly ruined your lovely disposition. Never mind, Tommy, I sympathize
+with you. What did you tackle next?"
+
+"Tariff-reform, I think," said Tom.
+
+"What is tariff-reform?" asked Winona. "I never could understand it
+exactly."
+
+"Don't ask me to say it all over again!" begged Tom. "I was getting
+anxious by that time for fear I wouldn't have subjects enough left to
+use on Elsie. You know she isn't much of a talker. But I had to say
+something, and Mrs. Davis didn't, and I couldn't think of anything but
+this foolish book. Mrs. Davis didn't seem to care much about
+tariff-reform, either, so I gave that up and looked at the list again,
+and chose 'Weather.' She did warm up a little at that. But the best
+weather won't last forever, and you could just hear the silence bump
+every little while.
+
+"Then I got desperate, and used up Politics and Canoeing and the
+California Fair, and all the rest. Folks, I finished off every last
+thing I was going to talk to Elsie about, before she ever appeared!
+Except about trimming hats--that seemed such a foolish thing to ask a
+woman that old about."
+
+"They discussed Measles and Mice, and Music, and everything else that
+began with an M," quoted Louise from her favorite Alice in Wonderland.
+
+"Don't mind her," said Billy as soberly as he could. "Just go on. Did
+Elsie Davis ever come down at all?"
+
+"Yes," said Tom, "she did. Just as I finished my last subject, if you
+please! She seemed to be dressed for a party, but she said she wasn't.
+She sat down at the other end of the room, and tried to see if she
+couldn't keep as still as her mother. Mrs. Davis stayed right there,
+too, and smiled like an alligator--and there was I without an idea in my
+head or on the memorandum!"
+
+"Didn't they even show you the photograph album?" inquired Louise,
+forgetting to be offended.
+
+"They wouldn't talk, I tell you!"
+
+"Well, what _did_ you do?" asked Louise.
+
+Tom grinned a little, shamefacedly.
+
+"Well--I simply yanked out that old tablet, and began at Civil War
+again. I said 'As I was just saying to your mother!' and I gave her
+every subject over!"
+
+His hearers howled, and after a minute Tom himself joined in. "Did it
+work better this time?" asked Winona at last, wiping her eyes.
+
+"Not a work," said Tom cheerfully, reaching for the last cooky. "That
+is, all but the hat one. That was clever of you, Lou. She got almost
+human over that, and began to talk about how many engagements she
+had--had to break half of them. And I said 'I don't believe in breaking
+dates,' and suddenly I remembered the one with you to take the
+pictures--and I left then and there, like a streak of lightning. I left
+my cane--I don't care--she can have it to remember me by. Louise, I owe
+you an apology the size of the house. Why didn't you remind me about
+those snapshots?"
+
+"It's not too late," said Louise amiably. "The moon's just about right,
+now."
+
+Tom went into the house after the cameras, sending his hat flying up to
+the hat-tree, followed by his gloves.
+
+"Let's go, too," said Billy.
+
+"All right," said Winona. She leaned back, and laughed, as they waited
+for the others to come out.
+
+"I don't believe Tom will try any more formal calls till he's eighteen,
+anyway," she remarked.
+
+"It seems a pity, though," said Billy, getting up. "He wasted a
+perfectly good cane!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
+
+
+Louise went back to camp next day, and Winona went on with her work at
+home. Louise had left all sorts of presents and messages from the girls,
+and taken a great many from Winona away with her. Louise's visit cheered
+Winona up very much. There was only one hard thing about it--the news
+Louise had brought that the girls had extended the time of their stay
+again. The plan now was to stay in Camp Karonya till the fourteenth of
+September. School opened on the fifteenth. It seemed a long time to wait
+to see her friends again--for the doctor was certain that her mother
+would not be able to bear her weight on the injured ankle for a month to
+come.
+
+Meanwhile Winona wrote to the girls, and her mother and Florence kept
+track, in what Winona considered a very wild way, of the things she did
+that should entitle her to honors. The honor-list and a sheet of blanks
+lived under her mother's pillow, Winona was sure. If it gave her mother
+pleasure she was glad to have her do it; but it occurred to Winona the
+day after Louise left that it mightn't be a bad scheme to collect a few
+honors herself, things that she was sure would count. Also she wanted
+some fun, and she had found that the acquiring of honors usually led to
+it. So Winona proceeded to "start something."
