The at the Seashore Part 3 (1/2)

”Oh, I guess there's nothing to worry about,” said Marcia, cheerfully enough. ”We can keep her in order all right, and if she doesn't behave herself decently I guess you'll find that Miss Turner will send her home in a hurry.”

”Oh, I hope not,” said Bessie. ”That wouldn't really do any good, would it? We want to be friends with her--not to have any more trouble.”

”I wish I'd kept out of it,” said Dolly, dolefully. ”I think I can keep my temper, and then I go off and make things worse than ever! I ought to know enough not to interfere. I'm like the elephant that killed a little mother bird by accident, and he was so sorry that he sat on its nest to hatch the eggs!”

”Maybe it's a good thing,” said Marcia, laughing at the picture of the elephant. ”After all, isn't it a good deal as Bessie said? If there's bad feeling, it's better to have it open and aboveboard. We all know where we are now, anyhow. And I certainly hope that something will turn up to change her mind.”

CHAPTER V.

THE COUNCIL FIRE.

”I hope it will, Bessie,” said Dolly. ”But you know what a nasty temper I've got. If she keeps on talking the way she has, I don't know what I'll say.”

”Well, you might as well say what you like, Dolly. I believe she wants a good quarrel with someone--and it might as well be you.”

”You mean you think she likes me to get angry?”

”Of course she does! There wouldn't be any fun in it for her if you didn't. Can't you see that?”

Dolly looked very thoughtful.

”Then I won't give her the satisfaction of getting angry!” she declared, finally. ”Of course you're right, Bessie. If we didn't pay any attention at all to her it wouldn't do her a bit of good to get angry, would it?”

”I wondered how long it would take you to see that, Dolly.”

They were walking back to their own tents as they spoke. Once arrived there, neither said anything about the spirit Gladys had shown. They both felt that it would be as well to let the other girls think that Gladys shared the friendly feelings of the other Halsted girls. And since Bessie and Dolly happened to be the only ones who knew that Gladys had been the prime mover in the trouble that had been made at Lake Dean, it was easy enough to conceal the true facts.

”She can't do anything by herself,” said Dolly. ”Up at Lake Dean nothing would have happened unless the rest of those girls had taken her part against us.”

”I'm going to try to forget about her altogether, Dolly,” said Bessie. ”I'm not a bit angry at her, but if she won't be friends, she won't and that's all there is to it. And I don't see why I should worry about her when there are so many nice girls who do want to be friendly. Why, what are you laughing at?”

”I'm just thinking of how mad Gladys would be if she really understood! She's made herself think that she is doing a great favor to people when she makes friends of them--and, if she only knew it, she would have a hard time having us for friends now.”

Charlie Jamieson and Billy Trenwith accepted Eleanor's pressing invitation to stay for the evening meal, but Trenwith seemed to feel that they were wasting time that might be better spent.

”Not wasting it exactly,” he said, however, when Eleanor laughingly accused him of feeling so. ”But I do sort of think that Charlie and I ought to keep after this man Holmes. He seems to be a tough customer, and I'll bet he's busy, all right.”

”The only point, Billy,” said Charlie, ”is that, no matter how busy we were, there's mighty little we could do. We don't know enough, you see. But maybe when I get up to the city, I'll find out more. I'll go over the facts with you in Bay City to-night, and then I'll go up to town and see what I can do with Jake Hoover and Zara's father.”

”Well, let's do something, for Heaven's sake!” said Trenwith. ”I hate to think that all you girls out here are in danger as a result of this man's villainy. If he does anything rotten, I can see that he's punished but that might not do you much good.”

”I tell you what would do some good, and that's to let Holmes know that you will punish him, if he exposes himself to punishment,” said Charlie Jamieson. ”That's the chief reason he's so bold. He thinks he's above the law--that he can do anything, and escape the consequences.”

”Well, of course,” said Trenwith, ”it may enlighten him a bit when he finds that those rascals we caught to-day will have to stand trial, just as if they were friendless criminals. If what you say about him is so, he'll be after me to-morrow, trying to call me off. And I guess he'll find that he's up against the law for once.”

”Did they get that telephone fixed up, Nell?” asked Charlie. ”You're a whole lot safer with a telephone right here on the beach. Being half a mile from the nearest place where you can ever call for help is bad business.”

Eleanor pointed to a row of poles, on which a wire was strung, leading into the main living tent.

”There it is,” she said, gaily. ”I don't see how you got them to do it so fast, though.”

”Billy's a sort of political boss round here, as well as district attorney,” laughed Jamieson. ”When he says a thing's to be done, and done in a hurry, he usually has his way.”

