Abbott, Jane - Keineth

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by Keineth(Lit)


  her head and was folding it higher. It helped her breathe.

  "What was it?" Keineth managed to whisper. "I'd never, never, never

  have forgiven myself," Barbara was crying now.

  "You almost drowned," Peggy explained. Now that the danger was over she

  began to enjoy the excitement.

  "And Pilot saved you!" Billy cried.

  "We had just missed you and Billy had started up the shore when we

  heard your cry!"

  "And it didn't take that dog two seconds to get out to you! Just say he

  isn't human!"

  "I thought it was Daddy," Keineth whispered.

  "What, dear?" Barbara had not caught the words. "You must keep very

  quiet, Ken. And Billy's had his first aid case!"

  Pete clapped Billy on the shoulder. "Wal, I jes' calculate now that it

  was them gim-cracks Billy here put you through, missy, that brung you

  to!"

  "I always wondered if I could do it," Billy said with pardonable pride,

  "and, say, that'll mean a medal from the troop!"

  Alice had run home to tell Mrs. Lee of the accident. Together they had

  hurried down to the beach. With Pete's help they lifted Keineth to the

  gravel wagon and, like a triumphal procession, moved slowly homeward.

  Mrs. Lee immediately tucked Keineth into bed with hot water bottles and

  blankets to check the chill that was creeping over her.

  "She'll be all right, I am sure," Mrs. Lee whispered to the anxious

  children. Later the doctor came, left some powders and patted Keineth

  on the head. "A good sleep and quiet will fix up those nerves O. K.

  Then forget all about it."

  He was quite right; the next morning Keineth, quite as well as ever,

  joined the family at breakfast. Though Mrs. Lee had warned them not to

  mention the accident to Keineth unnecessarily, Mr. Lee did pinch her

  cheek and say: "You lost your head, didn't you, little sport? If you'd

  just kept your arms down, now--but, if you go exploring strange beaches

  again you'll remember, won't you?"

  Peggy and Keineth, moved by a feeling of intense relief, suddenly

  caught hands under the table. For into both hearts had come the fear

  that Keineth's mishap might end the swimming for the summer! And

  Keineth had not forgotten that, though it had ended sadly, for a very

  brief time she _had_ mastered the stroke. Mrs. Lee smiled down the

  table. "And I think Pilot has won a home! Except for him--" she stopped

  suddenly, her eyes bright with tears. "William, bring home the finest

  collar you can find and to-night we will decorate our dog with all due

  honor!"

  CHAPTER XII

  A LETTER FROM DADDY

  "KEN--a letter!"

  Billy rushed toward the garden waving a large square envelope over his

  head.

  Keineth and Peggy were weeding their flower bed. Keineth dropped her

  hoe quickly to seize the letter.

  "It's from Washington, and it's got a seal on it like the seal of the

  United States!" exclaimed Billy.

  "Oh, let me see!" cried Peggy.

  Keineth had taken the letter. Looking from one to the other, she held

  it close to her.

  "I--I can't--it's from the President, I guess--" A wave of

  embarrassment seized her and she stopped short, wishing that she might

  run away with her treasure.

  "The President--writing to you! Oh, say--" Billy snorted in derision.

  Peggy, offended at Keineth's shyness, turned her back upon her. "I

  don't want to see your letter, anyway," she said ungraciously.

  "Oh, please--I'd love to show it, only--I promised--" Then, as Peggy

  gave no sign of relenting, Keineth walked slowly toward the house with

  her letter.

  "I think Keineth's mean to have secrets," and Peggy dug her hoe

  savagely into the ground. "She acts so mysterious about her father and

  I'll bet it isn't anything at all!"

  "But that letter _was_ from the President, I guess! Gee whiz, think of

  getting a letter really from him! I wish I was Ken!"

  "It's nothing! Anyone can be President--I mean, any man!"

  "Just the same, mother told me that some day we would be very proud of

  knowing Keineth's father. She wouldn't tell me any more. I'll bet it

  would be awful interesting to know him! There's something certainly

  queer about how no one knows where he is! I guess I'll ask Ken to tell

  me just a little bit. I can keep a secret."

  "Well, you can know her old secret for all I care," and Peggy started

  for the barn. Billy did not follow. He had thought of a plan. He would

  challenge Ken to a game of tennis. And he would let her beat him. Then

  he'd ask her very casually about her father and promise, on his scout's

  honor, not to tell a soul! The plan seemed good. He'd wait for her to

  come down.

  In her room Keineth had opened the large white envelope. From inside

  she drew a sheet of paper upon which were written a few lines, and with

  it a blue envelope of very thin paper, addressed in her father's

  familiar handwriting. With a little cry she caught it up and kissed it

  again and again. Before she broke its seal she read what was written on

  the sheet which had enclosed it.

