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"At the same time," she decided finally, "lots of people change to more simple-sounding names, and it was better to start out without that mistake following me. I suppose Tessie has changed her name as often as she does her sleeping places. Poor girl! I do wish she could come back and get a start such as I have."
And another girl in another town was thinking just that in another way.
CHAPTER XVI
MORE MYSTERIES
"I know what we'll do," decided Grace as the three young scouts discussed the secret correspondence with the man o' the woods. "We must tell Margaret Slowden. She knows best and Margy wonders what we are whispering about all the time."
"Yes," promptly agreed Madaline. "I think that is the best plan.
Margaret said the other day we were acting as if we had a troop of our own instead of being True Treds."
"We would be perfectly safe in telling Margaret," Cleo followed.
"And she can help us best because she has already received a merit badge."
"And lost it," added Grace.
"Received another," amended Madaline.
"I feel a little timid about all the woodsy part," admitted Cleo, "because we haven't any way of finding out about our cave man except spying on him, and that would be so risky it would demerit instead of meriting us. You know we all had to promise to be prudent," she finished.
"But we won't tell the twins," Grace restricted, "that would spoil the whole secret."
So it was arranged that Margaret Slowden should be admitted to the inner circle, and after school that afternoon the marvelous story was told.
Margaret finally gasped. She swallowed something like a tiny bug with the intake. The girls were all squatted in the little tepee made from the school-house shutters, and Margaret always chewed clovers and sweet gra.s.s. After a coughing fit she was able to hear the remainder of the weird story of Grace and her man o' the woods.
"And why couldn't you see him?" demanded Margaret.
"Why!" exclaimed the indignant Grace. "Do you think you would be able to take notes on appearances with a coil of rope in one hand and a big slip knot ready to work off in the other, when you had to run around a tree without waking the man!"
"But what did he look like?" demanded the inquisitor.
"All I could see was feet--no, it was shoes--and a hat pulled down."
"All movie men have their hats pulled down," interrupted Margaret.
"Maybe some one was working a camera on the other side of a tree."
"You're just horrid, Margaret," Grace pouted, "and I won't tell you another word about it!"
"Why, Grace, I'm not teasing! You know, all big things like that turn out to be movie stunts--making the pictures, you know.
Although, of course, your mystery may be real. But what are you going to do about it?"
"We planned to send the scout book just as, he asked, and then wait, also as he asked, until something happens we don't know what. Then we expect he will reveal his ident.i.ty," and this last clause had a very dignified tone to the girlish ears.
"That seems perfectly all right," Margaret rendered her verdict, "and none of our rules in any way could oppose that. The only thing is, we girls would be obliged to shun the woods because we are ordered, you know, to avoid unnecessary danger, and cave men are supposed to be very wild and woozy."
Details were all finally arranged, and Hal Crane was to pay one more trip to the woods, there to deposit the small blue book of scout data in the big hollow of the charmed rock.
"Suppose he turns out to be some great man who might give us a new park or something like that," ventured Madaline rather hazily, "then we would all come in for honors, wouldn't we?"
"I would rather come in for the park," Cleo inserted. "We need a few more if we are going to do much drilling this summer."
"That man might be a writer, camping out there, who wants material," speculated Margaret. "You know, the River Bend Wood is considered very romantic. An artist painted the falls once."
"Too snaky for camping, though," objected Cleo. "Well, at any rate, girls, we have got to practice wig-wagging this afternoon, so let's wiggle along. Have you heard all about the Venture Troop, of Franklin? That awfully pretty little blonde girl, who was at our meeting one night, you know, is a patrol leader, and they have wonderful things planned."
"I heard something the other day that gave me the creeps,"
confessed Margaret. "I wasn't going to say anything about it, but since you all have mysteries, I might as well share mine."
"Oh, what's it about? Scout stuff?" demanded Grace, her cheeks toning up to the excitement key.
"Yes, of course. You all remember the night I lost my precious badge? Well, that was the same night two girls ran away from Flosston. Mother offered all sorts of rewards for the return of my badge, for I did prize it so," and the brown eyes glinted topaz gleams at the memory.
"Oh, yes. We called it your D. S. C. because you got it for guarding the cloakroom the night your brother received his decoration," recalled Cleo.
"Yes, and it was very strange in this town, where every one knew all about it, that I never heard from it since," went on Margaret with a show of considerable importance. "Now here is my mystery.
One day last week I received an anonymous letter, just two lines long. It said, 'Don't give up. You will get your badge back some day soon.' Now, why, do you suppose, anyone who has it is holding it?"
"Maybe some of the boys just playing a joke," suggested Grace.
"Oh, no, the boys wouldn't wait all this time for their joke; besides, there's no fun in that," a.n.a.lyzed Margaret. "Please don't say anything about it, girls, but since you told me your secret, I thought I ought to tell you mine. There come the other girls. Come on for the wig-wagging. I just love to stand up on the library steps and wave. Hope Captain Clark gives me that place," and the quartette were off to join forces with others of the True Treds, with their signal flags of red and white.
It was usual to have spectators on wig-wagging practice days, and this afternoon an unusual number seemed to take time to stop and notice the picturesque scouts. The troop girls had worn their uniforms, to school that afternoon, so as to be ready for an early start, and in the glorious suns.h.i.+ne, striking in golden rays through the deep green elms for which the village was noted, the troop girls, with their signal flags, made an attractive picture.
Captain Clark stood far off on a mound of green, waving her "questions," and each girl answered the code as the messages were relayed and transmitted. The younger girls were promptly qualifying, and it was very evident the coming tests for higher degrees would find our especial little friends ready to advance.
Coming down from the terraces where they had been stationed, Grace and Cleo observed a handsome limousine drawn up to the curb where the occupants could have viewed the wig-wagging to advantage.
"Oh, there's that lovely girl that was in the wheel-chair!"
exclaimed Madaline.
"I believe she would speak to us if she were near enough,"
commented Cleo.
"What a stunning car!" added Madaline. "What a pity the little girl cannot walk."
"That's about the way generally," finished Cleo vaguely. "But run!
There go Margaret and Winnie McKay," and the bright-eyed, pink- cheeked child, so eagerly watching the girl scouts through the open window of the big gray car, was soon forgotten in the more urgent demands of the wig-wag report.
The lesson had been noted "Satisfactory" and Captain Clark had good reason to be proud of her True Treds.