+
+To begin with, next door lived Nataly Lee. Winona went over there the
+very afternoon of the day Louise left, and spent the most persuasive
+three hours of her life, explaining to Nataly that they, as the only two
+Camp Fire Girls in town, ought to start some good times for other
+people, who, not being Camp Fire Girls, probably didn't know how. And
+before she went back to get supper she had persuaded Nataly she was
+right.
+
+Next day she and Nataly, cheerful and enthusiastic, made a canvass of
+the girls in their classes who were staying home. Winona had rather gone
+on the principle that nearly everyone was off somewhere else, but she
+found it wasn't so at all. There were six girls beside herself and
+Nataly who were ready and willing to join a Porch Club that was to meet
+once a week, and have a picnic one week and a party the next.
+
+Winona and Tom and Billy, with Nataly, even, helping once in a while,
+spent some time in furnishing the Merriam porch with chairs and hammocks
+and screens and lanterns. Then the boys went forth and invited their own
+friends with a lavish hand. The first porch party was a grand success,
+although there were about three boys to one girl. But that righted
+itself next time, which was three days later, for the Porch Club made an
+unanimous and prompt decision that it wanted to meet twice a week. And
+more girls wanted to join. So, although they were not like her own old
+comrades, Winona found that she was making friends whom she would never
+have had at all, if it had not been that she was cut off from her own
+set of girls, still having good times at Camp Karonya. As for Nataly,
+she was a marvellously different person. The work of management, of
+social entertaining, proved to be exactly what she could do best. And
+having to teach things to others (for the Porch Club added an afternoon
+session, devoted to hand-craft work and reading aloud), made her find
+that she could do things very well here that she hadn't liked doing in
+camp at all! As for Winona, she let Nataly run things as much as she
+wanted to. She herself was just what she had always been, Ray of Light,
+holding the girls and boys together by her brightness and her fondness
+for them. She was the centre of things, after all. Not that she realized
+it, particularly; she only thought how queer it was that there were so
+many nice, friendly people in the world, willing to do nice things and
+have nice times if you only suggested it. And there are, too.
+
+"And, Helen and Louise dear," Winona wrote to her own two best friends
+back at Camp Karonya. "Some of the girls in our classes that we scarcely
+knew, and thought were quiet and stupid, are as nice and bright and
+funny as ever they can be, and ever so Camp Firey! I believe we can
+organize another Camp Fire this fall. And I have my housework arranged
+so that I have two hours in the morning, and most of my afternoon and
+evening, to do what I please with. So I have a gorgeous time working for
+honors. It's a scheme I shan't tell you about till it's all worked out
+and over with, but I think it's going to work all right. Florence
+suggested it, bless her heart. Love to the whole Camp Fire, and ask them
+to take a hike for me!"
+
+Winona's supplementary plan for honor-winning had been suggested to her
+this way:
+
+One day she was on the back porch, mending, and Florence had four bosom
+friends out in the back garden, making a most fearful racket. Mrs.
+Merriam had a headache, and Winona knew that in a little while the
+headache would be worse, or that she would have to go and send
+Florence's friends home, which meant hurting that independent young
+person's feelings.
+
+"Florence," called Winona, "wouldn't you and the other girls like me to
+come down to the end of the garden and tell you fairy-stories?"
+
+The little girls seemed to very much want to. So Winona took her mending
+and her rocker, and they sat down in the shelter of a big tree. Winona
+told them stories till it was time for her to go in and see about
+supper. By then her mother's headache was over. But after supper
+Florence came up to Winona, and said, "The girls want to ask something.
+They want to know if you won't tell them stories other times, too!"
+
+"Why, what a lovely idea!" said Winona. "Of course I will!"
+
+So to the Porch Club and the housekeeping Winona added two hours every
+other day, telling stories to Florence and her small friends. She felt
+rather shy over it at first, but gradually it began to be more and more
+easy. When the fairy-tales ran low she went to the library and hunted
+out the Robin Hood and Arthur legends, and even history stories once in
+awhile. And one day when she was rummaging the card catalogue for more
+stories about King Arthur she found out that the Malory book was only a
+very little of what there was to be told. Everything seemed to lead
+somewhere else. So the story-hours kept to King Arthur, except for one
+fairy afternoon a week, for the rest of the month, and Winona learned a
+good deal about him that she would never have found out by herself.
