"Sure; I"m a punk soldier. That"s a swell hat you"ve got on. Can you hustle? If you don"t mind, we"ll take the short cut through the grove."
It _was_ a swell hat, there is no denying that, and she looked very pretty in it.
"I"m taking my knitting," she said, handing him one of those sumptuous bags with two vicious-looking knitting needles sticking out of it.
"I hate to go through the grove, it"s so spooky," she said, as they hurried along. "I"m always seeing things there. Do you, ever?"
"Oh, yes."
"Really? What?"
"Oh, lions and tigers and things."
"Now you make me afraid," she shuddered.
"I met a lion in there to-night," he said; "that"s what delayed me. If I see another one, I"ll jab him with one of these knitting needles. Hear that screech-owl? He sounds like the Kaiser"ll feel next year.--Do you know that Blakeley kid?"
"Roy? Surely I do. Everybody knows him."
"He"s all wool and a yard wide, isn"t he?"
"Yes, he"s fine."
"Look out you don"t trip on that rock.--He walked down the street with me last night and talked about--about that Slade fellow."
"Tom, you mean?"
"Yes; he"s a staunch believer in Tom, even yet."
She made no answer.
"I think you kind of liked that fellow," said Roscoe teasingly.
"I always said if he ever made up his mind to do a thing he"d do it."
"Well, I guess he went and done it, as my old school grammar used to say."
"I don"t like to hear you speak flippantly about him."
"How about me? Suppose I should make up my mind to do a thing----"
"Here we are at the bridge already," she said.
The new Y. M. C. A. a.s.sembly Hall presented a gay scene, and they pushed through the crowd, Roscoe opening a way for the girl to pa.s.s, greeted on both hands by his friends and former companions. It seemed as if all the young people of the town were on hand; scouts were conspicuously in evidence, and among them all Mr. Ellsworth hustled genially about attending to a hundred and one duties.
"There you are," said Roscoe; "take that seat. Reminds you of that meeting on June fifth last when I wasn"t with you--and Slade didn"t show up either. Now, don"t forget to clap when I stand up, will you?"
He swung up onto the platform, where Roy and Pee-wee and Doc Carson and Connie Bennett and the whole tribe of Silver Foxes cl.u.s.tered about him, helping him out of his big military coat and hovering about the chair he sat in. Even Dr. Wade, of the Y. M. C. A., and the gentlemen of the Local Scout Council received less attention.
As he sat there waiting, one or two of the scouts noticed (for scouts are nothing if not observant) that he craned his neck and looked far back into the lobby. If they thought twice about it, however, they probably attributed it to nervousness.
At last, after much impatient handclapping, all except the stage lights were dimmed, and Roy noticed again how the soldier peered searchingly into the back of the hall.
"Your mother and father coming?" he asked.
"They might stroll around."
"You look dandy," Roy whispered.
Roscoe grabbed him by the neck pleasantly and winked as he reached slyly over and pulled Pee-wee"s belt axe from its martial sheath, to the amus.e.m.e.nt of some boys in the audience. But it was no matter for laughing, for if the Germans should break through the French lines at Verdun, say, and push through to Bordeaux, capture all the French transports, run the British blockade and make a sudden flank move against Bridgeboro, Pee-wee would be very thankful that he had his belt-axe along.
It was a great affair--that meeting. Dr. Wade told of the aims of the new Y. M. C. A.; the Methodist Scouts" gave an exhibition of pole jumping; the Elks (one member short) gave a demonstration of First-Aid bandaging, and a Red Cross woman gave a demonstration of surgery, for (as Roy said) she extracted _one bone_ from everybody in the audience.
Oh, it was a great affair! They had a movie play, _Scouts in Service_; the Bridgeboro Quartette sang _Over There_; a real, live Belgian refugee told how the gentle, kind Germans burned his little home and sent his sisters and brothers into slavery.
Perhaps it was this tragic story fresh in their minds which caused the crowd to clap vigorously when Private Bent, Second Infantry, U. S. A., jumped to his feet as Mr. Ellsworth finished introducing him and stood, feet close together, straight as an arrow, a little flush of embarra.s.sment upon his handsome face, and threw his head back suddenly to get his little forelock of wavy hair out of the way.
It is no discredit to Dr. Wade or to Mr. Perry, of the Local Council, that Roscoe caught the audience with his first words. He was so young and fresh, so boyishly off-hand--so different from the others who had spoken. And then his straight young figure and his uniform!
"I don"t know exactly why I"m here," he said; "I got this thing wished on me and you"ve got me wished on you. I"m sorry for you. So far as I"m concerned I guess I don"t deserve any sympathy. I ran right into Scoutmaster Ellsworth with my eyes wide open [laughter] and he nabbed me. I should have kept my fingers crossed when I came back to Bridgeboro. He took me to his house and fed me on sugar----"
"You"re lucky," some one called.
"And what could I do after that?"
"If I ever get clear of the Boy Scouts, believe me, I"ll never get tangled up with them again. [Laughter.] But they tell me I"ll see more of them in England and still more of them in France--so I guess there"s no hope of getting away from them. [Laughter and applause.]
"If this thing keeps up we"ll have to start a campaign to swat the scout, and see if we can"t exterminate them in that way. [Uproarious shouts from Pee-wee.]
"But, ladies and gentlemen and scouts--not that scouts aren"t gentlemen [laughter]--I don"t think soldiers ought to be expected to make speeches. Actions speak louder than words, as the Kaiser will find out---- [Pee-wee was restrained with difficulty.] So I"m just going to _do_ something instead of standing here talking. Scoutmaster Ellsworth said for me to put plenty of pep into my little performance. And I"m going to put some tabasco sauce in it [Pee-wee again] and I hope it will hold him for a while.
"He introduced me as an enlisted soldier. Two thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven times in the last two days, he"s called me that. It"s a base libel! I didn"t enlist; I was drafted. [Laughter.]
"And now I"m going to let you into a secret. Before Registration Day I felt pretty much as I felt about coming here to-night--I had cold feet.
I have only the one thought now," he added, speaking more earnestly, "and that is to get over there and get one good whack at that crew of bandits and murderers! [Loud cheering.]
"But before Registration Day I was scared--just plain _scared_. You soon get rid of that when you get into the uniform. [Applause.] Well, I"m ashamed to say it, but I ran away. I had a crazy notion I could get away with it. I went up to a lonely place on a mountain near that big scout camp."
You could have heard a pin drop in the hall now.
"And one of these fellows--these scouts--suspected where I had gone and came up there after me and brought me to my senses." Roscoe"s voice had grown gradually lower, and he spoke hesitatingly now, but the silence was so intense that every word was audible. "He p.a.w.ned a gold medal he had to pay his way up there and he made me come back here. He missed his part in the big rally. He couldn"t come back himself because he"d hurt his ankle.--He made me come back here where I belonged--to register!
"And then when he found---- No, wait a minute, I"ll read you the letter!"
He was in a fine frenzy of enthusiasm again now that he had finished the recital of his own shameful part in the affair. He took out Tom"s letter and read it--read every word of it--and finished it with his cheeks flushed and his voice ringing:
"... so I"m going away to help in a way I can do without breaking my word to anybody. The thing I care most about is that you got registered. And next to that I"m glad because I like you"--Roscoe shook his head hastily and stopped for a second to control his voice--"because I like you and I always did--even when you made fun of me----"