Agony awoke the next morning to find
herself famous beyond her fondest dreams. Before
she was dressed she saw two of the younger girls peeping
into the tent for a glimpse of her; when she stood
in line for flag raising she was conscious of eyes
turned toward her from all directions while girls
who had never noticed her before stopped to say good
morning effusively, and seemed inclined to linger
in her company; and at breakfast each table in turn
sang a cheer for her. Jo Severance, who was one
of the acknowledged camp leaders, and whose friendships
were not lightly bestowed, ostensibly stopped and
waited for Agony to catch up with her on the way over
to Morning Sing and walked into Mateka with her arm
around Agony’s waist.
“Will you be my sleeping partner
for the first overnight trip that we take?”
she asked cordially.
“Certainly,” Agony replied
a little breathlessly, already well enough versed
in camp customs to realize the extent of the tribute
that was being paid her.
At Camp Keewaydin a girl never asked
anyone but her dearest friend to be her sleeping partner
on an overnight trip, to creep into her poncho sleeping
bag with her and share the intimate experience of a
night on the ground, heads together on the same pillow,
warm bodies touching each other in the crowded nest
inside the blankets. And Jo Severance had chosen
her to take the place of Mary Sylvester, Jo’s
own adored Mary, who was to have been Jo’s partner
on all occasions!
Before Morning Sing was over Agony
had received a dozen pressing invitations to share
beds on that first camping trip, and the date of the
trip was not even announced yet!
And to all this fuss and favor Agony
responded like a prism placed in the sunlight.
She sparkled, she glowed, she radiated, she brought
to the surface with a rush all the wit and charm and
talent that lay in her being. She beamed upon
everyone right and left; she threw herself with ardor
and enthusiasm into every plan that was suggested;
she had a dozen brilliant ideas in as many minutes;
she seemed absolutely inspired. Her deep voice
came out so strongly that she was able to carry the
alto in the singing against the whole camp; she improvised
delightful harmonies that put a thrill into the commonest
tune. She got up of her own accord and performed
the gestures to “The Lone Fish Ball” better
even than Mary Sylvester had done them, and on the
spur of the moment she worked out another set to accompany
“The Bulldog and the Bullfrog” that brought
down the house. It took only the stimulating influence
of the limelight to bring out and intensify every
talent she had ever possessed. It worked upon
her like a drug, quickening her faculties, spurring
her on to one brilliant performance after the other,
while the camp looked upon her in wonder as one gifted
by the gods.
The same exalted mood possessed her
during swimming hour, and she passed the test for
Sharks with flying colors. Immediately afterward
she completed the canoe test and joined that envied
class who were allowed to take out a canoe on their
own responsibility.
A dozen new admirers flocked around
her as she walked back to Gitchee-Gummee at the close
of the Swimming hour, all begging to be allowed to
sew up the tear in her bathing suit, or offering to
lend her the prettiest of their bathing caps.
What touched Agony most, however, was the pride which
the Winnebagos took in her exploit.
“We knew you would do something
splendid sometime and bring honor to us,” they
told her exultingly, with shining faces.
“I’m going to write Nyoda
about it this minute,” said Migwan, after she
had finished her words of praise. “What’s
the mater, Agony, have you a headache again?”
she finished.
“No,” replied Agony in a tone of forced
carelessness.
“I thought maybe you had,”
continued Migwan solicitously. “Your forehead
was all puckered up.”
“The light is so bright on the
river,” murmured Agony, and walked thoughtfully
away.
Days passed in pleasant succession;
Mary Sylvester’s name gradually ceased to be
heard on all sides from her mourning cronies, who at
first accompanied every camp activity with a plaintive
chorus of, “Remember the way Mary used to do
this,” or “Oh, I wish Mary were here to
enjoy this,” or “Mary had planned to do
this the first chance she got,” and so on.
Life in camp was so packed full of enjoyment for those
who remained behind that it was impossible to go on
missing the departed one indefinitely.
The first camping trip was a thing
of the past. It had been a twenty-mile hike along
the river to a curious group of rocks known as “Hercules’
Library,” from the resemblance which the granite
blocks bore to shelves of books. Here, among
these fantastic formations, the camp had spread its
blankets and literally snored, if not actually upon,
at least at the base of, the flint.
When bedtime came Katherine had found
herself without a sleeping partner, for she had forgotten
to ask someone herself, and it just happened that
no one had asked her. She was philosophically
trying to make her bed up for a single, by doubling
the poncho over lengthwise into a cocoon effect, when
she heard a sniffle coming out of the bushes beside
her. Investigating, she found Carmen Chadwick
sitting disconsolately upon a very much wrinkled poncho,
her chin in her hands, the picture of woe.
“What’s the matter, can’t
you make your bed?” asked Katherine, remembering
Carmen’s helplessness in that line upon a former
occasion.