+
+After one or two meetings, sewing as she talked, she began to show the
+children a little about darning, too. They brought stockings after that,
+and kept quieter, she found, when they were working as well as she. The
+most surprising thing of all to her was that she had time enough for
+everything. The story-hours took care of all the household mending that
+her mother did not do; the Porch Club, which met at different houses in
+rotation, was no trouble at all, merely a good-times affair. The
+housekeeping was running smoothly, and Winona got time for
+letter-writing and walks with the boys, and even practice on the piano.
+There were lots of places where she and Nataly and Tom and Billy could
+go trolley riding on hot evenings, and there were always boys and girls
+running in and out, asking her to go places and do things. Winona
+discovered, as others have before her, that you can have a very good
+time by staying home in the summer.
+
+One night, toward the last of August, her mother asked her a question.
+
+"How would you like to go back to camp to celebrate your birthday,
+dear?" she asked.
+
+Now Winona's birthday, her fifteenth, was on the eleventh of September,
+just two days before the girls were coming back.
+
+"I would, very much," she said, "but do you think you will be able to
+spare me?"
+
+"I am quite sure of it," said her mother. "Indeed, I might be able to
+take charge of the house again by next week, if my ankle improves as it
+is doing now."
+
+"Oh, no," said Winona, "I won't take the risk. Besides, I couldn't leave
+the story-hour children, and the Porch Club has to have some things
+planned for it that I think I'd better help with. But if I can go up
+there over my birthday it will be lovely."
+
+"You'll have to get somebody else to tell the stories while you're gone,
+then," said Florence. "I don't want my story-hour broken up!"
+
+"By all means, don't break up Florence's private story-hour!" said Tom.
+"Why don't you do the story-telling yourself, Floss?"
+
+But, "That's true, Florence," said Winona. "I think I can find one of
+the girls in the Porch Club who will do it. You see, mother dear, I'll
+need to get all the loose ends up out of the way if I go back even for
+three days!"
+
+But all the loose ends tied themselves up neatly. Ellen Marks, one of
+the nicest of the Porch Club girls, promised to tell the stories for the
+two days Winona would miss. Nataly could look after things elsewhere,
+and by the eleventh Mrs. Merriam was nearly as well as ever. So the
+morning of that day saw Winona on her way back to Camp Karonya, with joy
+in her heart, and her ceremonial costume over her arm, in a special bag.
+
+The whole crowd of girls rushed out to meet her, and sang a cheer from
+the time her motor-boat was in sight till she landed. They surrounded
+her, and carried her into camp, where supper was nearly ready.
+
+It seemed very good to be back. The pine needles smelled as woodsily as
+ever, and the long wooden table looked very homelike, with its brown,
+chattering girls surrounding it, all trying to tell her everything at
+once. As soon as supper was over Helen and Louise swept her off to her
+old tent.
+
+"Hurry," said Helen. "Get into your ceremonial costume, honey. Heap big
+Council Fire to-night."
+
+"Council Fire?" said Winona in surprise. "Why, is it the night for it?"
+
+"This is an extra-special," explained Helen hastily. "Here, Win, let me
+help you."
+
+She began to unfasten Winona's travelling suit.
+
+"You have a lot more beads than you had," Winona observed a little
+wistfully, as Helen took her own gown down from the wall and began to
+put it on.
+
+Helen laughed as she slung the long string of colored honor-beads around
+her neck.
+
+"Maybe you'll catch up," she remarked carelessly. "You'll doubtless get
+an honor or so to-night."
+
+"Oh, yes," said Winona. "I ought to get a bead or two for home-craft,
+and I did some story-hour work, too."
+
+"As if that was all you did!" said Helen indignantly; and stopped
+herself short.
+
+"Hurry up, girls!" said Louise, sticking her bead-banded head into the
+tent. "Time to begin. Hear the drum!"
+
+"Oh, the nice old drum!" cried Winona happily, as she heard its
+well-remembered monotonous sound in the distance. The three girls linked
+arms, and hurried to the council hill.
+
+"Oh, but it's good to be back!" said Winona for the third or fourth
+time, as she sank into her place in the circle around the first place.
+She listened dreamily as the ceremony of fire-lighting and all the rest
+went forward. Things had been happening, it appeared. The reports were
+given one by one. Winona listened on, and Hike the Camp Cat trotted
+noiselessly over the ground and curled himself into Winona's lap. Even
+he remembered her. She stroked him and listened.
