"Let"s hear the worst."
"Break it gently."
"We thought your new junk wagon broke down."
"Don"t say anything against his new junk Wagon or he"ll never tell us anything."
"Did you put the baby to bed?"
"Yes and locked him in."
"What kept you so late?"
"We got mixed up with a Bandit of Harrowing Highway."
"Who"s he?"
"He"s a villyan."
"A which?"
"A movie play."
"That"s a nice thing for two scoutmasters to go and see. Your two troops are ashamed of you."
"If our two troops don"t shut up--"
"We"ll shut up--come on, _altogether_!"
Followed a welcome silence.
"We"ve gone to a lot of trouble today for you kids," said one of the scoutmasters. "We"ve got the cup but we had to wait a couple of hours for it. The merchants in the great metropolis of Bridgeboro are so slow that a turtle would be arrested for speeding there. Poke up the fire, Nick, we"re cold, and I"ll tell you all about our adventures. We"ve made a day of it, huh?"
The scout whom he called Nick jogged up the waning blaze while others brought a fresh log, and soon the camp-fire was roaring a warming, hearty welcome home to the weary scoutmasters. One of these (who was evidently young enough to be addressed by his Christian name, for they called him Ned) sat on an old grocery box and related the happenings of the day, while the others sprawled about, listening. Occasionally his fellow scoutmaster (Safety First they called him) contributed a few words.
"Well, the first thing we did when we got ash.o.r.e was to--"
"Get out of the boat?" a scout asked. There was surely not much constraint between scouts and scoutmasters in this outfit.
"We went up to town and saw the school board; at least we saw Mr. Cram.
He says everything"s upside down and they don"t know what they"ll do--says there won"t be any school for a month anyway. (Cries of despair.) They can"t use the town hall and they can"t use the fire-house and they"re talking of using the old Wilder mansion. We told him if there wasn"t going to be any school till the middle of October or so, we"d like to bunk right here on the island and study nature. He said, "Go to it." So there"s no school for a month (murmurs of disappointment) and we"ve got to chip in and get some more groceries.
"We squared things with your parents and most of them are glad to get rid of you. How about that, Safety First? Corby"s sister is giving a party and hopes he"ll stay away. Let"s see now; oh yes, we bought some fishing tackle.
"Then we got some gas and started for Bridgeboro after the cup. We went after that cup like Sir Thomas Lipton. The jewelry man didn"t have the engraving finished so we dropped in at a movie show and saw a fellow with a lot of pistols. How many pistols were there, First Aid? We counted them off coming back in the machine, there were seventy. Crazy stuff. That"s the kind of stuff you kids fall for. Well, after the pistol shooting was over we got the cup and started back and here we are. Any questions?"
"Let"s see the cup."
We left it in the machine. We"ll get it in the morning. Now look here, you scouts. I want every last one of you to try for that cup. There are half a dozen of you that need to wake up. There are a few dead ones here; Harry, the crack shot--yes you--I"m looking right at you--I want you to can all this stuff about killing animals and get busy and do the best scout stunt of the season and win that cup. Understand? I was saying to Safety First on the way home that a fellow gets more fun stealing up on an animal and piking him with a camera than he does poking around with an old air gun that he saw advertised in _Boy"s Life_. That"s what! I"m talking to you straight.
"Now here"s a silver cup and it looks pretty swell all engraved with our patrol names and we drove way to Bridgeboro to get it. That cup"s going to stand on the stump of that tree there--where the chipmunk hangs out.
And the day we leave this island it"s going to the scout that has done the best scout stunt. Tracking, signalling, good turn, cooking, it makes no difference what. The scout that does the _biggest thing_, he gets the cup. We two scoutmasters and Mr. Wade are going to be the committee. Now you"d better all turn in and hurry up about it, and Ralph Gordon is not to snore; they"re complaining about it over in town."
"Can we do any kind of stunts we want to?" asked the tall scout whom they call Nick.
"Any kind at all that"s good scouting; that"s the only rule."
"All right, then I"m going to start to-night," said Nick; "I"m going to row across and get that cup out of the car so we all can see it. Let"s have the key, will you?"
At this there was a general laugh mingled with shouts from a dozen or so volunteers:
"I"ll go with you!"
"Take me?"
"I"m in on that!"
"I was just going to suggest it!"
"Yes you were--not!"
"Wait till morning," said Scoutmaster Ned.
"It can"t be done," said Nick in a funny, sober way; "a scout is supposed to have his sleep, that"s the most important rule of all, you said so yourself. I can"t sleep till I"ve had a squint at that cup. Come on Fido, let"s row over."
The scout called Fido had won his name because of his doglike persistence in following trails. "That"s me," he said, "I was just going to propose it when you took the words out of my mouth."
"I"d like to see a photograph of anybody taking anything out of _your_ mouth," said Scoutmaster Ned. "Go ahead, the two of you; I wish your people would send you both to a private school that opens up to-morrow.
Go on, get out of here. And don"t wake us up when you come back."
"Thank you kindly," said Fido.
"The pleasure is mine," said Scoutmaster Ned.
CHAPTER XVI
FOOTPRINTS
So this, then, was the explanation of the bloodthirsty talk which the mighty hero of the Bridgeboro troop had heard under the buffalo robe as he emerged from the sweet realm of slumber in the automobile.
Pistols, killing, stealing and dead ones! To steal up to a bird and _not_ kill it! To wake up if you are a dead one! To laugh with wholesome scout humor at the silly gun play of the screen! To count the pistols in William I. Smart"s five reel thriller!
Alas, Scout Harris!
But we are not to accompany that redoubtable rescuer in his thrilling flight. We are going to row across the lake in which the dying camp-fire on the little island cast a golden flicker, into which the oars held by our new acquaintance, Nick Vernon, dipped silently and rose dripping as his practiced arms drew the boat through the water, causing a musical little ripple at its bow.