"Asia," promptly answered Gladys.

"Turkey," said Katherine, somewhat doubtfully, and "Persia," said Agony in the same breath.

Then they all looked at each other a little sheepishly.

"The extent to which I don"t know geography," remarked Sahwah, "is something appalling."

"Well, if _we_ don"t know what country Bagdad was in, it"s pretty sure that none of the others will either," said Hinpoha brightly, "so it doesn"t make much difference what kind of a costume you wear. Something Turkish is what you want, I suppose. A turban and some great big bloomers, you know the kind, with yards and yards of goods in them."

"But you can"t swim in such awfully full bloomers," Sahwah protested.

"That"s so, too," Hinpoha a.s.sented.

"Well, get them as big as you _can_ swim in," said Migwan pacifically.

"Who"s going to make them?" Sahwah wanted to know. "We haven"t much time."

"Oh, just borrow Tiny Armstrong"s regular ones," Migwan replied.

"They"ll look like Turkish bloomers on you."

"Won"t she suspect what we"re going to do if I borrow them?" Sahwah demurred.

"Nonsense! What could she suspect? She will know of course that you want them for the stunt, but she couldn"t guess _what_ for."

"We"ve got to have her other pair, too, for the person who is going to impersonate Tiny," Agony reminded Migwan.

"So we do," replied Migwan, making a note in her book. "And her stockings, too, those red and black ones. We"re going to do that snake business over again. Somebody will have to get these without Tiny"s knowing it, or she"ll suspect about the snake. Who"s in her tent?"

"We are," replied Katherine and Oh-Pshaw. "We"ll manage to get them for you. Who"s going to impersonate Tiny Armstrong?"

Migwan squinted her eyes in a calculating manner and surveyed the girls grouped around her. "It"ll have to be Katherine, I guess," she finally announced. "She"s the biggest of us all. But even she isn"t nearly as big as Tiny," she added regretfully.

"Couldn"t we put two of us together?" suggested Sahwah. "Carmen Chadwick is as light as a feather and she could get up on Katherin"s shoulders as easy as not."

"But we need Katherine to impersonate the Lone Wolf. She"s the only one who can do it well," objected Migwan. "Somebody else will have to be the bottom half of Tiny. Hinpoha, you"ll do for that part. Gladys, you"ll be Pom-pom, of course. There, that"s three councilors taken care of. As soon as your parts are a.s.signed will you please step over to that side, girls. Then I can see what I have left. Now, who"ll be Miss Peckham?"

There was a silence, and all the eligibles looked at one another doubtfully. n.o.body quite dared impersonate Miss Peckham--and n.o.body wanted to, for that matter.

"Jo?" Migwan began hesitatingly. "You"re such a good mimic--no--" she broke off decidely, "you have to be Dr. Grayson, of course, because you can play men"s parts so beautifully."

She looked from one to the other inquiringly. Her eye fell upon Bengal Virden. "Bengal, dear--"

Bengal looked up with a jerk and a grimace of distaste. "I wouldn"t be Pecky for a thousand dollars," she declared flatly. "I hate her, I tell you." Then something seemed to occur to her, and a mischievous twinkle came into her eyes. "Oh, I"ll be her," she exclaimed, throwing grammar to the winds in her eagerness. "Please let me. I want to be, I want to be."

"All right," said Migwan relievedly, putting the entry down in her notebook and proceeding with the a.s.signment of parts. But Agony, having seen the mischievous gleam that came into Bengal"s eyes when she so suddenly changed her mind about impersonating Miss Peckham, wondered as to its meaning.

She called Bengal to come aside with her, and Bengal, enraptured at being noticed by her divinity, trotted after her like a delighted Newfoundland puppy, bestowing clumsy caresses upon her as they proceeded.

"Oh, I"ve got the best joke on Pecky!" she gurgled, before Agony had had a chance to broach the subject herself.

"Yes?" said Agony.

"Did you know," confided Bengal, with a fresh burst of giggles, "that Pecky shaves?"

Then, as Agony gave a little incredulous exclamation, she hastened on.

"Really she does, her whole chin, with a razor, every morning. I found it out a couple of days ago. I guess she"d have a regular beard if she didn"t. You"ve noticed how kind of hairy her chin is, haven"t you? I found a little safety razor among her things one day--"

"Bengal! You weren"t rummaging among her things, were you?"

"No, of course not. But once when we were all up in the bungalow she found that she"d forgotten her watch, and sent me back to get it out of her bathrobe pocket, and there was a little safety razor in where the watch was. I didn"t think anything about it then, but after that I noticed that she always went off by herself in the woods. While the rest of us went for morning dip. Yesterday I followed her and saw what she did. She shaved her chin with that safety razor. Oh, won"t it be great fun when I do that in the stunt? Won"t she be hopping mad, though!"

Bengal hopped up and down and chortled with antic.i.p.atory glee.

"Bengal!" said Agony firmly, "don"t you _dare_ do anything like that?

Don"t you know that it"s terribly bad taste to make fun of people"s personal blemishes?"

"But she deserves it," Bengal persisted, still chuckling. "She"s such a prune."

"That has nothing whatever to do with the matter," Agony replied sternly. "Do you want to ruin our stunt for us? That"s what will happen if you do anything as ill-bred as that. It would take away every chance we have of winning the prize."

"Well, if _you_ say I shouldn"t do it I won"t," said Bengal rather sulkily. "But wouldn"t it have been the best joke!" she added regretfully.