  The few lines were signed "Faithfully, Woodrow Wilson." They began, "My

  dear little soldier girl," and they told her that it was with great

  pleasure he had forwarded her letter to her father and now returned to

  her its answer. He called it an honor to serve them both and expressed

  the hope that some day he might make her acquaintance and tell her how

  deeply he admired and respected her father.

  Keineth merely glanced at the lines. What mattered it to her that they

  had been written by the President of the United States! Did she not

  hold tightly in her fingers a letter from her Daddy?

  "My precious child," it began. Keineth had suddenly to brush her eyes

  in order to see the letters. "Your letter found me at one of my many

  stopping places. It brought to me a breath of home. I shut myself in my

  room and read and reread it, and it seemed to bring back the old room

  and the chair that could always hold us both. I could hear your voice,

  too. I miss you terribly, little girl, but I thank God daily that you

  are well and happy and with good friends.

  "I have travelled through many lands of which I will have much to tell

  you. I have been in the Far East--poor Tante would have wept with joy

  over the beauty of the Flowery Kingdom. I have bowed before enough

  emperors and kings to make my poor back ache. Do you remember how you

  used to rub the kinks out of it? I have spent hours and hours with the

  great men of the world. I have seen wonderful beauty and glorious

  sunshine. (How I'd like to ship some of it to old New York.) And I have

  seen ugly things, too. We shall have great times when we are together

  again, childy, telling one another the stories of these days we have

  been parted. You shall tell me something first and then I will tell

  you. It will take us hours and days and weeks.

  "Now I am going in my wanderings to other lands that are black with the

  horror of war. I shall have to witness the suffering it brings to the

  homes and I will be more glad than I can tell t
hat my baby is far from

  its pain.

  "I have learned in these wanderings of mine that it is in the children

  this old world must place its trust. That if they want a better

  government they must give to the little ones all that is pure and clean

  and honest and good and see to it that they are happy. I feel like

  shouting it from the housetops--'Make them happy!' It doesn't take

  much.

  "I feel your big, wondering eyes on mine--you do not understand! Ah,

  well, girlie, all I mean is--romp and play--build up a strong little

  body for that heart of yours--see things that are clean and good, and

  whatever the game is--play square!

  "We cannot be grateful enough to the dear Lees for all they are doing

  for us. Try and return their kindness with loyalty. I will write later

  to Mrs. Lee in regard to the plans for the fall. Do whatever she thinks

  best. You will stay with them until I return. Just when that will be I

  cannot tell now, but you must be brave. Your courage helps me, too, my

  dear.

  "Sometimes, when my day's work is done and I can put it from my mind, I

  close my eyes and dream--dream of the little home we will build when I

  return: build--not in the old Square, that is gone except to

  memory--but in some sunny, open spot where we can live and work

  together and lead useful lives. It is a beautiful castle as I see it in

  my dreams--and beautiful with love.

  "I will send this letter with other papers to Washington and they will

  forward it to you.

  "Good-by, little soldier--I salute you, my General.

  "God keep you for

  "DADDY."

  The words rang through Keineth's heart like a song. She longed to pour

  out her joy in music, but Billy's voice came to her from below.

  "Ken, Ken."

  "Yes, Billy." "Come on, I'll play tennis with you! Bet you can beat me,

  too!"

  Keineth suddenly remembered Peggy's and Billy's rudeness. Perhaps Billy

  was trying to make amends. She really wanted to be alone with her

  letter a little longer, but if Billy wanted her to play! She felt

  proud, too, that he had asked her.

  Billy found less difficulty than he had anticipated in letting Keineth

  win the set. In fact, deep in his heart, he was not sure he had "let"

  her. For Keineth, fired with the joy within her, played brilliantly,

  flying over the court like a winged creature, returning Billy's serves

  with a surprising quickness and strength that completely broke down his

  boyish confidence in himself.

  "Thanks awfully--that _was_ fun," Keineth said as they sank down under

  a tree for a moment's rest.

  Though his plan had worked very well so far, Billy now felt at a loss

  to know how he ought to proceed. So, accepting her thanks with a brief

  nod, he bolted straight to the point.

  "Say, Ken, if you'll tell me about your father I promise on my scout's

  honor not to tell a soul! And you ought to tell me anyway, for didn't

  my dog save your life, and didn't I give you first aid or you might've

  died!"

  "Oh, Billy!" Keineth cried, then stopped short. Her heart warmed to

  Billy--they seemed almost like pals now! He had preferred playing

  tennis with her than going off somewhere with the boys. And she did

  want more than anything else right then to talk about her daddy; to

  tell how great he was and how he was visiting courts of Eastern lands.

