<h2> <SPAN name="chp_35" id="chp_35"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXV </h2>
<h3> SCOUTMASTER NED DOESN'T SEE <br/> <br/> </h3>
<p>But Scoutmaster Ned was curious and when they reached the little
cottage he jumped out and, taking the can of gasoline he had
brought, he bade the others go on their way, saying that he would
follow when he got his car started.</p>
<p>"Well sir, you haven't been sitting here all this time, I hope?"
he said to Peter. "Nice brisk morning, hey? The kind of weather
to give you an appetite."</p>
<p>"Wouldn't they wait for you?" Peter asked.</p>
<p>"I'm glad to get rid of them," said Scoutmaster Ned in a way of
friendly confidence; "they make a noise like an earthquake; that
little fellow's the worst of the lot; he ought to have a
muffler."</p>
<p>"Is he a real scout?" Peter ventured.</p>
<p>"Oh, he's two or three scouts. What d'you think of them? Crazy
bunch, hey?"</p>
<p>"They're all real scouts--are they?" Peter asked hesitatingly.</p>
<p>"They think they are. Now look here," he added, sitting down on
the running board in a companionable way beside Peter, "I want
you to tell me what made you say that road was closed. There was
a light in the sky; you saw that? Big, tall light?"</p>
<p>"That--that fellow--named Nick--he made it."</p>
<p>"Yes, and what made you close the road? Somebody tell you the
light meant something?"</p>
<p>"There isn't anybody around here," said Peter, growing more at
ease as everyone did with Scoutmaster Ned, "except Aunt Sarah
Wickett and she's crazy. There's nobody in this house but my
mother."</p>
<p>"How about Mr. Fee? No? Well then, who told you to close the
road? Come now, you and I are pals and you have to tell me."</p>
<p>A scoutmaster, a real, live scoutmaster, a pal of <i>his?</i> Why
that was more wonderful than reading a signal. Peter's hands
rubbed together nervously and he hedged, as a scout should never
do.</p>
<p>"I want that scout to get that cup, the one that sent the
message. Could--maybe could I see that cup--if it's in this car?"</p>
<p>In the excitement of the night, Scoutmaster Ned had forgotten all
about the stunt cup (as they had come to call it). He now brought
it forth from under the rear seat and unwound the flannel rag
that was around it and polished it a little as he held it up. It
shone in the bright morning sunlight and Peter saw his face in
it. That was strange, that Peter Piper of Piper's Crossroads
should see his own face looking at him from the radiant surface
of a scout prize cup. He had never even seen such a good mirror
before. He just gazed at it, and continued to gaze, as
Scoutmaster Ned held it up. <i>Awarded for the</i>--it shone so,
he could hardly make out the words--<i>for the best all scout
stunt of the season.</i></p>
<p>"It cost a lot of money, didn't it?"</p>
<p>"Oh, something less than a couple of thousand dollars. Look nice,
standing on a scout's table, huh?" Scoutmaster Ned gave it
another little rub and contemplated it admiringly. "We had enough
of a fuss getting it, that's sure. See that Maltese Cross on it?
That's our bi-troop sign. We have two troops; always hang
together. A troop's one bunch in scouting. That kid thought the
Maltese Cross meant that the cup was to drink malted milk out of.
He's a three-ring circus, that kid."</p>
<p>"It was a stunt to send that--to make that light, wasn't it?"
Peter asked.</p>
<p>"Well, I'll say it was," said Scoutmaster Ned, giving the cup
another admiring rub.</p>
<p>That settled it for Peter. He could not match his poor little
exploit against such miraculous performances. The sight of those
uniforms in the broad daylight had cowed him. The sight of Nick
Vernon's signalling badge had brought him to his sober senses,
and he felt ashamed even of his dreams and his pretending. The
brief glimpse he had had of Scout Harris in all his flaunting
array, going forth to new conquests surrounded by infatuated
disciples, these things settled it for poor Peter. He thought
himself lucky not to have drawn attention and been made a fool by
those heroes. Maybe they would not all have been as considerate
as Scoutmaster Ned. The safest thing, as well as the thing
nearest to his heart, was to stand for Nick Vernon. He could
stand for him even if he was afraid of him. After all, a pioneer
scout was not really and truly a scout....</p>
<p>"I don't know why I put the rope up," he said nervously; "I just
did. There is a--a bad place in the road if you're going
fast--I'll--I just as soon show it to you--if you don't believe
me. I thought maybe the light--but anyway I wasn't sure--and I'll
show you that bad place. I guess he'll <i>sure</i> win the cup,
won't he; the scout that made the light?"</p>
<p>"Shouldn't wonder," said Scoutmaster Ned, a little puzzled, but
apparently satisfied. "Didn't you say something about a signal?
To that little codger? Or was he dreaming? Or am I dreaming?" He
scrutinized Peter very curiously but seeing no sign of the scout
about him, he dismissed the receiving end of this business with
Peter's rather awkward explanation, and let it go at that.</p>
<p>As for what Pee-wee had said, that did not worry Scoutmaster Ned.
Pee-wee's dream and experiences seemed to be all mixed up
together like the things in a hunter's stew. Scoutmaster Ned went
by the <i>signs</i>, which scouts do, and the signs were a funny
ticking shirt and a pair of pantaloons like stove pipes. No hint
of scouting there.</p>
<p>For you see the scout was <i>inside</i> of Peter Piper of Piper's
Crossroads. That was why he was for Nick Vernon. It was
<i>inside</i> him, and "disguised" (as Pee-wee would have said)
as a checker-board shirt. And that was why Scoutmaster Ned
couldn't see it....
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