A mass of vines and moss almost hid the hut from viewA mass of vines and moss almost hid the hut from view
A mass of vines and moss almost hid the hut from view
“Oh, we must have built well to have had it survive all these years, girls!” cried Mrs. Vernon, joyfully, as she stood and looked at the handiwork of her friends of years long gone.
“Verny, this is the way we girls will build, too. We will erect a hut alongside this, and show it to our children many years from now,” said Betty, fervently.
“I don’t see why we can’t use this hut, too,” said Julie.
“The frame and floor beams are solid enough,” added Joan, examining the posts.
“It will need a roof and some new side-logs—that is all,” Ruth said, taking a lively interest in the camp-plan.
“Yes, we can easily repair it, and then you girls can build your own hut as an annex to this hotel,” said Mrs. Vernon, still smiling with satisfaction at the discovery of the cabin.
“Dear me! I wish we had brought our camp outfit to-day and could stay to begin work,” complained Joan.
“I’m crazy to start, too,” admitted Julie.
“But we have to have those tools, and some others besides. I shall ask Uncle Verny to sell us some of his extra ones. He has several hammers, screw-drivers, and other implements he can spare,” said Mrs. Vernon.
“Now what can we look at?” inquired Ruth, quickly wearying of one thing. This was one of the weak tendencies Mrs. Vernon hoped to cure that summer.
“You can bring the hampers over to the pool, if you like, and when we are through planning here, we will join you and have our picnic.”
“Why, I don’t want to carry them alone! Can’t we all go now and do it?”
“I want to snoop about here a little more,” said Julie.
“And I want to figure out how many tree-trunks we’ll have to drag over here before we can have a cabin as good as this one,” called Joan, as she measured the length of logs with a hair-ribbon.
“Mercy! Aren’t any of you going to eat before you finish that nonsense?” Ruth asked plaintively.
Mrs. Vernon smiled. Then she turned to Joan and said: “If you girls will really promise to build and finish a hut, I will ask Uncle Verny to loan us the farm-horse to haul the timbers. You girls could never drag them, you know. But Hepsy is accustomed to hauling and heavy work, so we need have no fear of straining her.”
“Just the thing! Hepsy forever!” shouted Joan, throwing her hat in the air for a salute.
“Can you remember all the things we still need this summer, Verny?” asked Julie, anxiously.
“We’ll jot down everything as we remember it, then we can compare lists when we go to order the things,” said Mrs. Vernon.
“Won’t the girls at school look green with envy when we tell them we are going to have a strange girl camp with us this summer?” laughed Julie, as a thought struck her.
“Who is she?” gasped the other girls in surprise.
“Ho! did I get you on that?” teased Julie.
“This is the first hint we’ve had of it,” complained Joan.
“Why no! Verny suggested the plan herself—didn’t you, Verny?”
But Mrs. Vernon shook her head doubtfully, while Julie shouted with delight at their mystification. Then, eager to share her fun, she cried laughingly: “Hepsy, the dear old girl!”
Of course when one is happy and gay it takes but little to cause loud and long merriment, and so it was in this instance. They laughed uproariously at the joke, and decided then and there to tease the other girls at school who were so anxious to join a Patrol, but would not weed the dandelions to earn money for a camp.
As weeding had been the best test of endurance and patience Mrs. Vernon could think of at the time, she had felt rather relieved to find that only four responded to the initiation invitation. In doing things according to the Handbook for Captains, she felt she would find four girls sufficient material to practice upon for the first season.
When the luncheon was unpacked and spread out, Mrs. Vernon smiled continuously at the happy chatter of the four girls, and the thousand-and-one plans they made for the camp that summer. Then all sat down to enjoy the feast, for nothing had ever tasted so good to them before, and then—did Verny say it was time to start for home?
“Oh, no! It can’t be late, Verny!” exclaimed Ruth.
“Why, we’ve only been here half a minute, Verny,” added Joan.
The Captain glanced at her wrist watch. “We have been here more than two hours, girls, and it is a two hour drive back, you know.”
“Dear, dear! the only comfort I have in leaving now is the hope of being here for all summer in another week!” cried Betty.
“Then you have decided to choose this site?” ventured the Captain.
“I thought you knew it! Of course this is what we want,” admitted Ruth, frankly. And Mrs. Vernon mentally gave her a credit-mark for forgetting self enough to speak her opinion honestly.
The drive back was much longer than going, even though the girls planned and plotted how to earn more money with which to buy everything they craved for that camp. It was to be a wonder-camp.
“I can add a dollar and seventy-five cents to the fund now,” announced Ruth, calmly.
“A dollar and s-e-v-e-n-t-y—five cents!” gasped the girls.
“Then I’ll have another dollar and a half before next Friday—if I keep on washing those nasty dishes every night!”
“R-rruth!” squealed Betty, throwing her arms about her friend’s neck.
“Ruth Bentley!” cried Joan.
“I cannot believe my ears!” added Julie, in a whisper.
Mrs. Vernon never said a word, but she did a lot of silent praying—thanking Him for this break in the clouds of human will and selfishness that the girl had always displayed hitherto.
Ruth felt embarrassed at so much fussing, and felt a deep gratitude to the Captain for not adding to her self-consciousness. The moment she could free herself from Betty’s loving embrace, she said, recklessly:
“I told mother I’d rather give up camping than do those dishes any more, but now that I’ve seen the place, I’ll scrub the kitchen floor if she wants me to.”
A great laugh relieved every one’s feelings at this statement from Ruth, and the merry party reached the Vernon home feeling very much at peace with the world in general.
The next few days were so filled with the final work to finish the scholastic year, and closing of school, that every one of the girls was kept busy, and had little time to think of camp.
Once Thursday came, however, the only exciting thing remained to be done was Commencement on Friday; so the four girls met at Dandelion Tent to plan for the camp.
“We ought to have our folks give us a great send-off, like they did with the regiments that mustered from the town families,” said Julie.