  And she wanted to show Billy the letter from the President, it was in

  her pocket. And she knew if Billy said he'd never tell that he would

  not.

  But a soldier never swerves from duty and had not her father called her

  his "General"?

  "I--I can't, Billy," she finished.

  There was something so final in her voice and in the set of her lips

  that Billy, red with rage, rose quickly to his feet.

  "I'll bet you haven't got any secret and you're just making up to be

  smart and I'll get even with you, baby! And you didn't beat me playing

  tennis, for I let you, anyway! You wait--" and, vengefully, Billy

  strode away, leaving an unhappy little girl sitting alone under the

  tree. Peggy met Billy on the road. Peggy was in search of Keineth. Her

  nature was too happy to long nurse a grievance. She didn't care if

  Keineth did have a secret! And she had wonderful news, too!

  But Billy's morose bearing stirred her curiosity.

  "Did she tell you, Billy?" she asked.

  "I'll bet she hasn't got any secret that's worth knowing! And she

  needn't say she beat me at tennis, either."

  "Oh, Billy Lee, you let her beat so's she'd tell you! I'm just _glad_

  she didn't! I guess girls never tell anything they've promised not

  to--even if they are girls!"

  In great scorn she ran from the disconsolate Billy. She had spied

  Keineth alone under the tree.

  "Ken--Ken! Great news!" Peggy rushed toward her. "We are going camping

  with Ricky--you and me--next week! Hurray!"

  CHAPTER XIII

  CAMPING

  Keineth learned that Ricky was Peggy's gymnasium teacher. Her real name

  was Fredericka Grimball, but to "her girls" she was always known as

  Ricky. The camp was among the hills ten miles from Fairview. And during

  the vacation months Ricky took her girls there in groups of twenty.

  With their play she gave them instruction in scoutcraft.

  "We go for tramps into the woods and she tells us stories of the birds

  and trees. I never knew until she told me that there are male and

  female trees, and flowers and all the things that grow; did you know

  it, Ken? And we found a weasel, last summer--it was almost tame. We're

  going to learn signalling, too; perhaps this winter Ricky will let us

  form a troop and join the Girl Scouts."

  Keineth, with wide-open eyes, was trying to follow Peggy's incoherent

  description of the camp life they were to begin on the morrow. Back in

  her mind was a tiny doubt as to whether she would enjoy twenty

  girls--all strangers! But she would fight this shyness and do whatever

  Peggy did.

  "We sleep right out of doors when it is clear. The woods smell so good

  and there are all sorts of funny sounds as if all the bugs and things

  were having parties."

  "Oh-h, I wonder if I'll like it!" and Keineth shivered with pleasurable

  dread.

  "We paddle in canoes on a little lake that's like a mill-pond. It's

  awfully shallow and the water is so clear you can see right through it,

  and we ride horseback, too! I'm a patrol leader," Peggy finished with

  pride. She folded the last middy blouse neatly into a wicker suitcase.

  Their luggage consisted of bloomers, blouses, bathing-suits and

  blankets.

  "Easy to remember--all B's," Mrs. Lee had laughed.

  Mr. Lee drove them to the camp. "Come back with some muscle in these

  arms of yours and a few more freckles on your nose," he said to

  Keineth, pinching her cheek affectionately.

  "Camp Wachita"--the girls had nicknamed it Camp Wish-no-more--was

  nestled in the hills with the tiny lake at its front door and a dense

  woodland at its back. Sleeping tents were built in a semicircle about

  the cent
ral building, in which were the living-rooms. On a grassy level

  stretch close to the water was the out-of-door gymnasium and beyond

  that the boathouse and dock to which several gaily-painted canoes were

  fastened.

  The family at Camp Wachita consisted of Martha Washington Jones, the

  colored cook; Bonsey, her twelve-year-old son, who very occasionally

  made himself useful about the camp; Captain O'Leary, a Spanish War

  Veteran by title and by occupation caretaker of the horses and boats;

  Miky, the little Irish terrier, and Jim Crow, who had been brought, the

  summer before, to the camp hospital from the woodland to receive first

  aid for a broken wing, and had refused to leave the family.

  Keineth had little difficulty in making friends with the other girls.

  There seemed to be among them such a jolly spirit of comradeship that

  she found it very easy to call them Jessie and Nellie and Kate, and

  never once wondered at their quickly adopting Peggy's familiar "Ken."

  She thought that Peggy must have known them all very well and was

  surprised when Peggy told her that there were only three of her friends

  among them.

  "But we're all Ricky's girls, you see," she explained, as though that

  was all that was necessary to create a firm bond of loyalty and

  friendship among them.

  "Ricky," this captain of girls, was a tall, straight, broad-shouldered

  woman of twenty-five. The sunniness of her smile, the firmness of her

 

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