<h2 id="c11">CHAPTER XI <br/><span class="small">GARRY’S STORY AND HARRY STANTON’S</span></h2>
<p>It was around the glowing camp fire on
that memorable night that the wondering boys
heard Garry Everson’s simple, unboastful tale
of the new kind of first-aid which had helped
him to solve the mystery of Jeffrey Waring
and put Tom Slade in the way of realizing
his fondest dream—that of returning Harry
Stanton to his young sister and his home.</p>
<p>“If we looked like beans, I’d say you were
trying to string us,” observed Roy, as he sat
in his familiar posture near the fire, his knees
drawn up and his hands clasped about them.
“It beats anything <i>I</i> ever heard. Our beloved
scoutmaster will have to go away, way
back and sit down.”</p>
<p>Mr. Ellsworth, still half incredulous,
shook his head. “The pity of it is,” said he,
“that there’s no merit badge for this kind of
first-aid. There can be no doubt of the truth
of this thing, I suppose?” he added.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_128">[128]</div>
<p>Garry laughed good-naturedly. “I wish
I could be as sure of his having the boat for
his own—now that he’s somebody else. It’s
one peacherino.”</p>
<p>“And you suspected that first night, you
say?”</p>
<p>“Well, no—not exactly. You fellows have
got to remember that my father was an alienist,
if you know what that is, and I’ve heard
him tell about just such troubles as Harry’s.
So I don’t deserve much credit. Only I had
to be very careful. You can see yourselves
it wasn’t a case for bandages and splints and
things.”</p>
<p>“It would be pretty hard to give you too
much credit,” Doc Carson said.</p>
<p>“The first thing I noticed,” Garry went
on, “was the way Tom stared when he first
saw him that night up in the woods. He was
sure he’d seen him before. I didn’t think much
about that though till afterwards when other
little things set me thinking and then I remembered
about it and I began to put two and
two together. When Jeffrey told me where
he belonged I remembered about the old gentleman
in Vale Centre who came home one
time with a young fellow he called his nephew
and how all the people in the village wondered
who the nephew was. They didn’t live
near enough for me to know much about them
and I don’t know as I ever saw Jeffrey until
that night up on the mountain.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_129">[129]</div>
<p>“Well, it was while we were bringing Mr.
Waring down through the woods on the
stretcher that Tom said something about the
Stantons—he just mentioned the name sort
of off-hand, and I noticed that Jeffrey stared
at him and looked sort of worried or puzzled,
kind of, and then started in again chattering
in that way of his.</p>
<p>“Then it came jumping into my head all
of a sudden that he was trying to think of
something and couldn’t. And I was wondering
if Tom really ever had seen him before,
when I just happened to think—the idea came
to me, sort of—that maybe it was his sister
that Tom had seen. Of course, I didn’t think
so but the idea wouldn’t go away and I decided
that anyway I’d keep Jeffrey near me
if I could and not let him get mixed up with
the crowd where he’d be all the time getting
excited, and see if I couldn’t find out something
about him. And even as it was, that
was some tall job, believe me.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_130">[130]</div>
<p>“You certainly kept by yourselves,” some
one said.</p>
<p>“I knew the time was short and I wanted
to see if maybe he wouldn’t get better by just
being quiet. I knew a person could get to
be—sort of—flighty, like, from an accident
or something like that, and lose his memory,
and be like a kid, and that sometimes, if he
lives quiet and don’t get excited or see many
people, he’ll begin to remember things——”</p>
<p>“Garry, we’ve got to hand it to you,” said
Roy, earnestly. “You’ve spent your whole
vacation buried alive.”</p>
<p>“Even still I didn’t exactly think he was
Harry Stanton,” Garry went on, “but after,
a while, just for experiment, kind of, I began
springing words on him that I thought he
might remember. I sprung <i>Stanton</i> and
<i>Nyack</i> but there wasn’t any come-back until
one day—it was the day Arnold dropped in
to see me—I sprung the word <i>Nymph</i> as a
good name for a boat and that seemed to kind
of hit him. He just stared and stared and
stared. After that I decided to take him
down to Catskill Landing to look at that
sumptuous yacht of his and then to show him
the <i>Good Turn</i>. I knew that sometimes when
a person sees the thing that caused his trouble
or goes back to the same place, maybe, or
something of that sort, his memory comes
back to him all of a sudden and he wakes up
as if he’d been dreaming, as you might say.