“If they’ll only give us all I asked for, we will be satisfied,” laughed Joan.
“What did you do?” instantly said three voices.
“First, I told mother what we would have to have for camp, then I got mother to visit your folks and tell them what we really ought to have to make life comfortable in the wild woods.”
“Oh, oh! That’s why Eliza told us she would fix us up with some jams and other food-stuff,” laughed Julie.
“And mother asked me did we want any furniture or china?” added Ruth.
“What did you say?” asked Julie.
“I told her we’d rather she donated the price of china or furniture this time, and let us invest it as we found need.”
The girls laughed and Mrs. Vernon ran out of the side door, saying: “I’m missing all the fun! Do tell me what it is about?”
Then Julie told her what Ruth had replied to her mother’s question, and the Captain laughed also. “I see Ruth is developing a wonderfully keen sense of finance.”
“You’ll say so when you see this scrap of paper, Verny,” said Ruth, taking a crumpled oblong of tinted paper from her middy blouse and passing it over to the Captain.
Mrs. Vernon looked at it in surprise, and gasped: “Why, of all things!”
“The price of china and furniture that mother figured we would smash or damage,” explained Ruth.
“Girls, it’s a check for twenty-five dollars from Mrs. Bentley. We’ll have to vote her a letter of thanks at once.”
“Hurrah! Now, all ready for three cheers for Mrs. Bentley!” shouted Julie, jumping upon the camp-stool and waving her hat.
Instantly the girls began a loud hurrah, but the folding chair suddenly shut up, with Julie frantically trying to balance herself. Before a second hurrah could have been given, Julie was sprawling across the camp table right on top of the hats, pans and what-not that had been accumulated to take to camp. Such a clatter of tins and wild screams of laughter that filled that tent!
Finally Julie emerged from the wreckage and stood up, tentatively feeling of her bones and head and body. “Am I all in one piece, girls?” she asked, trying to appear anxious.
“You are, but my hat isn’t!” retorted Joan, holding up a crushed straw sailor with the brim severed from the crown.
“I’ll have to work and buy you another,” said Julie.
“Please don’t! I despise sailors and had to wear this one because mother said I would need no new summer hat if I was in camp,” hastily explained Joan.
“Come, girls, we must indite that letter to Ruth’s mother now. Sit down quietly and suggest something fine,” interpolated Mrs. Vernon.
So the letter was composed and given to Ruth to deliver, then the last plans for leaving home were perfected, and the Patrol separated for the day.
Saturday found the girls again at Vernon’s place, eager to hear what day they were to start for camp. Everything that they had on their lists had been provided, and now the only thing to do was to say good-by and leave. This the girls felt could not be accomplished any too soon for their peace and comfort.
“Why, Verny, if we don’t get away in a day or so, those seven girls who are possessed to join us will steal us and hold us as hostages until you agree to take them in our Troop,” said Julie.
“Patience! They’ll have to wait now, and learn the lesson you girls have finished before they can join this Patrol. Why, I wonder if you realize how high you have climbed on the rungs of the ladder of Scout Ideals during these past few weeks?” said Mrs. Vernon.
“I can’t see any change,” said Joan.
“What! don’t you think your friends here have improved any whatsoever since we decided to begin a Troop?”
“Oh—the girls have—a little, but I haven’t!”
“You have, too, but you don’t see it yet. Wait.”
“All the same, Verny, tell us when wecanstart?” begged Julie.
“Well, Mr. Vernon sails for his European trip on Monday, so I see nothing to keep us home after that. Can you all be ready to go on Tuesday morning?”
“You know we can—why ask?” laughed Julie.
“Maybe you’d prefer us to start Monday afternoon after you come home from the steamer,” suggested Ruth.
Mrs. Vernon laughed. “Hardly as soon as that.”
When Tuesday arrived, however, the girls found many little things to delay them, so it was past nine o’clock before they met at the old headquarters, but the tent had disappeared.
“Here we are, Verny, bag and baggage!” shouted Julie, as they tramped up the side-steps of the porch.
“And some of our folks are coming over in a few minutes to see us off. I suspect they have various advices to whisper to you, as well as leave with us some forgotten parting words,” said Joan.
“Eliza’s going to give us a parting pie,” added Betty, so innocently that every one laughed.
“Well, the visitor that we invited to camp with us for the summer is hitched up and waiting to start,” Mrs. Vernon informed the girls, as she pointed towards the barns, where a horse was seen going down the back road.
“Why, Hepsy’s hooked up to a buckboard? What for?” asked Ruth.
“We won’t need it this summer, so Uncle Verny suggested that Hepsy take it along for us to use if we had to go to the stores at Freedom, or should we want to go away on a picnic.”
“Say—that’s a great idea! I never thought of it,” said Julie.
“Which proves that you have no monopoly on great ideas,” retorted Joan.
Then the automobile drove up to the steps and was soon followed by a heavy rumbling auto-truck that was used for heavy cartage at Mr. Vernon’s factory. He had sent it down for the newly-fledged Scout Troop to make use of to carry tents, boxes and what not to Verny’s Mountain.
The advance line of family members now came straggling up the road to watch their girls depart. Before the truck started, the other friends arrived, so there was quite a crowd to wish them good-by and good-luck as they climbed into the car and wildly waved hats and hands.
The ride seemed very short that morning, for so much had to be talked over, and the village of Freedom was reached before they could realize it. Then began the ascent up the woodroad to the plateau. Here the car halted, and the chauffeur assisted the driver of the truck in transferring the boxes and baggage to the buckboard Hepsy had brought thus far.
“We’ll have to stable Hepsy somewhere, girls,” suggested Julie, as she stood and watched the men work.
“Yes, we ought to make that our first concern, for Hepsy may not appreciate outdoor life as we do—especially if it rains.”
“We’ll build her a hut,” promised Ruth, eagerly.
“And let her sit out under a tree for the four weeks it will take us to erect it?” laughed Joan.
