Tom Slade on Mystery Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 129 pages of information about Tom Slade on Mystery Trail.

Tom Slade on Mystery Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 129 pages of information about Tom Slade on Mystery Trail.

So he came down working his way with both feet and one hand, and holding the precious piece of branch with its dangling nest in the other.

“Talk about your barbed wire entanglements,” he called.  Then, after a minute, “This little codger lives in a swing,” he shouted; “I should think she’d get dizzy.  No accounting for tastes, hey?  Whoa—­boy!  There’s where I nearly took a double-header.  If I should fall now, I wouldn’t have so far to go.”

“You won’t fall,” said Tom with a note of admiring confidence in his brief remark.

“Better knock wood,” came the cheery answer from above.

And presently his trim, agile form stood upon the lowest stalwart limb, as he balanced himself with one hand against the trunk.  His khaki jacket was in shreds, a great rent was in his sleeve, and a tear in one of his stockings showed a long bloody scratch beneath.  In his free hand he held the piece of branch with its depending nest, extending his arm out so as to keep the rescued trophy safe from any harm of contact.

“Some rags, hey?” he called down good-humoredly, and exposing his figure in grotesque attitude for sober Tom’s amusement.  “If mother could only see me now!  Get out from under while I swing down.  Back to terra cotta—­I mean firma.  Here goes——­”

Down he came, tumbling forward, and sprawling on the ground, while he held the branch above him, like the Statue of Liberty lighting the world.

“Here we are,” he said.  “Take it while I have a look at my leg.  It’s nothing but an abrasion.  It looks like a trail from my ankle up to the back of my knee.  What care we?  I’ve got trails on the brain, haven’t I?”

Tom took the branch and stood looking admiringly, yet with a glint of amusement lighting his stolid features, at the younger boy, who sat with his knees drawn up humorously inspecting the scratch on his leg.

“Well, what do you think of eagles now?” Tom asked, in his dull way.

“Decline to be interviewed,” Hervey said, with irrepressible buoyancy.  “What kind of a crazy bird is this that lives upside down in a house that looks like a bat.  It reminds me of a plum pudding, hanging in the pantry.  What’s that streak of red, anyway?  His patrol colors?  You’d think he’d get seasick, wouldn’t you?”

“You’ve got the bird badge,” Tom said, smiling a little; “can’t you guess?”

What Tom did not realize was that this merry, reckless, impulsive young dare-devil, whose very talk, as he jumped from one theme to another, made him smile in spite of himself, could not be expected to bear in mind the record of his whole remarkable accomplishment.  He was no handbook scout.

There is the scout who learns a thing so that he may know it.  But there is the scout who learns a thing so that he may do it.  And having done it, he forgets it.  Perhaps there is the scout who learns, does, and remembers.  But Hervey was not of that order.  He had made a plunge for each merit badge, won it and, presto, his nervous mind was on another.  It takes all kinds of scouts to make a world.

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Project Gutenberg
Tom Slade on Mystery Trail from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.