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"Oh yes," with a glance at her inadequate costume. "Will this dress be all right?"
"If it's the strongest you have with you," replied Ted. "But we have some very saucy briars and brush. We must see about a real woodsy outfit for you." She paused a moment, then continued, "I am sure you will like the Girl Scouts when you get to know more about them. I know a group of the girls and to my thinking they are the real thing in girls."
Nora flushed slightly. One point she had made up her mind on. She was not going to lose her ident.i.ty by joining in with a group of girls who, she imagined, just did as they were told, and apparently had no ideas of their own. Nora had seen some of the Girl Scout literature and it had not impressed her favorably. It was plain and practical, while she longed for novelty.
"Well, Bob is going to be my scout, at any rate," chimed in Jerry, quick to sense possible embarra.s.sment. The shade of Nora's cheeks gave him his cue. "We won't talk about the regular Scouts until--well, until later,"
he finished, in the foolish way he had of making a boy of himself. It was rather foolish, but so jolly. He would wind up everything in just the way Nora never expected, as if his words said themselves.
The visitor was conscious now of something unpleasant stealing in upon her. Would Mrs. Manton oblige her to be different? Couldn't she dream and play and fancy all the wonderful things she had been storing up for so long? Wasn't this her dream vacation?
Nannie, that play mother of hers, _she_ knew would not want her to change her peculiar characteristics.
This sort of reasoning flashed before her mind as the party prepared for a day in the woods.
So the little girl in Belgian blue went along with the big man in his knickers and brown blouse, and with the young woman in her service uniform.
Nora made an odd little figure, but she was, as she had always been, a picture of a girl.
CHAPTER V
THE WOODS AT ROCKY LEDGE
Out in the woods!
Forgotten was the dread idea of a Scout uniform or the possible program of a Scout ritual. Nora romped with Cap, discovering new delights at every few paces and only pausing to exchange salutations with birds, bees and b.u.t.terflies. The sky was as blue as her gown, and her eyes matched the entire scheme. Her golden hair tossed in the wind like new corn silk, and when Jerry and Ted slyly inspected their charge at a safe distance, a most comprehensive nod of a pair of wise heads told volumes to the woodlands and the surrounding Nature audience.
Yes, Nora would do. Now life at the Nest seemed complete. Even this dreamy, romantic little bit of humanity was a real child, and to the pair of adopted parents she seemed as beautiful as a wild flower.
"Now Ted, you just hold back on that Scout stuff," Jerry had the temerity to suggest. "We don't want to scare her off, first shot. And you can see she's opposed."
"She doesn't understand," replied Ted. "But, of course, there is no need to urge her. No hurry, at any rate."
"I don't know as I like the tom-boy idea," continued Jerry. "She's very pretty just as she is."
Ted laughed knowingly. "You're the boy who pulls down the shades rather than say 'no' to the peddlers," she reminded him. "It is easy to understand why you are opposing the Scouts."
He adjusted his tripod and seemed to have found something very absorbing at that moment. Nevertheless, his big shoulders shook, and his curly head wagged a little suspiciously.
They were surveying the end of a big strip of woodland. All over the young forest could be seen the yellow stripes that marked the trees that were to be spared, while those unmarked were doomed for the woodman's ax. Birds liked the yellow-banded trees best, to judge from the perches they made upon such, but of course, they could not have known that the other, not so fortunate, needed their musical sympathy to make less gloomy the approaching execution.
"See! Just see!" Nora called, running back from the wild grape-vine cave. "Do come over and see this--little play house. It's perfect as can be, with vine draperies, and moss carpet, and real wild-rose decoration.
Cap led me to it, I guess it's his secret place." She was panting with sheer joy. The woods were new to the girl from the boarding school, where walks were confined to the limits of neuritis and neuralgia as "enjoyed" by the Baily Sisters.
"Cap'll show you," replied Jerry. "He has nothing to do but hunt while Ted and I work for our living."
"Oh, could I help?" Nora felt like an intruder upon their industry.
