Part 12 (1/2)

why I'm sure I can't imagine, perhaps because he seems foreign. He does really beautiful wood carving and basket weaving and he seemed quite pleased over getting orders from us. We all of us want to do something for Phoebe but she is not the kind you can approach easily. I would not dare even offer her a pair of shoes, and she's generally barefooted.

Cousin Helen thought perhaps she might like to work for us, but I would as soon think of asking our dear cousin herself. I'm the best coffee maker in the compound and I've learned by the cookbook how to poach eggs, after breaking six to get the hang of it. Dr. Hume knows a Scotch dish that's a dream and so easy to make. Nancy and I are going to give them a surprise. It's 'Mock Duck,' made of beefsteak stuffed with many things, and then rolled up like a mummy and tied with strings. We shall roast it over hot embers on a spit Ben has rigged up, with a thing he calls a 'gutter' to catch the juices. Good-by, dearest Papa. Don't forget the strong, fearless girl.

Your devoted daughter, Billie.”

In due time a telegram was telephoned from the railroad station to the nearest hotel and from thence to the postoffice in the village at the foot of Sunrise Mountain. Here it was written down on a sc.r.a.p of paper and in the course of events reached Billie Campbell. It said:

”Meet Alberdina, fearless Swiss-German. 4.30 train Sat.u.r.day. Father.”

Ben brought the message with the evening mail Friday afternoon while Nancy and Billie, much heated and excited, were in the act of cooking the mock duck.

”What are you roasting? An Indian papoose?” he demanded, after they had laughed over the name of the new, fearless maid.

The spurious fowl made of a large flat piece of meat stuffed out to plump proportions and tied at each end did resemble a fat little Indian baby.

”Don't worry us,” exclaimed Nancy. ”We have enough to bother us now. The potatoes are taking forever to cook and the beans are almost done.”

”The onions are just as bad,” put in Billie.

”Why don't you put the onions and potatoes in the same pot with the beans? Maybe it will bring them luck,” suggested Ben.

”Do you think it would affect the flavor?” Billie asked eagerly.

But Nancy, of a more adventurous spirit in cooking, recklessly dumped all the vegetables together into one pot and set it on the kerosene stove, which had been carried out by the ever-useful Ben and placed at no great distance from the open fire.

Percy came up just then.

”How are the Gypsy cooks? Is the pot boiling? What's that thing that looks like a pig in a blanket? Or is this a cannibal feast?”

”Run away, Algernon Percival, and don't ask so many questions,” replied Billie, stirring the pot.

”I've brought the dinner horn along,” said Percy in an insinuating tone of voice.

Even the Gypsy cooks laughed at this. Percy was the last person to rise in the morning. He usually appeared with the coffee and eggs, but the moment he waked up, he seized the trumpet from a nail in the wall at the side of his bed and blew a long triumphant aria with variations. Then from the camp fire at a safe distance from the log hut would come shouts of derision from the others who had been up quite an hour. The table had been carried out under the trees, and here in the early morning they had their breakfast. Here also, they had their supper if it was ready before dark and there were no lights to attract the myriads of night-flying insects. But it did look this evening as if they would be obliged to transfer all dishes and stools, table and eatables into the house, unless the potatoes and onions could be impressed with the importance of submitting to the inevitable.

Dr. Hume, just in from a long walk, tired and mortally hungry, now made his appearance, and Miss Helen Campbell in dainty white, and without any traces whatever of her recent experience with Mrs. Lupo, came trailing across the clearing. There was an expectant expression on her face, as of one who is thinking with inward pleasure of dinner. Elinor came with a bowl of Michaelmas daisies and Mary brought up the procession, carrying a platter of bread sliced so as not to destroy the shape of the loaf, an accomplishment she was proud of.

Percy, seeing the gathering of the company, promptly lifted the trumpet to his lips and blew a blast so startling and unexpected that Mary gave a nervous shriek and dropped the bread to the ground.

”Oh, you wretch,” she cried, ”see what you have done! And what was the use anyway, since dinner isn't ready and we are all here?”

”Don't be so hasty in your judgments, Lady Mary,” answered Percy, composedly gathering up the slices of bread. ”That was a song of joy because a beautiful damozel approached with bread for the hungry.”

”Hungry?” repeated Miss Campbell, watching, unmoved, the process of shaking the pine needles from the bread. ”Starving, rather. If I don't have my dinner in a minute, I shall be light enough to float away like a thistledown.”

”Who said starving?” cried Dr. Hume, joining the circle. ”If there were a stronger word, I'd use it.”

”Famished?” suggested Ben.

”Peris.h.i.+ng for want of food,” added Elinor.

Nancy and Billie exchanged glances of dismay and Billie impotently poked the pot of vegetables with a long peeled wand.