Part 2 (1/2)
”Since you are not particular about what deed shall be the n.o.ble one, won't you just give me a hand, and help me save this heel of mine from a blistering shoe? The shoe was all right in school, but just now it has picked up a snag, somehow, and between the shoe and the snag, my life is not worth living.”
”Poor Madie,” soothed her chum. ”Let us sit right down here and diagnose the case. I'm first rate at diagnosing anything but why my bureau can't stay fixed. It has chronic upsettedness, and all my operations are of no avail. There go the girls down into the hazel nut gully. Let's sit on this lovely mossy couch, and look after the heel. Doesn't moss grow beautifully smooth under the cedars? I wonder how it ever gets so velvety?”
At the twined and natural woven seat, wrought from the uncovered roots of a great hemlock, the girls caressed and patted the velvet moss that formed a veritable carpet--no--it was softer than carpet, a silken velvet throw, over a natural cedar divan. Even the suffering heel was forgotten, in the joy of nature study, in green, with the darker green canopy of cedars, and the music of a running river at the foot of the sloping hill. Here the scent of watercress vied with the hemlock and cedar, for its place as nature's perfume, and only such mingling of wild ferns, trailing arbutus, budding bush, and leafing vine, could produce the aroma of incense that just then permeated the woody glen.
”Don't let the girls get too far away from us,” cautioned Madeline. ”I wouldn't like to get really lost, even for the joke of having you find me, Gracie.”
”But you would do a little thing like that to help me out on my personal bravery stunt?” teased her companion. ”I wonder why only the first cla.s.s girls are permitted to do all those wonderful things and get all the really high honors?”
”Because they have gone through all the necessary trials and examinations,” replied Madaline sagely. ”You and I can get credit for our deeds, but we must show our full records to get the highest B. C. That's fair. You can't make a major out of a private. He has got to go up by degrees.”
”Well, maybe it is fair, but I just love the glory of presentations. I am so sorry for Margaret. I would have dug up the town today to find that Merit Badge she lost last night.”
”I like the way she braved it out, though,” added Madaline. ”She felt badly enough, and it did mean so much to her,” finished the sympathetic scout.
”Oh, yes, I suppose so,” rather reluctantly agreed the ambitious Grace. ”But I shouldn't relish the feeling that some grimy mill girl was wearing the badge in a smoky factory.”
”Oh, Grace, shame! That's not scouty. You must not speak so of the mill girls. We hope to take some of them in our troop before long.
We would have no right to public support if we did not do something definite for others, and the mill girls have so few chances. So don't, Gracie dear, ever speak like that again.”
”I won't if you say so, also if it isn't scouty. I am out to win the goal, and I don't mind what I may have to do to get my scout good conduct ball into the official basket. Now, how's the heel?
Did the little pad of soft leaves help to keep the pressure off?”
”Yes, that was a fine idea, and I shall see to it that some day, when original work is called for, you get credit for the nature- aid heel pad. Rather a clumsy t.i.tle, but when we explain how easy it is to get soft leaves to make pads for suffering feet, I am sure it will be welcome news to many an ambitious hiker.”
”Oh, Madie dear,” suddenly exclaimed Grace. ”Where are the girls gone? They are not in the hazel nut clump, and I can't hear a sound!”
”Oh, my! Suppose they have gone looking for us the other way?”
Both girls in alarm, now scurried through the woods, calling and giving the ”Coo-ee” call, but not a sound answered them. Birds were flitting about from limb to branch, and the strange stillness of the woods frightened the little Tenderfoots.
”You go along the bank, and I'll scour the elderberry patch. This wood is so dense in spots, and so clear under the hemlocks, it is easy to lose and hard to find anyone in it,” declared Grace. ”I'm glad I brought my big rope. I intended to tie every knot in the course, and cut them all out to fetch back finished, and I haven't even unwound the rope.”
”If there is anything easier than getting lost in the woods it must be getting caught at whispering in the eighth grade,”
grumbled Madaline. ”I wish my old heel had behaved itself.”
”And all the plans for my brave stunt gone to naught,” put in the now breathless Grace. ”I would never have made up the hike if I had not determined to get a glory mark out of it. Now see where we are! Miles from home, and darkness coming on at each end. Where could those girls have gone to?”
”Sure as shooting they have gone on searching for us. There's the reservoir road, going in the opposite direction, and also Chestnut Hill. To go either of those roads meant getting entirely away from the foolish little scouts who stopped to chatter and chin. Just shows what we can do when we don't know we shouldn't.”
For some moments they brushed their way through the thicket, beating down briars with their stout sticks, then coming to a broad clearance they found themselves in a great grove of pines, clean as a floor, except for the layer of savory pine needles, and almost dark as night from the density of the pine canopies.
”My, how lovely!” exclaimed Grace.
”Yes, if we could only enjoy it,” demurred Madaline.
”Grace! What's that? Over under that thick tree!”