<h2 id="c15">CHAPTER XV <br/><span class="small">CRUISING IN THE “HONOR SCOUT”</span></h2>
<p>“I don’t say I’ll get it this summer,” said
Tom in his sober and rather awkward way.
“’Cause you can never tell what you’ll get.
I care more about all the members getting
them, anyway, and when we get twenty-one
we’re an Eagle Patrol.”</p>
<p>“There’s no such thing as an Eagle Patrol,
Tom,” said Mr. Ellsworth.</p>
<p>“If a scout is an Eagle Scout when he gets
twenty-one merit badges,” said Tom, doggedly,
“then a patrol is an Eagle Patrol when it
has twenty-one merit badges. I don’t care
what National Headquarters says.”</p>
<p>Mr. Ellsworth laughed. The patrol idea
was so firmly rooted in Tom’s mind that he
could never think of the individual scout.
Rule or no rule, you couldn’t pry that notion
out of his head with a crowbar. Everything
was for the glory and honor of the patrol.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_171">[171]</div>
<p>“You’ve only one more to get yourself to be
a star scout, haven’t you?” asked Garry.</p>
<p>“I got nine,” said Tom. “We got sixteen
in the patrol. If I get one more I’ll be a
star scout as you call it. I’d like the Gardening
Badge or the Automobile Badge——”</p>
<p>“Smallest flivvers thankfully received,
hey?” said Roy.</p>
<p>A half dozen or more of them were
sprawled upon the cabin roof as the <i>Honor
Scout</i> glided silently up the river.</p>
<p>“Merit badges are a cinch,” said Roy.</p>
<p>“No, they’re not either,” said Connie
Bennet.</p>
<p>“Sure, all you have to do for the Architecture
Badge is to build a castle in the air.
Know how to win the Astronomy Badge?” he
asked, turning to little Raymond who was always
hugely amused at Roy’s nonsense.
“Jump out of a third-story window, land on
your head and see stars. The Aviation Badge
is easy, too. Fly up in the air when anybody
kids you—like Pee-wee. Know how to win
the Plumbers’ Badge? Just have a pipe
dream. Know how to win the Photography
Badge? Cultivate <i>taking</i> ways.”</p>
<p>“Tell some more,” said Raymond.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_172">[172]</div>
<p>“Well, if you want the Blacksmith’s Badge,
you just forge a check, and for the Business
Badge, mind your own business.”</p>
<p>“I think we’d <i>better</i> mind our business,”
said Mr. Ellsworth, “and slow down if we expect
to stop at West Point.”</p>
<p>“Man the tiller, Pee,” called Roy. “I
don’t mean <i>man</i> it, I mean <i>small boy</i> it.”</p>
<p>They paused for a visit at West Point,
where they were cordially received and shown
about. They saw the immaculate barracks,
watched the drill which was carried through
with the precision of clock-work, noted with
envy the erect posture and almost mechanical
salutes of the young officers, and Pee-wee, at
least, felt assured that the talk which he had
heard about unpreparedness was without
foundation.</p>
<p>“It makes me feel like a tramp,” said Will
Bronson, as they resumed their cruise, “to see
all those swell uniforms and the way those
fellows stand and walk.”</p>
<p>“Some class,” agreed Roy, perched in his
usual place upon the combing.</p>
<p>Mr. Ellsworth, who was steering, laughed.
“I guess they don’t always look like
that,” said he.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_173">[173]</div>
<p>“If Germany sinks many more of our ships,
they won’t look like that,” said Connie.
“They’ll put on khaki and roll up their
sleeves.”</p>
<p>“You said something,” observed Roy.</p>
<p>“What would <i>we</i> do if the country went to
war?” asked Pee-wee.</p>
<p>“Move to the city,” said Roy.</p>
<p>“I like uniforms,” said a timid voice, “because
that shows what you are; a policeman
makes you feel safe and so does a soldier, because
they have their uniforms. It says in a
book I read, ‘Show your colors’ and that
means, show what you are.”</p>
<p>Everybody turned and stared at little Raymond
Hollister who was sitting on the cabin
with his feet dangling in the cockpit. It was
not often that he spoke up. Indeed, he had
never seemed to be thoroughly at home with
anyone except Garry and Jeb Rushmore.
They all liked him for the quiet, odd little fellow
that he was. They seldom jollied him as
they did Pee-wee and they humored his prejudices
and notions when those became
known. He would sit, hour in and hour out,
quietly listening to their talk, laughing at
Roy’s nonsense, and occasionally emboldened
to defend Garry against some bantering
charge.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_174">[174]</div>
<p>“Right you are, Ray, old pal,” said Roy.
“It’s the suit that makes the scout. That’s
a good slap at Tomasso; sling it into him,
Ray!”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said Mr. Ellsworth. (He
always hesitated to direct their arguments,
preferring to let them dope things out themselves.)
“The uniform is only good for what
it means—as it seems to me. To be a scout
means certain things and to wear the uniform
says to the world that you are for those things.