"Bengal," Agony continued, realizing that even if Bengal could be suppressed as far as the stunt went, she would still have plenty of opportunity for making life miserable for Miss Peckham now that she had learned her embarra.s.sing secret, "you won"t mention this to any of the other girls, will you? You see, it must be very embarra.s.sing for Miss Peckham to have to do that, and naturally she would feel highly uncomfortable if the camp found it out. You see, you found it out by accident; she didn"t tell you of her own free will, so you have no right to tell it any further. A girl with a nice sense of honor would never think of telling anything she found out in that way, when she knew it would cause embarra.s.sment if told. So you"ll give me your promise, won"t you, Bengal dear, that you will never mention this matter to anybody around camp?"

Bengal flushed and looked down, maintaining an obstinate silence.

"Please, won"t you, Bengal dear?" coaxed Agony in her most irresistible manner. "Will you do it for me if you won"t do it for Miss Peckham?"

Bengal could not hold out against the coaxing of her adored one, but she still hesitated, bargaining her promise for a reward. "If you"ll let me wear your ring for the rest of the summer, and come and kiss me goodnight every night after I"m in bed--"

"All right," Agony agreed hastily, with a sigh of resignation for this departure from her fixed principles regarding the lending of jewelry and about promiscuous demonstrations of affection, but peace in camp was worth the price.

Bengal claimed the ring at once, and then, after pawing Agony over like a bear cub, said a little shamefacedly, "I wish I were as good as you are. You"re so honorable. How do you get such a "nice sense of honor" as you have? I think I"d like to have one."

"Such a nice sense of honor as you have!" Agony jerked up as though she had been jabbed with a red hot needle. "Such a nice sense of honor as you have!" The words lingered in her ears like a mocking echo. The smile faded from her lips; her arm stiffened and dropped from Bengal"s shoulder. The frank admiration in the younger girl"s eyes cut her to the quick. With a haggard look she turned away from Bengal and wandered away to the other part of the island, away from the girls. Just now she could not bear to hear their gay, carefree voices. What would she not give, she thought to herself, to have nothing on her mind. She even envied rabbit-brained little Carmen Chadwick, who, if she had nothing in her head, had nothing on her conscience either.

"Who am I to talk of a "nice sense of honor" to Bengal Virden?" she thought miserably. "I"m a whole lot worse than she. She"s only a mischievous child, and doesn"t know any better, but I do. I"m no better than Jane Pratt, either, even though I told Mrs. Grayson about her going out at night with boys from Camp Altamont." This matter of Jane Pratt had tormented Agony without ceasing. True to her contemptuous att.i.tude toward Agony"s plea that she break bonds no more, she had refused to tell Mrs. Grayson about her nocturnal canoe rides and thus had forced Agony to make good her threat and tell Mrs. Grayson herself. She had hoped and prayed that Jane would take the better course and confess her own wrong doing, but Jane did nothing of the kind, and there was only one course open to Agony. It was the rule of the camp that anyone seeing another breaking the rules must first give the offender the opportunity to confess, and if that failed must report the matter herself to the Doctor or Mrs. Grayson. So Agony was obliged to tell Mrs. Grayson that Jane was breaking the rules by slipping out nights and setting a bad example to the younger girls if any of them knew about it.

The matter caused more of a stir than Agony had expected, and much more than she had wished for. Dr. Grayson prided himself upon the high standard of conduct which was maintained at his camp, and he knew that the mothers of his girls gave their daughters into his keeping with implicit faith that they would meet with no harmful influences while they were at Camp Keewaydin. If a rumor should ever get about that the girls from his camp went out in canoes after hours Keewaydin"s reputation would suffer considerably. Dr. Grayson was outraged and thoroughly angry. He decided at once that Jane should be sent home in disgrace. That very day, however, Mrs. Grayson had received a letter saying that Jane"s mother was quite ill in a sanatarium and that all upsetting news was being carefully kept away from her. She particularly desired that Jane should not come home, as there was no place for her to stay, and she was so much better taken care of in camp than she would be in a large city with no one to look after her. It was this letter that brought about a three-hour conference between the Doctor and Mrs.

Grayson. Dr. Grayson was firm about sending Jane home in disgrace; Mrs.

Grayson, filled with concern about her well loved friend, could not bear to risk upsetting her at this critical time by turning loose her unruly daughter. In the end Mrs. Grayson won her point, and Jane was allowed to stay in camp, but she was deprived of all canoe privileges for the remainder of the summer and forbidden to go on any of the trips with the camp. She was taken away from the easy-going, sound-sleeping councilor whose chaperonage she had succeeded in eluding, and placed in a tent with Mrs. Grayson herself. Dr. Grayson called the whole camp together in council and explained the matter to the girls, dwelling upon the dishonorableness of breaking rules, and when he finished his talk there was small danger that even the smallest rule would be broken again during the summer. The sight of Jane Pratt called out in public to be censured was not one to be soon forgotten. Agony was commended by the Doctor for her firm stand in the matter, and praised because she did not take the easier course of remaining silent about it and running the risk of letting the reputation of the camp suffer.

Since then Jane, though somewhat subdued, had treated Agony with such marked animosity of manner that Agony hardly dared look at her. Added to her natural embarra.s.sment at having been the in-former--a role which no one ever really enjoys--was the matter which lay like lead on Agony"s own conscience and which tortured her out of all proportion to its real significance.

"Pretender!" the whole world seemed to shriek at her wherever she went.

Thus, although Agony apparently was throwing herself heart and soul into the preparations for Stunt Night, her mind was not on it half of the time and at times she was hardly conscious of the bustle and excitement around her.

These last three days the camp were as a house divided against itself, as far as the Avenue and the Alley were concerned. Such a gathering of groups into corners, such whispering and giggling, such sudden scattering at the approach of one from the other side! Sahwah spent two whole afternoons over on the far side of Whaleback, rehearsing her shipwreck, while the rest of the Alleyites worked up their parts on sh.o.r.e, trying to imitate the voices and characteristics of the various councilors. All went fairly well except the combination Tiny Armstrong.

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