“I haven’t any partner!”
answered Carmen, with another sniffle. “I
had one, but she’s run away from me.”
“Who was it?” asked Katherine.
“Jane Pratt,” replied
Carmen. “I asked her a long time ago if
I might sleep with her on the first trip, and she
said, certainly I might, and she would bring along
enough blankets for the two of us, and I wouldn’t
need to bother bringing any. So I didn’t
bring any blankets; but when I asked her just now
where we were going to sleep, she said she hadn’t
the faintest notion where I was going to sleep,
but she was going to sleep alone in the woods,
away from the rest of us. She laughed at me,
and said she never intended to bring along enough blankets
for the two of us, and that I should have known better
than to believe her. What shall I do?”
she wailed, beginning to weep in earnest.
Katherine gave vent to an exclamation
that sent a nearby chipmunk scampering away in a panic.
She looked around for Miss Judy, but Miss Judy was
deep in the woods with the other councilors getting
up a stunt to entertain the girls after supper.
“Where’s Jane Pratt?” asked Katherine.
“I don’t know,” sniffled Carmen.
“Didn’t you bring any blankets at all?”
“No.”
“Carmen, didn’t it ever
occur to you that Jane was making fun of you when
she said she would bring blankets for two? Nobody
ever does that, you know, they’d make too heavy
a load to carry.”
Carmen shook her head, and gulped afresh.
“No, I never thought of that.
I wanted a sleeping partner so badly, and everyone
I asked was already engaged, and when she said yes
I was so happy.”
“Of all the mean, contemptible
tricks to play on a poor little creature like that!”
Katherine exclaimed aloud.
“What’s the matter?” asked Agony,
appearing beside her.
Katherine told her.
Agony’s eyes flashed. “I’m
going to find Jane Pratt,” she said in the calm
tone which always indicated smouldering anger, “and
make her share her blankets with Carmen.”
Jane, who, with the practised eye
of the old camper, had selected a smooth bit of ground
thickly covered with pine needles and sloping gently
upward toward the end for her head, and had arranged
her two double blankets and her extra large sized
poncho into an extremely comfortable bed for one,
looked up from her labors to find Agony standing before
her with flushed face and blazing eyes.
“Jane Pratt,” Agony began
without preliminary, “did you promise to sleep
with Carmen Chadwick, and lead her to think she did
not need to bring any blankets along on this trip?”
Jane returned Agony’s gaze coolly,
and gave a slight, disagreeable laugh. “Carmen’s
the biggest goose in camp,” she said scornfully.
“Anybody’d know I didn’t mean ”
“Carmen didn’t
know you didn’t mean it,” Agony interrupted.
“She thought you were sincere, and believed
you, and now she’s dreadfully hurt about it.
You ought to be ashamed of yourself, hurting a poor
little girl’s feelings like that.”
“If anybody’s green enough
to come on an overnight trip without any blankets
and actually think someone else is going to bring them
for her ”
“Well, as it happens, Carmen
was green enough, and that’s just the
point. She’s never been away from home and
because she’s so desperately homesick she’s
having a hard time making friends. If one person
treats her like this it’ll be hard for her ever
to believe what people tell her and it’ll be
harder for her to get acquainted than ever.”
Jane shrugged her shoulders.
“What she believes or doesn’t believe
doesn’t concern me.”
“Why, Jane Pratt!”
Jane smiled amusedly at Agony’s
reproachful exclamation. “My dear,”
she said patronizingly, “I never sleep with
anyone. There’s no one I like well enough.
I thought everyone in camp knew that.”
“Then why did you tell Carmen you would sleep
with her?”
“Because she’s such a goose it was no
end of fun taking her in.”
“Then you deliberately deceived her?”
asked Agony witheringly.
“Well, and what if I did?” retorted Jane.
“You have absolutely no sense
of honor,” Agony remarked contemptuously.
“Deceiving people is just as bad as lying, or
cheating.”
Stung by Agony’s tone, Jane
flushed a little. “Well, what do you expect
me to do about it?” she demanded. “What
business is it of yours, anyway?”
“You’re going to let Carmen take one of
your blankets,” replied Agony.
“I’ll do no such thing,”
returned Jane flatly. “It’s going
to be cold here tonight and I’ll need them both.”
“And what about Carmen?”
“Bother Carmen! If she’s
such a goose to think that I meant what I said she
deserves to be cold.”
“Why, Jane Pratt!”
“Why don’t you share your
own blankets with her, if you’re so concerned
about her?”
“I’m perfectly willing
to, and so are the rest of the girls, but we’re
giving you the opportunity to do it, to help
right the mistake.”
“I suppose you’ve told
all the girls in camp about it and will run and tell
Mrs. Grayson to come and make me give up my blankets.”
“I’ll do no such thing.
