<h2> <SPAN name="chp_12" id="chp_12"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII </h2>
<h3> ENTER THE GENUINE ARTICLE <br/> <br/> </h3>
<p>At another time Pee-wee would have delighted to linger in this
scout's Utopia. But his chief thought now was to take advantage
of his fortunate escape. He had not the faintest idea where he
was, more than that he was a full two hour's ride from home. That
would be a long and lonely hike, even if he could find his way in
the darkness.</p>
<p>He tried to recall the names of the various lakes in New Jersey
and in the neighboring state of New York, and he recalled a good
many, but that did not help him to identify this one. So he
started up toward the town in the hope of identifying that.</p>
<p>The village petered out toward the lake; there were but a few
houses. It was about eleven or twelve o'clock or after and the
good people in the straggling cottages thereabout had put out
their lights and retired to slumber before that wicked hour.</p>
<p>There was a stillness and gloom about these uninviting, dark
houses; a cheerlessness not to be found in the densest woods.
They made Pee-wee feel lost and lonesome, as the dim, silent
wilderness could never do.</p>
<p>Soon he reached the town, and there in the center of a spacious
lawn was something which, in his loneliness and uncertainty,
seemed the picture of gloom. The ruin of a building which had
been burned to the ground. What a fire that must have been to
witness! Better far than The Bandit of Harrowing Highway! Over a
partly fallen arch, under which many reluctant feet had passed,
Pee-wee could just make out the graven words: WEST KETCHEM PUBLIC
SCHOOL.</p>
<p>West Ketchem. So that was where he was. But he had never heard of
West Ketchem. The fame of this lakeside metropolis had not
penetrated to surging Bridgeboro. At least it had not penetrated
to the surging mind of Scout Harris. He tried to recall West
Ketchem on the map of New Jersey in his school geography.</p>
<p>But evidently West Ketchem had scorned the geography. Or else the
geography had scorned West Ketchem.</p>
<p>Undecided what to do, Pee-wee lingered a few moments among the
mass of charred timbers, and desks ruined and laid low, and
broken blackboards, all in an indiscriminate heap.</p>
<p>"I bet the fellers that live here are glad," he said to himself.
"That isn't saying they have to believe in fires, except
camp-fires, but anyway after it's all over they've got a right to
be glad."</p>
<p>The situation of the school seemed to have been a sort of
compromise between the claims of the lake and the claims of the
town. It was not too far from the town and not too far from the
lake. Perhaps it had been built within sight of the lake so that
the West Ketchem student body could see it while at their
lessons. A kind of slow torture.</p>
<p>Pee-wee had never before seen the familiar realities of school
life thus brought low and lying in inglorious disorder at his
feet. It gave him a feeling of triumph and had a fascination for
him. Damp smelling books were here and there among the ruins,
histories, arithmetics, algebras and grammars. He could tread
upon these with his valiant heel. A huge roll call book (ah, how
well he knew it even in the darkness) lay charred and soggy near
the assembly-room piano. Junk heaps had always had a fascination
for Pee-wee and had yielded up some of his rarest treasures. But
a school, with all its disciplinary claptrap reduced to a junk
heap! He could not, even in this late hour and strange country,
tear himself away from it.</p>
<p>But another influence caused him to hesitate. What should he do?
There were hardly any lights in the town now. He was a scout and
he could not reconcile himself to the commonplace device of going
to someone's house and asking for shelter. His scout training had
taught him self-reliance and resource, and here was the chance to
apply them, to go home, to find his way without anyone's help.
The lonely road called to him more than the dark houses did.</p>
<p>But how about the car? Mr. Bartlett's stolen car? Would it be the
way of a scout to go home and tell about that? He had come in the
car, Providence had made him its guardian, and he would take it
back again and say, (or words to this effect) "Here is your super
six Hunkajunk car, Mr. Bartlett; they tried to steal it but I
<i>foiled</i> them! I was disguised as a buffalo robe."</p>
<p>There was only one difficulty in the way of this heroic course
and that was that he could not run the car. Never again would he
touch one of those frightful nickel things on the instrument
board. So, wishing to handle this harrowing situation alone, with
true scout prowess and resource, he kicked around among the ruins
of that tyrannous and fallen empire, and tried to devise some
plan.</p>
<p>Suddenly he heard a sound near him. He paused in the darkness,
his scout heel upon a poor, defenseless crumpled spelling book.
Thus he stood in mingled triumph and agitation, his heart beating
fast, every nerve on edge.</p>
<p>"Who--who's there?" he said.</p>
<p>He moved again, and was startled as his foot slipped off the
charred timber on which he was walking. The brisk autumn wind was
playing havoc among the debris, blowing damp pages over faster
than anyone could turn them. It played among a burned chest of
old examination papers, scattering them like dried leaves.
Correct or incorrect, they were all the same now. Pee-wee liked
this roving, unruly wind, having its own way in that dominion of
restriction. He liked its gay disregard of all this solemn
claptrap.</p>
<p>But now he heard clearly the sound of footsteps among the ruins,
footsteps picking their way as it seemed to him, through the
uncertain support of all that various disorder. Groping, careful
footfalls.</p>
<p>"Who's there?" he asked. And the only answer was a gust of wind.</p>
<p>Could it be those thieves in search of him? Or might it be the
ghost of some principal or teacher lingering still among these
remnants and reminders of authority?</p>
<p>Step, step--step.</p>
<p>Then from around the corner of a charred, up-ended platform
appeared a face. A face with a cap drawn low over it. And
presently a dark form emerged.</p>
<p>"Who--who are--you?" Pee-wee stammered.</p>
<p>"I'm a teacher as was here," the stranger said. "You needn't be
scared of me, kiddo."</p>
<p>"I was just kind of looking around," Pee-wee explained
apologetically.</p>
<p>"Here's a pencil fur yer," the stranger said. "I jes' picked it
up."</p>
<p>Pee-wee accepted this as a flag of truce, and felt somewhat
reassured. A man who would give him a pencil surely meant no
harm. He had as much right to be there as Pee-wee had.</p>
<p>"If you were a teacher here I shouldn't think you'd say 'as
was,'" Pee-wee ventured, "But gee whiz," he added, "I don't care
how you say it." No teacher had ever before called him kiddo and
he rather liked it. "Maybe you taught manual training, hey?"
Pee-wee said. "Because they're kind of different."</p>
<p>"There's where you hit it," said the stranger.</p>
<p>"Manual training?"</p>
<p>"Right the first time, and I'm just sort of collecting some of my
junk."</p>
<p>"That's one thing about me, I'm good at guessing," Pee-wee said.
"I kinder knew you were that. Manual training, that's my favorite
study because it isn't a study at all. I made a bird-house, I
did, in manual training, a dandy big one."</p>
<p>"Bird-houses is a good thing to make," said the manual training
teacher.</p>
<p>Pee-wee could not see his new acquaintance very well or the
bundle which he carried. If the teacher had been after his junk
he seemed to have been fortunate in finding it, for he had
collected a considerable amount of booty. Indeed, he had but a
minute before succeeded in disinterring the safe which had been
in the principal's office, but here he had met with
disappointment. He had, however, hit upon a microscope of some
value from the equipment of the student laboratory and he had
found a lady's handbag which he seemed to think worth keeping.</p>
<p>"What are <i>you</i> doing here?" he asked of Pee-wee.
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