So I’m for the uniform. The uniform is the
scout’s chief badge. It’s just a great, big
merit badge and it ought to be worn like the
other merit badges.”</p>
<p>“There might be an invisible badge,” said
Tom.</p>
<p>Everybody laughed except Tom himself.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid not,” said Mr. Ellsworth. “An
invisible badge wouldn’t be a badge at all.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_175">[175]</div>
<p>“It would be like a silent noise,” said Roy,
“You’ve got the right idea, Raymond, <i>Show
your colors</i>. Rub it into him? He sold the
<i>Friday Evening Pest</i> all winter and he got
fifty cents twice a week for leading Miss
Wade’s kindergarten class in physical torture;
gee, I think he’s saving up to pay the national
debt, or something! And look at him with
that old book strap for a belt. Can you beat
it!”</p>
<p>Roy’s propensity for jollying, together
with his known fondness for Tom, made it
possible for him to say almost anything he
chose, and he never lost a chance to set people
good-naturedly by the ears. But you never
know where a spark is going to fall. If these
sparks of wit had fallen only upon Tom they
would have had no more effect than water,
for he knew Roy, and their friendship was as
a rock.</p>
<p>But they fell upon little Raymond Hollister,
where they ignited other sparks which
were already smouldering. Like many boys
who have been invalids and have been much
by themselves, Raymond had notions; away
back home he had first been attracted to the
scouts by the trim khaki regalia; it was the
first bait Garry had used with him, and to
Raymond at first a scout was simply a boy
who wore a khaki suit. With Garry’s help,
the pale-faced little fellow had managed to
wriggle through the tenderfoot tests, and
then he wanted his suit. It was all he had
thought of. I dare say there are a few other
scouts like him. He had not delved very deeply
into the Handbook.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_176">[176]</div>
<p>The members of the little struggling patrol
had slipped away until there was no patrol,
but Raymond still wore his precious suit and
felt that he was a Boy Scout. Perhaps he had
the right idea, too, if you will just subtract
his prejudice. <i>Show your colors</i> is a good
slogan, but little Raymond went farther than
that. He assumed that if you didn’t show
your colors it was because you didn’t have
any; and like most scouts of the tenderfoot
class, he was a great stickler for the khaki, for
its own sweet sake.</p>
<p>He had (as he had confided to Pee-wee
that first night in camp) never “fallen for”
Tom Slade. There was not much of the scout
glamor about Tom and Raymond liked the
scout glamor. He worshipped Roy and he
idolized Garry. He was so jealous for Garry
that he looked on Tom as an unfair rival.
Who had sent that smudge signal from the
hill? Who had made Harry Stanton get better?
And who had been treated like a dog
during his whole vacation? Who but his
friend, Garry.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_177">[177]</div>
<p>And who had taken Harry Stanton when
he <i>got</i> better, and broken up the little patrol
which was just starting up all over again?
Why, that was the fellow in the gray shirt
and the book-strap belt, who was no scout at
all—Tom Slade. Raymond knew what a
scout was—he had seen pictures enough of
them.</p>
<p>Probably, his diffident nature would have
kept him from saying more now except for
Roy’s laughing encouragement and the belief
that Mr. Ellsworth stood with him. In
any event, he launched forth in a way which
astonished them all.</p>
<p>“That’s why you don’t wear the uniform—because
you’re not a scout!” he shouted at
Tom. “You’re too stingy, you are, and everybody
knows it! You’ve no right to go with
fellers that are scouts! You—you get them
to name their boats after you—fellers—fellers
that you stole—yes, <i>stole</i>, you did!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_178">[178]</div>
<p>It was unfortunate that both Mr. Ellsworth
and Garry, either of whom could have
smoothed this thing out in half a jiffy, were
on the forward deck getting the anchor ready
to cast, and the other scouts were too surprised,
and perhaps a little too amused, to put
a stop to his tirade. Probably they did not
think it would affect Tom.</p>
<p>But Raymond, losing all control of himself,
his eyes brimming and his voice trembling,
went on:</p>
<p>“That’s because—you—you lived down in
an alley where people kill each other—and
burglars live—and men get drunk and you
don’t know how other kinds of people act—you
don’t.... And maybe, you stole other
things before—maybe you did—before you
ever <i>stole</i> Jeff—I mean Harry Stanton! <i>I</i>
wouldn’t call you a scout with your old rags
on—I wouldn’t. Scouts wear the uniform
and they don’t steal——”</p>
<p>Then they stopped him.</p>
<p>“It’s my fault,” said Roy, as Connie vaulted
to the cabin edge and put his arm about
Raymond, trying to quiet him.</p>
<p>“I know about scouts—I do—and I know
what a scout is—I do——” he shouted, almost
crying.</p>
<p>“All right, all right, Ray,” said Connie,
soothingly.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_179">[179]</div>
<p>Tom Slade looked up, straight at Raymond.
He was gulping and it was pitiful to look at
him. “I know I did,” he almost sobbed.
“I——”</p>
<p>“Never mind, Tom,” said Roy, softly.
“Don’t mind him. He doesn’t mean it.”</p>
<p>“I know I did,” Tom said again. “But
you <i>can</i> have an invisible badge, just the same—I
don’t care for Mr. Ellsworth or anybody.”</p>
<p>With a supreme effort to control himself,
swallowing sob after sob in great painful
gulps, he pushed aside the cabin locker, went
down into the cabin and banged the door shut.</p>
<p>Roy followed after him, but Tom’s stolid
nature had been pierced at last and he turned
away even from Roy.</p>
<p>“Of course, you can, Tom,” said Roy, almost
frightened at his emotion. “You <i>can</i>
have an invisible badge, Tom—I know you
can, Tom.”</p>
<p>He did not know exactly what Tom had
meant; like many of his expressions, it had
been a puzzle to them all, but he would have
said almost anything now to soothe him and
help to efface those black memories.</p>
<p>“Sure you can, Tom,” he repeated.
“That’s easy—old man. It’s a cinch!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_180">[180]</div>
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