The girls were too eager to reach their campsite to wait any longer for the men to complete the baggage transfer, so they informed the Captain:
“We’ll take our suitcases and start up, Verny!”
Mrs. Vernon readily agreed to this, so they started off and were soon out of sight. Once they had reached the old cabin, Julie said:
“Let’s get out of these city clothes and get into our scout camp-uniforms.”
This met with general approval, and soon the girls were gleefully comparing notes about each other’s appearance. But this was interrupted when shouts and crackling of brush was heard. Then poor Hepsy was seen snorting and pulling to bring the loaded buckboard up to the plateau.
“Gee! That’s some haul—that grade!” complained Jim, as he mopped his hot brow and stood looking back at the steep road.
“And Hepsy’s so soft from no recent work!” added Mrs. Vernon, as she reached his side. Jim was too easy with the horses for their own good, so she said what she did to let him know his sympathy was misplaced.
Hepsy began nibbling at the luscious grass that grew near her feet, and Mrs. Vernon laughingly added: “Poor thing! She must be almost dead to be able to start right in and eat like that.”
The luggage was taken to the hut and then Jim went back for a second load. The back seat of the buckboard had been removed so the camp outfit could be easily piled upon the floor of the vehicle. But it did not hold very much, hence it was necessary to make several trips.
When all was carted up to the campsite, Mrs. Vernon said: “Now, Jim, remember to bring the oats once a week for Hepsy, and any other things I write for. See that all mail is forwarded to Freedom, where we can get it.”
Jim promised to see that everything was done as requested, then he, too, left. When the last chugs from the automobile truck and the car died away, Mrs. Vernon turned to the girls.
“Well, scouts, here we are for a whole summer of delights!”
“Hip, hip——” began Julie, and the others joined in.
“Don’t you think the hut has grown smaller since we were here last?” asked Betty, wonderingly.
“That is because you were picturing the place on a much grander scale after you got home than it actually is. It is your thought that has to dwindle again to take in the proportion of the hut as it is,” replied the Captain, amused at Betty’s experience.
“I thought the very same thing, but I hated to say anything that sounded like criticism,” admitted Joan.
“Tell the truth, girls, I think that hut is tiny, but it looked big enough the other day,” laughed Julie.
“Then we must build ours larger than this,” said Mrs. Vernon, turning to look over the stock of things needing shelter.
“It looks like an awful heap of stuff, doesn’t it?” asked Ruth.
“Yes, but we needed everything, so we had to bring them.”
“What shall we do first, Verny?” asked Betty.
“Better pitch the tent first of all, and arrange the cots, then we can work as long as we like, without worrying about having to make our beds.”
The girls quickly unrolled the large canvas tent they had purchased, but when it came to erecting it, they found it a much more difficult task than they had anticipated. Jim and the gardener had helped pitch it the first time, but now they were absent.
However, after many failures, the tent was up, albeit it looked wobbly and one-sided. The cots were next opened and placed under the canvas, and the lockers were dragged to their right places.
“Where’s the crex rug Verny said we could bring for the ground inside the tent?” called Julie, thrusting her head from the opening of the canvas. But she forgot Ruth had placed a pole directly in front of the entrance to hold up the flap temporarily.
“Ouch! Who left that tree-trunk right in the way?” cried Julie, as she bumped her head smartly.
“That’s the porter standing at the door of our hotel!” retorted Joan, laughing as she saw Julie scowling.
“Well, where’s the crex rug, anyway?” demanded Julie.
“Come to think of it—Jim threw it out when he unloaded the truck, and then he must have forgotten to pick it up again,” said Mrs. Vernon.
“We’ll have to use grass for carpet to-night, then,” said Julie.
“Unless you run down and drag it up,” ventured Ruth.
“That’s what we brought Hepsy for, girls. Who’ll drive her down and bring back the rug?” called Mrs. Vernon from the hut.
All four were anxious to drive and enjoy the fun, so Julie jumped on the front seat and the others sat dangling their feet from the back of the buckboard. The Captain stood smiling and watching as they went, thinking to herself, “What a good time they will have in camp!”
When the amateur truckman returned, Ruth called out: “Guess what, Verny? We found the seat of the buckboard in the bushes, too. Wasn’t it fortunate we went for the rug?”
“We might have hunted all over the camp for that seat when we want to go for a drive, and never have thought of it being left down there,” added Julie.
When the girls ran over to see what next to do, they found the Captain eyeing a board about sixteen inches in length. She was calculating aloud and wondering if it would fit.
“Fit where? What is it for?” asked Joan.
“You’ll soon find out. Now you girls can unpack the hamper and get luncheon ready—I’m hungry,” replied Mrs. Vernon.
She knew this would meet with great approval, and soon they were busy unpacking the ready-made lunch, and placing it on a large flat rock.
“Ruth! quick—brush that awful bug from the butter!” shrieked Julie, as she stood with both her hands filled with dishes.
“Oh—oh! I can’t! It’s an awful looking creature!” cried Ruth, running away from the rock where the luncheon was spread.
“Joan—come here! What’s that beast on the butter—see?” called Julie, trying to set the tier of dishes down on the grass.
“It’s only a young dragon-fly—don’t you know one when you see it?” laughed Joan, shooing the insect away.
“I’ve seen them flying in the sunshine, but never on the butter-dish,” said Julie, picking up the dishes again and placing them on the cloth.
Mrs. Vernon had started for the rock-table when she heard the shouting, but now she laughed heartily. “Joan, where did you study insect-life that you know so much about one of the common members?”
“Wasn’t it a dragon-fly, Verny?”
“Not at all. I should think every one of you girls could tell a dragon-fly, because we have them about our gardens at home.”
“What was it, then?” asked Joan.
“I’m going to send to Scout Headquarters for a book on Insect Life, and have you study the different ones you find while in camp. Then you’ll become acquainted with them and never forget again. The same with flowers and trees—I must send for books that you can refer to and teach yourselves all you need to know about these things that every good scout knows.”