+
+Helen, they told, had managed to coax an old farmer down the road, the
+identical one they didn't buy the music-box of, to stop setting traps
+that hurt rabbits. Louise had, after many hoppings about in solitude,
+actually managed to master five folk-dances. Adelaide and little Frances
+had made an emergency dash down the river to get the doctor, when one of
+the other little girls had fallen from a tree and broken her wrist.
+There were other things as thrilling.
+
+"And all I did was stay home!" thought Winona as the tales went on, and
+the beads were awarded. Then she sat up and began to listen more
+closely, for Mrs. Bryan, Opeechee herself, was rising to give this
+report, and that was something sure to be special and worth while. When
+Opeechee related what a girl had done it was an honor worth having.
+
+"You have all done well, and deserved the honors you have been awarded
+on this, our final Council in the open," began the Guardian. "Here,
+together in the woods, it has been easy to follow the law of the fire.
+We have found it so, I know.
+
+"But now I want to tell you about a watcher of the Camp Fire who has
+been following the law without any of the helps we have. She gave up the
+camp and its good times, and went back to assume the duties of a
+woman--the tending of the real Fire of home. She had charge of the
+household. She kept a family of four beside herself, including an
+invalid mother, comfortable, well taken care of and happy, for one
+month. She made a pleasure out of her duties, and showed others how.
+Besides this, she collected girls who had not much social life and gave
+it to them. She led them for a month, three times a week. She told
+children stories and taught them sewing every other day for a month. And
+through it all she was happy, and made light for others wherever she
+went. She has carried the Torch of happiness and health and work and
+love, and passed it on undimmed to others. Winona, the Flashing Ray of
+Light, is just fifteen to-night. That is the earliest age at which
+anyone can be made a Torch-bearer--but I think she deserves the rank,
+Sisters of the Camp Fire. What do you say?"
+
+Before the girls could answer Winona was on her feet with the kitten in
+her arms, scarlet and protesting.
+
+"But I didn't do all those wonderful things, Opeechee!" she cried. "I
+just did what there was to do. I like to plan things and have people
+have good times. I just wanted to get as good a time out of it all as I
+could. And I don't believe I have enough honor beads to be a
+Torch-bearer."
+
+Mrs. Bryan paid her protest very little attention.
+
+"What do you say, Sisters of the Camp Fire?"
+
+The girls burst out into cheering.
+
+"Winona, Flashing Ray of Light, is to take the rank of Torch-bearer
+to-day," repeated Mrs. Bryan inexorably. "Rise, Winona."
+
+And as Winona stood up again (she had sat down hastily after her first
+objection) Mrs. Bryan repeated the honors she had won, and that her
+mother and Florence had kept track of so faithfully. She had expected
+the honor for story-telling, but the one for marketing--and the one for
+folk-songs--and--why, that Alice Brown pantomime had meant an honor
+bead! So had bringing in and arranging her mother's invalid-tray, and
+the Porch Club and the story-hour had given her a double right to the
+Torch-bearer rank, which requires leadership of a group. Then, of
+course, the wood-craft honors she had won before she went home--she had
+known about those. But to think that everything, even that hilarious
+ten-course dinner she and Louise had planned, had been good for a bead!
+Winona had far more than the fifteen required honors for the highest
+rank of the Camp Fire.
+
+"Repeat the Torch-bearer's Desire, Winona," said Mrs. Bryan, and Winona,
+half in a dream, said,
+
+ The light which has been given me
+ I desire to pass undimmed to others.
+
+Mrs. Bryan stepped forward, and threw a string of beads over her head.
+She had not been in Camp till now, and so the beads had not come one by
+one as they generally did. She fastened the pin on Winona's breast, and
+stepped back, while the girls sang a tempestuous cheer.
+
+Winona sat down on the grass, still bewildered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well, how does it feel to be a Torch-bearer--the only one in Camp?"
+asked Helen late that night, as the girls were undressing together.
+
+"Wonderful--only I don't believe it, yet!" said Winona. "Think of all
+those honors that I never even dreamed I was getting--and to think I was
+having such fun getting them, too! It seems as if I ought to have worked
+so hard it was uncomfortable, somehow, to deserve them."
+
+"It was dreadfully hard to keep the surprise a secret, sometimes," said
+Helen. "When your letters were a wee little bit lonesome, sometimes, we
+had hard work keeping Louise from telling. Oh, Winona, all the girls are
+so glad!"
+
+"I'm glad, too," said Winona soberly. "And oh, Helen, I _am_ going to
+keep on carrying the torch, too--as high as ever I can!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Winona of the Camp Fire, by Margaret Widdemer
+
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