Eleanor looked curiously at Trenwith, and Charlie, catching the glance, winked broadly at Dolly Ransom. It was perfectly plain that the young District Attorney interested Eleanor a good deal. His quiet efficiency appealed to her. She liked men who did things, and Trenwith was essentially of that type. He didn't talk much about his plans; he let results speak for him. And, at the same time, when there was a question of something to be done, what he did say showed a quiet confidence, which, while not a bit boastful, proved that he was as sure of himself as are most competent men.

Also, his admiration for Eleanor was plain and undisguised. Charlie Jamieson, who was almost like a brother in his relations with Eleanor, was hugely amused by this. Somehow cousins who are so intimate with a girl that they take a brother's place, never do seem able to understand that she may have the same attraction for other men that the sisters and the cousins of the other men have for them. The idea that their friends may fall in love with the girls they regard in such a perfectly matter-of-fact way strikes them, when it reaches them at all, as a huge joke.

All the girls were sorry to see the two men who had helped them so much go away after dinner, but of course their departure was necessary. Just now, after the exciting events of the previous night, there seemed a reasonable chance of a little peace, but the price of freedom from the annoyance caused by Holmes was constant vigilance, and there was work for both the men to do. Moreover, the sight of the cheerful fire from the other camp, and the thought of the great camp fire they were presently to enjoy in common consoled them.

”The Halsted girls are going to build the fire,” said Eleanor. ”It's their first ceremonial camp fire, so I told Miss Turner they were welcome to do it. They're all Wood-Gatherers, you see. So we'll have to light the fire for them, anyhow. See, they're at work already, bringing in the wood. Margery, suppose you go over and make sure that they're building the fire properly, with plenty of room for a good draught underneath.”

”Who's going to take them in, and give them their rings, Miss Eleanor?” asked Dolly. ”You, or Miss Turner?”

”Why, Miss Turner wants me to do it, Dolly, because I'm older in the Camp Fire than she is. She's given me the rings. I think it's quite exciting, really, taking so many new girls in all at once.”

”Come on,” cried Margery Burton, then. ”They're all ready and they want us to form the procession now, and go over there.”

”You are to light the fire, Margery. Are you all ready?”

”Yes, indeed, Miss Eleanor. Shall I go ahead, and start the flame?”

”Yes, do!”

Then while Margery disappeared, Eleanor, at the head of the girls, started moving in the stately Indian measure toward the dark pile of wood that represented the fire that was so soon to blaze up. As they walked they sang in low tones, so that the melody rose and mingled with the waves and the sighing of the wind.

Just as the first spark answered Margery's efforts with her fire-making sticks, they reached the fire, and sat down in a great circle, with a good deal of s.p.a.ce between each pair of girls. Eleanor took her place in the centre, facing Margery, who now stood up, lifting a torch that she had lighted above her head. As she touched the tinder beneath the fire Eleanor raised her hand, and, as the flames began to crackle, she lowered it, and at once the girls began the song of Wo-he-lo: Wo-he-lo means love. Wo-he-lo, wo-he-lo, wo-he-lo. We love love, for love is the heart of life. It is light and joy and sweetness, Comrades.h.i.+p and all dear kins.h.i.+p. Love is the joy of service so deep That self is forgotten. Wo-he-lo means love.

Outside the circle now other and unseen voices joined them in the chorus: Wo-he-lo for aye, Wo-he-lo for aye, Wo-he-lo, wo-he-lo, wo-he-lo for aye!

Then for a moment utter silence, so that the murmur of the waves seemed amazingly loud. Then, their voices hushed, half the Manasquan girls chanted: Wo-he-lo for work!

And the others, their voices rising gradually, answered with: Wo-he-lo for health!

And without a break in the rhythm, all the girls joined in the final Wo-he-lo, wo-he-lo, wo-he-lo for love!

Then Margery, her torch still raised above her head, while she swung it slowly in time to the music of her song, sang alone: O Fire! Long years ago when our fathers fought with great animals you were their great protection. When they fought the cold of the cruel winter you saved them. When they needed food you changed the flesh of beasts into savory meat for them. During all the ages your mysterious flame has been a symbol to them for Spirit, So, to-night, we light our fire in grateful remembrance of the Great Spirit who gave you to us.

Then Margery took her place in the circle, and Eleanor called the roll, giving each girl the name she had chosen as her fire name.

Then Mary Turner, in her new ceremonial robe, fringed with beads, slipped into the circle of the firelight, bright and vivid now.

”Oh, Wanaka,” she said, calling Eleanor by her ceremonial name, ”I bring to-night these newcomers to the Camp Fire, to tell you their Desire, and to receive from you their rings.”