“Oh, come on and let’s eat. Every ant and bug in the land will get there before us, and we’ll have to eat leavings,” said Julie, whipping a hornet from the jelly dish.
So with all kinds of insects for guests, the girls ate their first lunch at camp. They were so hungry that stale bread would have tasted good, but given the delicious things prepared by the Vernons’ cook, it was small wonder they all felt uncomfortably full when they left the rock-table.
Immediately after luncheon, the girls left the flat table-rock and ran off in quest of fun. They had ignored the remains of the meal, and the dishes were left to attract all the ants and flies within a radius of the odor of the food.
Mrs. Vernon had gone to the buckboard to unpack the chest that held the tools, and was engaged in sorting the nails she thought would be needed to repair the old hut. When she turned to see if the girls were almost through with the task of clearing away the dishes, she found them eagerly investigating the camp grounds.
“How I’d like to have a swim in this pool,” called Joan, standing beside the mirror-like water.
“Oh, no; we can take a dip any time. Let’s go for a hike up the mountainside. I want to explore,” cried Ruth.
“Why not wait until to-morrow morning for adventuring—I want to see if there are any fish in this trout brook,” said Betty.
Julie was out of hearing, but she was busy over some quest of her own, and she had shirked work as well as the others.
“Girls, is it possible that you are seeking for a kind fairy who might live in the woods, or are you just waiting for some one to happen along and offer services to you?” asked Mrs. Vernon.
“What do you mean?” inquired Joan, puzzled at the words.
“And what areyoulooking for, Verny?” asked Betty, seeing the Captain going about examining various spots, then glance up at the trees overhead, or shade her eyes to gaze at the sky.
“Finding a suitable place for the cook-stove,” said she.
“Cook-stove! Why, we didn’t bring any!” replied four girls.
“Oh, yes we did—I’ll show you a fine one to-morrow.”
“Are we to have running water in our bedrooms, too?” laughed Joan.
“You can, if you are willing to do the plumbing,” retorted Mrs. Vernon.
But evidently she found just the place she sought for; and now the girls were deeply interested in watching her build a camp-stove. “You see, I need a place where the smoke will not be driven into our tents, and also where the wind will act as a blower up the chimney and not a quencher of the fire.
“Julie, you can bring me some smooth flat stones for an oven, and Joan can find me a peck of small stones for a lining. Then Betty can cut a good strong young sapling about an inch through, cut off the twigs and leave a clean pole about five feet long; and Ruth can cut two shorter ones with crotches made by two limbs. The crotched limbs can be about three inches long and the poles cut to four feet high. Sharpen the ends to a point so we can drive them into the ground.”
Each girl went to do the bidding of their Captain, and when they returned they found a pit had been scooped out of the sheltered nook at the base of a huge rock. This pit was lined with smooth small stones, and the flat oven-stones firmly fixed at the back. Then the two notched poles were planted one on each side of the fireplace, and the long pole placed across the top, the ends fitting securely into the notches.
“To-night we shall have hot soup for supper, girls, and there will be plenty of hot water to wash dishes in.”
“Hadn’t we better heat some water now for the dishes?” asked Julie.
“Oh—haven’t you cleared away the lunch table and washed the dishes?” asked Mrs. Vernon, seemingly surprised.
“Not yet—there wasn’t any hot water,” said Ruth.
“Then we must heat some at once, for no good scout will postpone clearing away food and dishes after he has had a bountiful meal. It shows a lack of appreciation and gratitude to the Provider when one is slack about cheerfully doing his part,” said the Captain.
So Joan was sent for a pail of water, and the other girls were told to remove all signs of food from the rock and bring the dishes to the kitchen.
“Where is the kitchen?” giggled Ruth.
“For to-day, we will have itbelowthe pool in which we wish to bathe. Then the brook can carry away the dish-water without having it seep into the ground and find its way to mingle with the pool.”
The pail of water was hung upon the cross-pole, and fire was laid and lit in the fire-pit. The girls watched very closely as the Captain slowly placed the dry leaves, then the dried twigs, and lastly the dry wood that would burn quickly and start other wood burning in the stove.
While the water was heating, Mrs. Vernon showed the girls how to hitch and unhitch Hepsy. If either one needed to do it, she would understand just where all the pieces of harness fitted in. Hepsy was now given a drink and some oats, and turned out to graze about the plateau.
With five pairs of hands, the clearing away of the dishes did not take long. As they worked, the Captain planned the carpentry work.
“Don’t you think we ought to repair the old hut first?” asked she. “You see, we need some sort of protection for our dry groceries and other things.”
“Well, we can do that to-day, and begin on Hepsy’s shed in the morning,” suggested Julie.
“I doubt if we can complete all the work to be done on the old place in this afternoon’s few hours,” returned Mrs. Vernon.
“It doesn’t look as if it would take more than two hours at most,” argued Joan.
“We’ll begin now and then you can find out for yourselves,” the Captain said in reply.
All the tools they had brought were now unpacked and placed ready for use. Mrs. Vernon then said: “Now we must weed up all the stubble and wild-growth that has filled the interior of the hut. We may find the floor beams good enough to use again when the undergrowth is cleared away.”
“Why not let’s build the roof first?” asked Ruth.
“Because you have no flooring down, and every nail or tool you drop while working on the roof will have to be sought for in the rank growth.”
The girls saw the logic of that, so they began pulling and working on the material that had to be eliminated before further work could be attended to.
“Why, this is as bad as weeding dandelions,” grumbled Ruth.
“Say, Ruth, dandelions were easy in comparison,” laughed Joan, standing up to wipe the perspiration from her face.
“Well, all I can say is, if this is the sort of fun the Girl Scouts rave about, I don’t want any more of it!” declared Ruth, throwing down her weeding fork and stepping over the beam to get out of the hut.
The other girls stopped work and looked impatiently at her, but Mrs. Vernon said: “Perhaps you’d like to work at some other task. There are many things to be done before we can settle down in camp and enjoy our leisure.”
“All right! Give me any old thing but that weeding!”
