Blue Bonnet's Ranch Party - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"We'll have the manager hold the performance," said Knight cheerfully.
"We'll be back in half an hour,--Carita can go by that time, too."
Blue Bonnet brightened visibly at this, and turned resolutely to the hated tasks.
"Debby and I will wash the dishes; Sarah can 'red up,' and you and Amanda do the beds," Kitty suggested.
Aunt Lucinda's training stood Blue Bonnet in good stead here. The going over the rather b.u.mpy beds got in that half-hour left Amanda breathless with admiration.
"You can do things beautifully when you want to, Blue Bonnet," she remarked.
"When I have to, you mean," Blue Bonnet replied.
"Where's the broom, do you know?" asked Sarah.
"s.h.!.+" Blue Bonnet drew her into the tent and out of every one's hearing. "There isn't any broom, Sarah."
"But I put one in the wagon myself."
"And I _threw it out_!"
"Blue Bonnet!" Something like horror was in Sarah's blue eyes.
Blue Bonnet met her gaze defiantly. "Did you ever see a picture of the Witch of Salem, Sarah?"
Sarah gave a bewildered nod. "What has the Witch of Salem--"
"Wasn't she riding a broom?" Blue Bonnet persisted.
"Yes--but--"
"Well, in my opinion that's the only good use a broom was ever put to!
It has no place in a respectable camping party."
Sarah said no more; but when, a few minutes later, Amanda and Blue Bonnet looked out to learn the source of an odd sound, they beheld the indomitable Sarah, armed with an antiquated rake, gathering up the leaves and litter on the hard dirt "floor" of the dining-room.
"Who would have thought to see our Sarah grown rakish?" asked Blue Bonnet,--and then dodged the pillow sent by Amanda's indignant hand.
By the time the allotted half-hour was up, _Poco Tiempo_ was a model of neatness and order. The girls, booted and hatted in spite of Blue Bonnet's objections, were ready to the minute, and when the young scouts appeared they set out at once, exactly--as Blue Bonnet remarked--like the third-graders at recess.
Grandmother had settled herself comfortably with a book,--Mrs. Judson was coming over later for a chat,--and so it was with a free mind and a soul ready for a carnival of pleasure that Blue Bonnet stepped forth on the joyous expedition.
"I reckon it is better," she admitted to Alec, "to have everything done first, instead of having them to do when you're tired."
"Oh, wise young judge!" he laughed. "We'll make a New Englander of you yet."
"That reminds me of something Cousin Tracey said once. He thought I was developing a New England conscience, and said it was an exceedingly troublesome thing to have around. I believe him,--it's much more fun to develop Kodak films. There now!" she broke off impatiently, "--if I haven't left my camera in the tent. And I want pictures of the Spring."
"Never mind, we'll be up here every day," said Alec. "There's a jolly little rustic bridge where you can gather the crowd for a group picture. Here we are!"
He and Blue Bonnet had walked faster than the others, and so were first to see this most beautiful of springs. Blue Bonnet gave one look, and then something rose in her throat, stifling breath and speech. Alec watched her appreciatively.
"If he speaks to me now, he's not the boy I've always believed him,"
the girl was saying to herself. She dreaded the first word that should break in on that moment of perfect beauty.
Below them the giant spring surged up, a great emerald in a setting of woods and hills. Clear as air, the water boiled up from the bowels of the earth, revealing every fish and pebble in its mirror-like depths.
Shrubs overhung it; wild cresses and ferns cl.u.s.tered about it; below the surface long tresses of pinky-coral gra.s.ses floated and waved in the bubbling current.
A voice shattered the blissful moment of peace. "Isn't she a beauty?"
It was a sandy-haired youth with Kitty who had clambered roughly into the picture. Blue Bonnet hated him fiercely for a few seconds. Then the rest came up with a babble of voices and exclamations and she resigned herself, with a sigh, to the fact that the gift of silence, being golden, is given to but few.
Knight gave her a questioning glance and she glowed back at him. "It's perfect--almost too perfect."
"There's a wee spring up higher,--the camp creek flows from it. Do you feel equal to the climb?" he asked her.
She gave eager a.s.sent, and, after lingering a few minutes for the others and finding them too slow for the pace she liked, Blue Bonnet followed Knight up a steep winding path that circled the hill.
He carried a "twenty-two" rifle swung across his shoulders, and in his belt a rather formidable looking knife.
"For use or ornament?" she asked, indicating the weapons. "You look like d.i.c.k Danger."
"Strictly for use," he a.s.sured her. "The gun has brought down many a toothsome 'possum, and the knife serves to cut anything from firewood to alpenstocks. Shall I cut you one to a.s.sist your feeble steps?"
They halted while he selected a sapling for the purpose, trimmed and sharpened it at the end.
"Alpine travellers put sharp iron points on their staffs, Uncle says,"
he explained, "so that by thrusting them in the ice and snow they keep from slipping. We don't need them for just that purpose, but they are handy on steep paths--and to kill bugs with!"
She accepted the "alpenstock" gratefully and soon found it useful for both purposes.
"When we get back to camp I'll get Sandy to carve your initials in it--he's quite a genius at carving," Knight said.
"Is Sandy the--sandy one?"
"Precisely."
"Then I don't think I like him."
"Oh, but you will when you know him better," Knight protested. "He's tremendously clever,--a born orator. He won a medal last year in a debate."
"That accounts for his talking so much," Blue Bonnet laughed. "He's always at it."
"But unlike most incessant talkers, he says something," Knight urged for his friend. "We'll get him to recite some evening, then you can judge how talented he is."
"Does he do 'Curfew shall not--?'" she asked mischievously.
"Grief, no!" Knight's disgusted tone sent Blue Bonnet off in a fit of laughter. To her surprise the ripple of her laugh came back in a gleeful "ha, ha!" that had something witchlike about it. She turned a startled face to her companion.