There’s a long name they have for it, but I
can’t seem to remember it. Anyway, it’s a
blamed funny thing, but it’s true. If you
want to know what happened when we trespassed
on the <i>Good Turn</i>, you’d better let
<i>him</i> tell you, hey, Jeff?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_131">[131]</div>
<p>The boy who had been the subject of Garry’s
simple narrative was smiling, as every
one turned toward him, and though the familiar
trace of childishness was not entirely
gone from his smile, there was a suggestion
of mental poise or self-possession, even in the
face of this public stare, which had not been
there before. And though one or two noticed
(for they were scouts and noticed things) that
he twirled one finger nervously with his other
hand, he at least did not begin to chatter with
that distressing agitation and irrational boastfulness
which the camp had known so well.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_132">[132]</div>
<p>He had not changed his habit and demeanor
as a lightning change performer will doff
his costume, but there was a difference and
everyone could see it. The woods and the
quiet water and the sympathetic surroundings
were to do much for him yet and it would be
a long journey back to mental keenness and
physical vigor. But he was different, and it
seemed all very wonderful. It was a knockout
blow to Doc Carson, proficient though he
was in his chosen specialty, for not a word
about this kind of business had he ever seen
in his study of First-Aid.</p>
<p>“Hey, Stanton, you old Jekyll and Hyde,”
Garry repeated, cheerily; “you came near
getting me in Dutch with this bunch. Tell
them about the <i>Nymph</i>.”</p>
<p>Harry Stanton smiled naturally and now
Tom Slade, who was watching his every
movement, realized how much like his
young sister he looked. His nose wrinkled
a little, just like hers, when he smiled. There
was no doubt as to who he was.</p>
<p>“I knew it was my boat,” he said. “I
thought it was the next morning. It seemed
as if I was just waking up. I don’t mean it’s
my boat, now, of course——”</p>
<p>“It sure is yours, all right,” said Roy.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_133">[133]</div>
<p>“I’ve got my other one and I don’t want
it. But it seemed as if I had fallen asleep on
it and——”</p>
<p>“He thought I was Benty Willis for a
minute,” said Garry.</p>
<p>“And then—then, sort of, I knew all about
what happened. When I saw my—the—boat,
I knew. I knew for sure.”</p>
<p>There were a few seconds of silence, broken
by Mr. Ellsworth’s saying, “It’s wonderful,
almost unbelievable.” And still no one else
spoke, the company only gazing at Harry
Stanton, as one might look at an apparition.</p>
<p>Then Doc Carson, Raven and First-Aid
Scout, said, “Garry, you’re a wonder.”</p>
<p>“And all the thanks he got——” began
Connie Bennet.</p>
<p>“Oh, I didn’t mind that,” laughed Garry;
“I had my little trail to follow, and I followed
it, that’s all. I just kept my eyes on the
trail and not on you fellows—just as Jeb is all
the time telling us. If he had seen that boat
too soon, or been jollied or got too much excited
or tired he might have gone nutty, for
sure. Tell us a camp-fire yarn, Roy, I want
Harry to see that we’ve got a real ‘nut’ in the
camp.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_134">[134]</div>
<p>But Roy told no yarn, and still they were
all silent. After a while, Tom spoke.</p>
<p>“I don’t want to make you talk about it,
if you don’t feel like it,” he said, “or if you
don’t remember, but I always thought that
maybe you were alive because a board belonging
to your launch’s skiff was in the launch
when we got her.”</p>
<p>Garry laughed. “Tell him how it happened,
Stanton,” said he.</p>
<p>“I remember all about it,” said Harry. “I
was in the launch and Benty was in the tender,
bailing it out. There was a long rope
from the tender to the <i>Nymph</i>. He was
singing and I was sitting in the cabin talking
to him. We had a light on the launch. That’s
the same way as I told it to you—isn’t it?”
he questioned, turning to Garry.</p>
<p>“Sure—go on.”</p>
<p>“Then I heard a speed-boat coming—down?”</p>
<p>“That’s what you said,” Garry encouraged.</p>
<p>“Maybe it was up. Anyway I called, but
I suppose they couldn’t hear me on account
of their exhaust.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_135">[135]</div>
<p>“You see,” said Garry. “He wanted to
warn them about the small boat which was
about thirty feet away and had no light.”</p>
<p>“They crashed into it and Benty yelled
that he was hurt and said he had hold of the
rope. And then—and then—” Stanton
broke off, looking frightened and perplexed,
and rubbed his hands together distressingly.</p>
<p>“You let me finish it for you and see if I
don’t get it right,” said Garry, soothingly.
“Jeff pulled the rope so as to save Benty, who
couldn’t swim very well. But Benty must
have let go. That right, Jeff?”</p>
<p>“Yes, and—”</p>
<p>“Now wait a minute.” Garry looked
across the fire at Tom. “And all there was at
the end of the rope was a board from the skiff.
The skiff must have been all smashed to
pieces. It was the board that had the ring in
it that the boat was tied to——”</p>
<p>“Yes?” said Tom.</p>
<p>“Well, that’s all there is to it. Stanton
pulled it aboard thinking his friend was
clinging to it. And when he saw how it was
he dived for him——”</p>
<p>“I dived right away,” interrupted Harry
Stanton, shuddering, “and I swam all around
and I called—I swam way out and then there
was a big light that dazzled me——”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_136">[136]</div>
<p>“And that’s all,” concluded Garry. “He
can’t tell you any more because he doesn’t remember
any more till he was in Mr. Waring’s
house. We’re going to try to find out about
it, aren’t we. Stan?”</p>
<p>He moved closer to the boy and put his
arm about his shoulder with a significant look
at the others as if to ask them not to question
him further.</p>
<p>“And he wants us all to go down to Nyack
with him in his own boat which has the other
one beat forty-’leven ways. He says he
wouldn’t ride in that old tub now, hey, Stan?
And you can keep it or sink it just as you
please. And when we get to Nyack he wants
a committee of three scouts to go home with
him while the rest of us stay on the boat. And
after that, if we can fix it up, we’re all going
to take a cruise up the river and through the
lakes for a little call on Uncle Sam at Plattsburg.
Hey, Stan?”</p>
<p>“And the three scouts that he wants to go
up home with him (he’s very particular about
it) are Tom Slade and Roy and Pee-wee Harris,
because they’re the ones who were there
last year and they know his sister, so it’s up
to them to take him back.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_137">[137]</div>
<p>“How about you?” Roy promptly demanded.</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m out of it,” said Garry.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly, such a shout as might have
raised the dead resounded. It was Pee-wee
Harris, flying off the handle, as he realized
the meaning of Garry’s proposal.</p>
<p>“Oh, crinkums, won’t it be great!” he
shouted. “And—and—I’ll think up a little
kind of a speech to make to her—gee, it’s just
like a story, with—with—yachts and long lost
brothers and things——”</p>
<p>“Especially things,” said Roy.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_138">[138]</div>
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