“Here’s the ax—see those trees growing so closely together over there?”
Ruth took the ax and signified by a nod that she saw the clump referred to.
“Start to cut down several of them, but do not chop too low or too high from the base. I mean, you ought to cut about eighteen inches above ground. When you have chopped through nearly half of the trunk, call me and I will show you what next to do.”
“Hurrah! Now I’m going to do something different! I’m sorry for you poor girls with nothing but weeds to work on,” called Ruth gaily, swinging the ax as she moved away.
The three girls watched for a few moments, but she had not yet reached the clump of trees before they were again working hard. The Captain was occupied in removing some boards from the packing cases already emptied of bedding and other things, so no one noticed Ruth.
She held the ax up over her head as she had seen others do, and brought it down with a swing. But it caught in the high bushes beside her and was yanked from her hands.
“Well! to think a little thing like that birch bush could do that!” exclaimed Ruth to herself.
She picked up the ax and took a fresh start. This time she changed her position so the birch could not interfere again. The ax came down, but so wide was its swing, and Ruth had not allowed for any leeway in her stiff pose, hence the muscles in her arms were wrenched and her back suddenly turned with the force of the blow.
“O-oh” exclaimed she, dropping the ax and rubbing the flesh of her upper arms.
She glanced over at her companions to see if they had seen the awkward work she was making of the chopping, but they were laughing merrily as they worked inside the hut. Mrs. Vernon was not to be seen so the girl’s pride was spared. She picked up the ax again and looked at it carefully.
“What is there about you that hurt me like that?”
But the inanimate ax did not answer, and Ruth could not tell. So she lifted it again, slowly this time, and then made sure that no obstructions were in the way.
She paid so much attention to the ax that she scarcely looked where the blow might fall, consequently the blade came down almost on a vertical line with the tree-trunk. It glanced off and sank into the soft soil beside the tree, with Ruth holding fast to the handle. So unexpected was this aim and the downward continuation of the ax until it sank into the ground, that Ruth was fairly pulled over and fell upon her face in the vines and bushes.
“You mean old thing! You can stick there as long as you like—I’ll never put a finger on you again!” cried the ax-scout, as she got up and felt of the scratches on her face.
“What’s the matter, Ruth?” called Mrs. Vernon, seeing the girl slowly returning to camp without the ax.
“That tool is too heavy for me to use. Have you a hatchet or something else to cut with?”
“The ax is the only thing that ought to be used on a small tree; the saw is for thicker trunks, but you can’t manage it, either, if you can’t handle the ax.”
“Well, what else is there I can do instead of chopping down forests?” asked Ruth, trying to cover her shortcomings with a laugh.
“Did you bring back the ax? It’s a very good one, you know.”
“I thought perhaps one of the other girls would want to change work soon, so I left it by the tree.”
“If one of the others should feel like quitting the work they were given to complete first, then they can take the ax from its place in the tool-chest. Better bring it to me now, Ruth.”
As no other alternative was open, she went back to the tree and kicked viciously at the ax. But the blade was still securely embedded in the ground and that made the handle as resistant as an upright post. So all Ruth got for her kick was a suddenly turned toe that felt lame for days afterwards.
“Oh, o-oh!howI hate camping! I’m going home and tell every one I know what a horrid thing this Girl Scout business is! All hard work and—everything! No fun, no rest—just lame backs and broken bones!” Ruth fairly screamed to herself as she sat down and removed the sneaker from the foot that had tried to crack the ax-handle of hickory.
The Captain heard the crying and hurried over to inquire into the cause of it. Ruth was weeping by this time, so sorry did she feel for herself, and her ill-treatment.
“What ever has happened, Ruth, in this perfectly safe spot?”
“O-ooh! I must have stubbed my toe! Oooo-h, I’m afraid it’s broken!” wailed the girl.
Mrs. Vernon saw the ax with its head deep in the ground but she did not dream how Ruth had “stubbed” her toe. She sat down and wiggled the injured member tenderly, then said:
“Oh, no, it’s not broken, only hurt by the collision. It will be all right in a little while,” the Captain replied cheerfully.
But Ruth did not want cheerfulness—she wanted to be told she had to remain as quiet as possible and have others wait on her.
“Pick up the ax and I’ll help you walk over—you can lean upon my arm if you think your toe will feel easier,” suggested Mrs. Vernon.
“I don’t believe I can walk,” breathed Ruth, fearfully.
“Oh, yes, you can. The foot is all right, it is only the toe that feels lame for a short time—just as it would have done at home if you ran into a piece of furniture.”
Reaching camp again, Ruth was about to drop the ax on the grass, when the Captain said: “The tool-chest is over on the buckboard, Ruth.”
The girl clinched her teeth in anger, but the ax was taken to its right place and left in the box whence she had taken it.
One after another of the girls looked up and felt surprised to find Ruth sitting on a box holding her foot. Then Julie called out:
“Good gracious! Ruth done chopping that tree so soon?”
“No, she and the ax had an argument,” laughed Mrs. Vernon.
Ruth glanced at the Captain out of the corners of her eyes, and wondered: “Did she see me kick that old thing?”
“Oh! Well, then, come over and get busy here again,” said Joan, beckoning to Ruth.
“That won’t make your toe hurt, Ruth. You can remain in one spot and weed,” added Mrs. Vernon.
Not having any other excuse at the moment, Ruth limped to the hut and slowly began the old work, but she rebelled inwardly.
After an hour’s hard work the clearing was done, and the girls threw themselves down to rest. The Captain was ready for this recess.
“I made a jugful of lemonade, girls, and it is as cold as if we had ice water in it. Just taste!”
“Oh, glory! Just what I was wishing for,” sighed Julie.
The others quickly agreed with that exclamation, and tested the drink. The mingled sounds of approval made the Captain smile. After a short rest, Joan said:
“What next? I’m ready to start work again.”
“Dear me! Haven’t we done enough for this afternoon? I want to enjoy alittlebit of the time here,” complained Ruth.
