The outdoor girls were making ready for their trip to Ocean View, where the better part of the summer would be spent.
The arrangements had been made for the Nelson family to occupy the beautiful cottage, Edgemere, which was completely furnished.
"Even to matches and a candle in each bedroom," Betty had said.
"But I thought you said it was a modern place," objected Grace. "I don"t like candles--excuse me, Betty dear, but they are so--so smelly!"
"I know. The candles are only for emergency. The house has electric lights."
"Electric lights! I thought Ocean View was such a _quaint_ old place,"
murmured Mollie.
"So it is. The electric plant is in Point Lomar, that swell summer resort. Only a few places in Ocean View have electricity."
And so the arrangements went on. Mollie, Grace and Amy were to be Betty"s guests during the summer, though their parents or relatives had a standing invitation to spend week-ends and holidays at the sh.o.r.e.
"And of course the boys are always welcome!" added Betty.
"And of course we"ll _come_!" declared Will and the others. "That is, I"ll spend as much time as I can away from my official duties!"
"Oh, he nearly told us then!" cried Grace. "Will, I"ll never speak to you again, if you don"t tell me that secret."
"You shall know in due time, sister mine. As for your threat, I don"t mind your not speaking to me if you don"t make me buy your chocolates. I care not who speaks to me!" he paraphrased, "as long as I do not have to buy their candy!"
"Here comes Percy Falconer!" interrupted Roy, and the little conference, one of many held whenever the friends met--broke up.
While the girls were getting ready with trunks of clothes, the boys were no less busily engaged. They had completed their plans for a series of cruises along the coast, in the motor boat _Pocohontas_, loaned to Allen Washburn by a wealthy gentleman for whom he had done some law business, though Allen was not as yet admitted to the bar.
"I"ll have a chance to practice this summer, getting the boat off a sand-bar!" he had jokingly said.
And finally trunks were packed, tickets had been purchased, word had come from Ocean View that the cottage was in readiness, and at last, on a beautifully sunny June morning, the outdoor girls stood at the station, ready to take the train.
The boys were there, also, as might have been guessed.
"And when are you coming down in the boat?" asked Betty.
"In about a week," Allen said. "We"re having the engine overhauled, a new magneto put in and some other things done."
"I"m coming in the auto," broke in Percy Falconer. "Father did not want me to make the boat trip, but the chauffeur will bring me down to the sh.o.r.e in the car."
"Pity he wouldn"t use a feather bed," murmured Roy Anderson.
"Oh, here comes the train!" cried Mollie. "Girls, I"m almost sure I"ve forgotten half my things."
"Good-bye, girls!" chorused the boys.
"Good-bye!" came the answer.
"Oh, Grace!" called Will to his sister.
"Yes," she answered.
"That secret of mine."
"Oh, yes. What is it? Do tell me! I haven"t a second----"
"I"ll tell you--when I come down!" his words floated to her as she was borne along the platform with her chums to the train that was to take them to Ocean View.
CHAPTER V
OLD TIN-BACK
"Isn"t he provoking!" murmured Grace, sinking into a seat beside Mollie, as the train slowly pulled out.
"Who?" asked Mollie, leaning toward the window to wave to the boys on the platform.
"My brother Will. He"s up to something--he has a secret and he won"t tell me!"
"Don"t let him know you care, and he"ll tell you all the quicker. Boys are that way," declared Mollie, with the acc.u.mulated wisdom of--say--seventeen years.
"Yes, I suppose so," agreed Grace, and then she began a hurried search among the various articles she had deposited on the seat between herself and Mollie.
"What is it--lost something?" asked the latter.
"My bag of--oh, here they are," and Grace, with a look of contentment, began munching some chocolates.
"It is awfully nice of you, Mrs. Nelson, to ask us down for the summer,"
said Amy Blackford to her hostess when they were settled in the speeding train. "I do so love the seash.o.r.e."
"Then I think you will like it at Ocean View," remarked Betty"s mother.
"And we think Edgemere a pretty place."
"I"m sure it must be from what Betty has told me."
"Do you like lobsters?" asked Mr. Nelson, looking over the top of his paper, with a twinkle in his eyes.
"Lobsters?" repeated Amy, questioningly. "I haven"t eaten many."
"It"s a great place for lobsters at Ocean View," went on Betty"s father.
"That"s one reason I decided on it."
"The idea!" cried his wife. "To hear you talk anyone would think you never ate anything else, and you know if you take too much _a la Newburg_ you don"t feel well the next day."
"I"m going to take only the plain boiled, and salads," declared Mr.
Nelson. "But there"s an old lobsterman--Tin-Back, they call him--near Edgemere in whom I think you girls will be interested," he went on.