The in the Woods Part 11 (1/2)
”There is a fine lesson for all of us in that,” she said. ”If Bessie had been weak, she might very well have been tempted to say what General Seeley wanted her to say. She knew she hadn't done anything wrong -- and she said so. But she was told that if she would confess she wouldn't be punished, or even scolded, and still she would not do it, even when she found that it meant trouble for her and for us. And, you see, she earned the reward of doing the right thing, for the truth came out. And it will happen that way most of the time -- ninety-nine times out of a hundred, I believe.”
”I should think you'd be perfectly furious at Jake Hoover, Bessie,” said Zara. ”He makes trouble for you all the time. Here he got you blamed for something he'd done again, and nearly spoiled things just when they were beginning to look better.”
”But he didn't know that, Zara. He did something wrong, but he couldn't have known that I was going to be blamed for it, you know.”
”Aren't you angry at him at all?”
”Yes, for killing that beautiful bird with his horrid snare. But I'm sorry for him, too. I think he didn't know any better.”
”What will happen to him, do you think, Bessie? Will he be sent to prison?”
”I don't believe so. General Seeley is a kind man, and I think he'll try to make Jake understand how wrong it was to act so, and send him home. I certainly hope so.”
”I don't see why. I should think you'd want him to be punished. He's done so many mean things without being found out that when he is caught, he ought to get what he deserves.”
”But it wouldn't be punis.h.i.+ng just him, you see, Zara. It would be hard for Paw Hoover, too, and you know how good he was to us. If it hadn't been for him I don't believe we'd ever have got to Pine Bridge at all.”
”Yes, that's so. He was good to us, Bessie. I'd like to see him again, and tell him so. But I can't -- not if Farmer Weeks can get me if I ever go back into that state.”
”There's another thing to think of, too, Zara, about Jake. He's more likely to be found out now, when he does something wrong.”
”Oh, yes, that's true, isn't it? I hadn't thought of that. He won't be able to make Maw Hoover think you did everything now, when you're not there, will he?”
”That's just what I mean. And maybe, when she finds that the things she used to blame me for keep on happening just the same, though I'm not there, she'll see that I never did do them at all. It looked pretty bad for me this morning, Zara, but you see it came out all right. And I'm beginning to think now that other things will turn out right, too, just as Miss Eleanor's been saying they would.”
”Oh, I do hope so! There's Miss Eleanor coming now.”
”Well, girls, have you chosen your fire names yet?” asked the Guardian. ”You'll have to be ready to tell us to-night at the big fire you know, when you get your rings.”
”Why, I hadn't though about it, even. Had you, Zara?”
”Yes, I had. I think I'd like to be called by a name that would make people think of being happy and cheerful. Is there an Indian word that would do that?”
”Perhaps. But why don't you make up a new word for yourself, as we made up Wo-he-lo? You could take the first letters of happy and cheerful, and call yourself Hachee. That sounds like an Indian word, though it really isn't. And what for a symbol?”
”I think a chipmunk is the happiest, cheerfulest thing I know.”
”That's splendid! You can be Hachee, and your symbol shall be the chipmunk. You've done well, Zara. I don't think you'll ever want to burn your name.”
”What is that? Burning one's name?” inquired Zara.
”Sometimes a girl chooses a name and later she doesn't like it. Then, at a Council Fire, she writes that name, the one she wants to give up, on a slip of paper, and it's thrown into the fire. And after that she is never called by it again.”
”Oh, I see. No, I like my new name and I'll want to keep that, I know.”
”I've always liked the name of Stella -- that means a star, doesn't it? -- so that my name and my symbol could be the same, if I took that.”
”Yes, Bessie. That's a good choice, too. You shall be Stella, when we are using the ceremonial names. Well, that's settled, then. You must learn to repeat the Wood-Gatherer's desire to-night -- and after that you will get your rings, and then you will be real Camp Fire Girls, like the rest of us.”
Then she left them, because there was much for her to do, and that afternoon Bessie and Zara made very sure that they knew the Wood-Gatherer's desire, and learned all that the other girls could tell them about the law of the fire, and all the other things they wanted to know. But they waited anxiously for it to be time to light the great Council Fire.
All afternoon the Wood-Gatherers worked, gathering the f.a.gots for the fire, and arranging them neatly. They were built up so that there was a good s.p.a.ce for a draught under the wood, in order that the fire, once it was lighted, might burn clear and bright. A cloudless summer sky gave promise of a beautiful starlit night, so that there was no danger of a repet.i.tion of the disappointment of the previous night -- which, however, everyone had already forgotten.
After supper, when it was quite dark, the s.p.a.ce around the pile was left empty. Then Mrs. Chester, in her ceremonial Indian robes, stood up in the centre, near the fire, and one by one the different Camp Fires, led by their Guardians, came in, singing slowly.