“I’m having a fine time! I like this sort of thing,” said Joan.
“You can do exactly as you like, girls; if you want to do any more work on the hut, well and good; if you prefer to rest or do anything else, there is no one to stop you. But it is plain to be seen that the hut cannot be repaired completely this afternoon, eh?” said Mrs. Vernon, with a smile.
“I should say not! If we finish it by to-morrow night we will be clever workers,” replied Julie.
“I’m going back to work on it, anyway,” came from Betty.
“You always were the easy mark for every one,” Ruth said scornfully, tossing her head.
Betty flushed, but Julie defended her. “She isn’t an easy mark at all! But she may be too sympathetic for hard-hearted or lazy folks who always play on her generosity!”
“I don’t believe the scout handbook says that members of the scout organization must criticize or say unpleasant things to others,” commented Mrs. Vernon.
That silenced every one, and soon all four girls were at work again, removing the dead wood of the flooring. When this was done, Mrs. Vernon examined it carefully.
“It isn’t as bad as I thought it would be. The tangle of briars and brush, and the decayed outer layer of the beams, made it look as if it all must be removed.”
Once they became interested in repairing the floor as it should be done, the girls wanted to continue and complete it, but the wise Captain called a halt, and said:
“Twilight will soon creep up to compel us to stop work; before that comes we want to have everything ready for the night.”
So when darkness fell the camp was ready and waiting for it. A fine fire reflected light fitfully about its radius, and lanterns were lighted for use in case the campers wished to go about. Hepsy had been fed and bedded for the night, and the tent was in readiness for its tenants.
Supper had been prepared and disposed of, and the dishes washed and cleared away before darkness invited every one to sit down and listen to the Captain’s stories of girlhood days in this very spot. But she had rather a drowsy audience that night. Four girls were so tired out with healthy exercise and the mountain air that the fire gave them a feeling of peace and rest.
Not a demur was heard when Mrs. Vernon suggested bed, and the hard cots must have felt like a nest of feathers to the newly-fledged scouts, for soon every one was fast asleep.
A loud drumming on a tin pan roused the would-be scouts in the morning, and each girl tumbled out of her cot feeling as if she had slept on roses. The invigorating air and the benefit of sleeping out-of-doors began to be felt. Then the odor of cooking was wafted in through the tent opening, and Joan ran to look out.
“Oh!” sniffed she, “Verny’s up and dressed and has somethingawfullygood cooking for breakfast!”
“Um-m—I should say she has!” added Julie, running over to join Joan at the tent door.
“What is it, Verny?” called a chorus of girls, and as the Captain turned to reply she saw four tousled heads crowded out of the opening.
“Can’t tell secrets until you’ve washed and dressed!” laughed Mrs. Vernon.
It was not long, therefore, before the hungry campers joined her about the fire and wanted to know what smelled so good. The Captain was adding a pinch of salt to the “something” in the pot, so she did not look up, but said hastily:
“Will some one watch that toast—it seems to be scorching.”
“Did you ever! Making toast on a stone!” laughed Julie, trying to turn over the slices with a stick.
“But the stone’s as hot as any stove-lid,” commented Betty, as she saw the smoke rise from the crumbs that burned on the rock.
“Is that cereal standing off on that other stone?” now inquired Ruth.
“Yes, but who’d a thought a stone would ever be used for an oven?” laughed Joan, stirring the cereal with a long spoon.
“The oven won’t retain heat long after the stone is removed from the embers. Better be ready to serve yourselves as soon as I say ‘ready,’” said Mrs. Vernon, as she removed the pot that had given forth such appetizing odors from the fire, and stood it upon a heated rock.
“Now—all ready!” laughed she, and every girl made a dash for the cereal.
“Here—let me dish it up and pass it along. The whole mess will be in the fire if we all struggle to be first,” added Joan.
The cereal disappeared like snow in July, and then four eager girls were asking for the next course.
“This food, fit for the gods, is composed of the leavings of supper last night. But you girls will never dream that it goes by a homely name,” said Mrs. Vernon, as she ladled a goodly portion upon each plate which was thrust out under her nose.
“Whatisit called?” asked Ruth, tasting a bit that fell upon the edge of her plate.
“It smells heavenly, Verny!” sighed Julie, rolling her eyes skyward.
Every one laughed, for Julie always was extravagant in her language.
“In boarding-houses the guests object every time it is served, but we have the great advantage over city boarders whose hash is made merely with chopped meat and eggs and milk! We have Nature’s appetizer to season our dish, so that it becomes nectar and ambrosia in this camp,” explained the Captain, smilingly.
The hash went the way of the cereal, and the girls looked anxiously in the pot to see if there could be a second helping.
“Oh, thanks to our lucky stars and Verny, she made a lot of it!” called Julie, waving a spoon at her comrades.
“But where is the toast? Verny—the toast is gone!” shouted Joan, gazing fearfully under the stones to see if it could have slipped from the oven-rock.
“Ha! that’s my secret! Eat the hash, girls, and I will tell you where the toast is.”
It needed no second invitation to finish all signs of hash, then Ruth demanded to know where the toast was hidden.
The Captain ran over to Ruth and touched the spot where the stomach is located. “You’ve had your share of toast and it is in there!” laughed Mrs. Vernon.
“We haven’t! We only had hash!” retorted Ruth, wonderingly.
“The hash was made of toast and other things. I only had about a spoonful of corned beef left from last night. But toast, when broken into bits, will taste so like meat that few people know the difference. That’s how I managed to cook a second helping.”
“As long as it was not wasted I don’t care much whether I ate the toast in hash or had it with tea,” said Julie.
“But I can eat more breakfast,” commented Joan.
“‘Enough is as good as a feast,’ and I’m sure you girls must admit you’ve had enough to sustain you until noon,” said Mrs. Vernon.
“Oh, certainly!” agreed Joan, “making the best of a famine is my especial virtue.”
This started a laugh, and merry words were exchanged while the dishes were cleared away and the camp was left in good order.