"Not just today, but pretty soon. Perhaps the day after." This was another of Jerry's characteristic replies. Nora understood them better now.
"But it is real fun--fun to look through that spy gla.s.s. Do you have cobwebs in there?"
Asking this brought back to her mind the cobweb nest in the attic.
Jerry's reply, however, forestalled further reflection in that direction at the moment.
"Some day, pretty soon, perhaps the day after tomorrow," he laughed again, "I'll show you all about this and the cobwebs. Ted has some town stuff to attend to; and listen, Bobbs" (he stepped over and whispered in Nora's ear), "Ted is a perfect terror if she is held too late in the woods. She would starve us to death, like as not, if I didn't get back before the clock cooled striking. So you and Cap just run along and find out what the fairies want from the village, while we mark a few more spots."
Was there ever such a jolly man? Once again he had quickly avoided embarra.s.sment to Nora. He would not even let her think she should be useful.
"Yes," called Mrs. Manton from her position astride a small white birch, "you and Cap have a good time, Nora. He will teach you to explore."
Willingly Nora ran back to the bower she had discovered. Surely it had been fas.h.i.+oned by elves and fairies, for it was perfect in every detail.
Unconscious of time, she flitted about making a little window in the wild grape vine, and fas.h.i.+oning a door between the hazel-nut boughs.
A murmuring song escaped her lips, while Cap now and then yelped sharply, impatient to be understood and receive attention.
"Why, Cap!" asked Nora in reply to one of these outbursts, "I don't quite understand your language. What is it?"
The big dog was vainly trying to make Nora see a nest of late sparrows.
The tiny feathered babies could just stretch their little heads above the rim of the straw cup of a nest they cuddled in, and when Cap found them he knew he should notify somebody. The bush was so low, although it was safely sheltered by the thick vines, and a wild trumpet vine loaned two beautiful flowers to cheer the little birds during their mother's absence. Still, Cap felt certain it was dangerous for such tiny creatures to be there in the very path of any wild, rough animal happening by.
Nora had never seen such baby birds before. First, she wanted to fondle them, but Cap gave warning and she desisted. Then, she wanted to feed them, as if birds could eat the black berries she offered them. But presently the mother bird flew into the bower with such a wild, shrill call, Nora knew her own presence was not desired so near the baby birds, so she followed Cap out into the clearance. As she did she saw approaching a group of girls, and they wore the Girl Scout uniform.
At the sight something within Nora seemed to tighten up. The girls were coming straight to the bower and their laughing voices had the strange effect of all but chilling Nora.
Without waiting to exchange so much as a smile she called Cap and ran off to the surveyor's camp.
"Well," she heard one girl exclaim, as she sped away, "one would think we were--Indians."
Nora's ears stung as her cheeks flamed.
"There! Wasn't that just what one might expect? As if a girl couldn't do just as she pleased in the woodlands! And they were her own Cousin Jerry's lands too," Nora scoffed.
"What's the matter, Nora?" asked Mrs. Manton, as she panting, sank down on a freshly-cut stump. "You don't mean to tell me you are actually afraid of those little girls, just because they wear uniforms?"
"Oh, no, Cousin Ted, I am not afraid of them," her voice would shake somehow, "but I didn't know them."
"I see. Well, we must all get acquainted in these pretty parts. The birds and the furry things never wait for an introduction," replied Ted, kindly.
"Come along with me, Bobbs," called Jerry, who was packing up his instruments. "I need help with this chain; it is bound to snarl."
"Jerry!" called out Mrs. Ted rather sharply. "You really must not interfere every time I attempt to tell Nora something useful. I want her to know the Girl Scouts, and the sooner she makes up her mind to do so the happier she will be. The Scouts are all over this place you know, Jerry," and the laughter of the girls up at the bower attested to the truth of that statement. "Anyone who is not interested in Scouting will have a poor chance of a real vacation in the woodlands," concluded Mrs.
Manton.
"But we are going to scout," insisted the man with the tripod on his shoulder. "The only thing is, we are going to do it in our own way.
Isn't that so, Bobbs?"