If you aren’t kind hearted enough yourself to
want to make Carmen feel better it wouldn’t mend
matters any to have Mrs. Grayson make you do it.
But I shall certainly let the girls know about it.
I think they ought to know what an amiable disposition
you have. I don’t think you’ll be
bothered with any more overtures of friendship.”
Jane yawned. “For goodness’
sake, are you going to preach all night? That
voice of yours sets my nerves on edge. Take a
blanket and present it to Carmen with my love and
let me alone.” She stripped the top blanket
from her bed and threw it at Agony’s feet; then
walked off, calling over her shoulder as she went,
“Good bye, Miss Champion of simple camp infants.
Most courageous, most honorable!”
She did not see the sudden spasm that
contorted Agony’s face at the word “honorable.”
It suddenly came over Agony that she had no right to
be calling other people cheats and liars and taking
them to task about their sense of honor, she, who
was enjoying honors that did not belong to her.
The light of victory faded from her eyes; the angry
flush died away on her cheek. Very quietly she
stole back to Carmen and held the blanket out to her.
“Jane’s sorry she can’t
sleep with you, because she never sleeps well and
is apt to disturb people, but she’s willing to
let you take one of her blankets,” she said
gently.
“Oh, thank you!” said
Carmen, much comforted. “I’m going
to sleep with Katherine. With this blanket there’ll
be enough bedding to make a double. I’m
glad I’m not going to sleep with Jane,”
she confided to Katherine. “I’m afraid
of her. I would lots rather have had you for my
partner from the beginning, but I was afraid to ask
you because I was sure you were promised to somebody
else.”
“Motto,” said Katherine,
laughing. “Faint heart never won lanky lady.
Don’t ever hesitate to ask me anything again.
Come on, let’s get this bed made up in a hurry.
I see the councilors coming back. That means
their show is going to commence.”
Of course, it was not long before
Agony’s little passage of arms with Jane Pratt
in behalf of timid little Carmen was known all over
camp, and Agony went up another point in popular favor
as Jane Pratt went down. The councilors heard
about it, too, for whatever Bengal Virden knew was
promptly confided to Pom-pom. Miss Judy told it
to Dr. Grayson, and he nodded his head approvingly.
“It’s no more than you
would expect from the girl who rescued that robin,”
he said warmly. “The champion of all weaker
creatures. Diplomatic, too. Tried to save
Carmen’s feelings in the matter by not telling
her the exact spirit in which Jane gave up the blanket.
A good leader; another Mary Sylvester.”
Then, turning to Mrs. Grayson, he
asked plaintively: “Mother, why do
we have to be afflicted with Jane Pratt year after
year? She’s been a thorn in our flesh for
the past three summers.”
“I have told you before,”
replied Mrs. Grayson resignedly, “that I only
accept her because she is the daughter of my old friend
Anne Dudley. I cannot offend Mrs. Pratt because
I am under various obligations to her, so for the
sake of her mother we must continue to be afflicted
with Jane Pratt.”
Dr. Grayson heaved a long sigh, and
muttered something about “the fell clutch of
circumstance.”
“We seem rather plentifully
saddled with ‘obligations,’” he remarked
a moment later.
“Meaning?” inquired Mrs. Grayson.
“Claudia Peckham,” rejoined
the Doctor. “Sweet Claudia Peckham:
How she used to scrap with my little brothers when
she came to visit us! She had a disposition like
the bubonic plague when she was little, and by all
the signs she doesn’t seem to have mellowed any
with age.”
“Doctor!” exclaimed Mrs. Grayson reprovingly.
“Sad, but true,” continued
the Doctor, his eyes twinkling reminiscently.
“When she came to visit us the cat used to hide
her kittens under the porch, and the whole household
went into a regular state of siege. By the way,
how is she getting on? I’ve lived in fear
of the explosion every minute. I never thought
she’d last this long. Who has she in the
tent with her?”
“That brown haired madonna
you think is so sweet, and the pretty, golden haired
girl who is her intimate friend,” replied Mrs.
Grayson. “Those two, and Bengal
Virden.”
The Doctor gave vent to a long whistle.
“Bengal Virden in the same tent with Claudia
Peckham? And the tent is still standing?”
“Bengal doesn’t sleep
in the tent,” admitted Mrs. Grayson. “She
has moved underneath it, into a couch hammock.
She thinks I don’t know it, but under the circumstances
I shall not interfere. We have to keep Cousin
Claudia somewhere, and as long as they’ll
put up with her in Ponemah I don’t care how
they manage it. She would be a tent councilor.”
“How do the other two get along
with her?” asked the Doctor, “the two
that have not moved underneath, as yet?”
“I don’t know,”
replied Mrs. Grayson in a frankly puzzled tone.
“They must be angels unaware, that’s all
I can say.”