“Now shall we start in to finish the hut, Verny?” asked Betty.
“I thought I’d like to read aloud from the handbook, ‘Scouting for Girls,’ and see how many of the laws and customs you girls know.”
“You’ll find us in the A-B-C-class, I’m afraid,” said Joan.
“Then the sooner you are promoted out of it the better,” declared Mrs. Vernon, seating herself on a stump and opening the manual.
“First question: ‘How do you start a Patrol?’” asked the Captain.
“Oh, we know that, Verny, ’cause we had to learn it by heart in order to advise those girls who wanted to join, you see,” chorused the girls.
“Well, then, are we a Patrol now?” asked Mrs. Vernon.
“In the real sense, we are not, as there are only four members at present; but we aregoingto be one, aren’t we?” said Julie.
“Yes, but until we have eight girls we are not anything on record. However, we can form our club and then enlist new members to increase the number to the required total.
“Next it says: ‘The Scout Captain who has studied the plan, principles and object of the organization, explains the laws and obligations of members to those who wish to form a troop.’ I must now take down your names and addresses in a book, and decide what day or at what time we wish to hold our regular meetings.
“It says here that fifteen minutes must be spent on knot-tying and three-quarters of an hour on recreation. So I will now teach you the art of tying knots. Following this lesson, we will take forty-five minutes for recreation.”
But the fifteen minutes merged into twenty, and still the novitiates begged to be allowed to “try just one more knot.”
“Now I am going to read the Girl Scout Laws from the book, but there will be no comments, please, until I give the signal,” said the Captain, having taken away the rope for knots, and seated herself upon it to keep the girls from experimenting.
“‘1—If a Scout says “on my honor it is so,” that means that what she says is as true as if she had taken a most solemn oath.
“‘2—A Girl Scout is loyal to the President, to her country, and to her officers; to her father, to her mother, and to her employers. She remains true to them through thick and thin. In the face of the greatest difficulties and calamities her loyalty must remain untarnished.
“‘3—A Girl Scout’s duty is to be useful and to help others. She is to do her duty before anything else even if she gives up her own pleasure, safety, or comfort. When in doubt as to which of two things to do she must think: “Which is my duty?” which means “Which is the best for other people?” and then do that at once. She must be prepared at any time to save life or help the injured. She should do at least one good turn to some one every day.
“‘4—A Girl Scout is a Friend to all, and a sister to every other Girl Scout. Thus, if a Scout meets another Scout, even though a stranger to her, she may speak to her and help her in any way she can, either to carry out the duty she is then doing, or by giving her food, or as far as possible anything she may want. Like Kim, a Scout should be a “Little friend to all the world.
“‘5—A Scout is courteous; that is, she is polite to all. She must not take any reward for being helpful or courteous.
“‘6—A Scout keeps herself pure in thought, word and deed.
“‘7—A Scout is a friend to animals; she should save them as far as possible from pain, and should not kill even the smallest unnecessarily. They are all God’s creatures.
“‘8—A Scout obeys orders under all circumstances; when she gets an order she must obey it cheerfully and readily, not in a slow, sullen manner. Scouts never grumble, whine nor howl.
“‘9—A Scout is cheerful under all circumstances. Scouts never grumble at hardships, nor whine at each other, nor frown when put out. A Scout goes about with a smile and singing. It cheers her and cheers other people, especially in time of danger.
“‘10—A Scout is thrifty; this means that a Scout avoids all useless waste of every kind; she is careful about saving every penny she can put into the bank so that she may have a surplus in time of need. She sees that food is not wasted, and that her clothing is cared for properly. The Girl Scout does not waste time. She realizes that time is the most precious thing any one of us has. The Girl Scout’s time is spent either in useful occupation or in wholesome recreation, and she tries to balance these two harmoniously.’
“Now girls, have you any comments to make, for I have read the ten commandments of the Girl Scout organization, and will hear any testimony now?” said Mrs. Vernon, laughingly.
“I haven’t any comments to make on the reading, but I would like to remind the illustrious Captain that she forgot a very important part of the program this morning,” said Julie, seriously, albeit there was a twinkle in her eyes.
“Speak now or forever after hold your peace!” declared Mrs. Vernon, with a magisterial air.
Every one laughed, but Julie obeyed the command: “You said we would give fifteen minutes to knot-tying and forty-five to recreation. Now I wish to ask Your Honor, is this Scout Reading to be considered as recreation?”
The Captain smiled, and after a few moments’ pause said: “I am guilty of theft. But I plead extenuating circumstances. I forgot what I said about recreation, and was so over-anxious to have my infant Patrol grounded in the first lessons of scout duties that I stole time from the hour. Who is there here just enough to sentence me?”
“We have no jury, but in lieu of a speaker, allow me to speak for myself: your zeal shall be your excuse, but hereafter see that you do not commit the same offense,” spoke Julie, with a judicial air.
The Captain and girls laughed heartily, and thus ended the first reading of Scout Laws. Mrs. Vernon closed the book and got up from the knotty seat of rope, and asked the girls if they had thought of any form of recreation.
“We still have to be informed by the Court if the time stolen from our forty-five minutes must be returned or deducted?” countered Julie.
“The Court thinks you should have the full time given you for any useful recreation—not for foolishness,” said Mrs. Vernon.
“Well, would the Court adjudge a good hike to be useful?” demanded Joan.
“The Court most certainly would, and will even offer to accompany the jury, or whatever body you call yourselves.”
“Then it’s us for a hike, girls!” cried Joan.
The suggestion met with favor, and soon the newly-made Scouts were climbing the steep grade of the mountainside. It was more than an hour before voices were again heard, and Hepsy whinnied as if to ask “What sort of scouts are you, anyway, to listen to a law read about animals and how to treat them, and then go away without giving me my breakfast?”
The moment the girls heard the appeal from the mare, they understood and ran pell-mell to get Hepsy the oats. When she saw they were measuring out her breakfast, she craned her neck as far as it would stretch, and pawed the ground impatiently.
Mrs. Vernon held her head with both hands and cried as if in despair: “Merciful goodness! What sort of a Captain am I to forget our faithful old scout Hepsy?”
“Will Hepsy get sick now, Verny?” asked Betty, worried.
“No, but she is so famished she may eat me up if I venture near her with a pail of water! That is all that might happen.”
“If she does, there will be a second result, too. Hepsy’ll sure have an awful case of indigestion after dining!” retorted Julie, causing the others to laugh.
Hepsy was given a long drink and then left to enjoy her oats. While the animal was feeding, Julie said: “How about the hut?”
“I hope we can finish it to-day, Verny,” added Joan.
“You can try at least. Every bit done helps, you know,” replied the Captain.
The old flooring had been scraped clean and the cross-sections that were too badly decayed were removed. Then the boards taken from the packing cases were fitted in and nailed down securely. By one o’clock the partly new floor was finished and cleaned up.
Dinner was suggested before continuing the work, and the campers talked about roofing the hut while they prepared the meal.
“Now that the floor is finished, two of us ought to begin to carry in our stock, while the others work on the roof. That will save our groceries from the moisture or dampness in the ground, you see,” said Mrs. Vernon.
“But we all want to work on the roof—it will be fun,” declared Julie.
“In that case, we shall have to draw lots. And after half of the groceries are moved in by two girls, the others will have to take their turn while the first two enjoy the roof,” suggested the Captain.
“And you—what do you want to do?” asked Ruth.
“I am going to hunt around for any down timbers that we can use for siding the hut where the old logs have fallen away and rotted on the ground. I will leave you scouts to work on the roof after your own plans.”
“Oh, but tell us what to use before you go?” cried Betty.
“You’ll find a roll of tar paper over there with the supplies. This you must measure off and cut the required size. Be sure to have it long enough to turn under the eaves and over at the top.”
“How do we nail it down?” asked Joan.
“Lay the strips lengthwise, from ridgepole to eaves, and fasten down each strip on the old boards. But, girls, do be careful not to break through those openings in the roof, nor crumble in at any decayed places!”
“All right—I guess we can remember that much all right,” said Julie, eager to begin.
So Mrs. Vernon left them to see how far they would use their intelligence in doing this work, while she began seeking along the woodland road for down tree-trunks of movable length and weight.
She found plenty of timber such as she wanted for the sides of the old hut, and also to start work on the new one, but she did not return to camp until four o’clock. When she did, she found two of the girls fast asleep on the grass, while the other two were in the pool splashing about.
She went quietly over to the hut, and, to her surprise, found the roof as neatly finished as if done by an experienced hand. The edges were turned under and fastened with nails, and the seams lapped just as they should be. In fact, she was delighted with the workmanship.
Then, too, the boxes of groceries and other goods were neatly stacked in one corner, so less room was used for storage and more left for personal use.
“Now I wonder which one of the girls thought this out? It is so natural for young folks to shove the boxes in and leave them standing about anywhere. But this proves to me that one of my scouts has a good head for management of affairs.”
The girls swimming about in the pool now caught sight of the Captain, and scrambled out of the water. They were soon dressed and ran over to receive Mrs. Vernon’s compliments on the work done. The two sleeping ones also sat up, rubbed their eyes, and laughed.
“When did you get back, Verny?” yawned Ruth.
“Just now; but, girls, I have seen the hut, and you surely have done fine work!” exclaimed the Captain, turning to admire the roof again.
While her head was turned, four girls exchanged knowing winks, but their faces were as serious as ever when Mrs. Vernon’s eyes searched theirs keenly.
“We thought you’d be pleased, Verny. But what kept you so long?” said Julie.
“I found enough wood for a new hut, and then I sat down on a log and sketched a working plan for the sections of the building you propose erecting.
“You see this rocky wall that rises back of the old hut?” the Captain pointed to the lines she had drawn on the paper. “Well, we will use that for a back wall against which our new hut can brace itself. The wall of the old hut can supply one side of the new building, and we can extend the roof on the same lines as the old one, along over the new hut.”
“Oh, yes, that’s a fine idea!” cried Joan.
“And that will save us hauling the wood and building up one whole side, won’t it?” asked Betty.
“Yes, but it also makes a two-room house of the two huts, see?” and Mrs. Vernon displayed another plan she had drawn on paper.
“I think I like it better than having two separate huts, Verny,” said Julie.
“And we can use the wood we might have built into the one side of the hut for a shed for Hepsy. Can’t we go right on extending the house and build the lean-to to the end of the new hut, just as we plan hooking the new addition on to the old hut?” asked Joan.
The original way in which the description was worded caused a general laugh, but Joan never worried about laughter when it was in fun. She always said, “Well, if it gives any one any satisfaction to laugh at me, I’m glad to accommodate them so cheaply. It doesn’t hurt one.”
“Joan’s idea is good, and we will follow it as soon as we finish the frame of the new hut,” said Mrs. Vernon.
“We were thinking of moving your cot-bed into the old hut, Verny, but then we decided to wait and see if you would like it,” now suggested Betty.
“You see, we were a bit crowded last night in the tent, and we thought you would like some privacy of your own. Being in the old hut might appeal to your sentimentality,” added Julie.
Another laugh rang out, but this time at Mrs. Vernon’s expense. She sighed and posed as a sentimental maiden might, and simpered her thanks for the scouts’ forethought. Then they laughed again.
“Now all joking aside, girls! I appreciate your thought and will gladly move my hotel-suite to the hut. At least I shall be near the crackers and prunes if I feel hungry at night,” declared Mrs. Vernon.
She then called the girls to assist her in moving her effects from the tent to the hut, and as they went back and forth the Captain could not refrain from again voicing her gratification at the manner in which the scouts finished their first carpentry work.
“If you were fully-fledged scouts of record, you surely would be awarded a badge.”
Behind her back, as she said this, the Captain’s four carpenters again exchanged smiles and knowing winks.