<h2> <SPAN name="chp_37" id="chp_37"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVII </h2>
<h3> HINTS <br/> <br/> </h3>
<p>They showed him. As Scoutmaster Ned had told him they would do,
they showed him. And Peter Piper was in dreamland; it was all too
good to be true. They showed him how to track and stalk. And how
to signal.</p>
<p>Nick showed him how to make a smudge fire, and Peter was doubly
sure, then, that Nick would win the cup. In the nights he dreamed
of the winning of that cup, of Nick winning it. Yes, they showed
him. Fido Norton showed him how to track a rabbit, and a
small-sized, pocket edition of a scout in the Elephant Patrol
showed him (very difficult) how to trail a hop-toad. Charlie
Norris showed him how to use a deadly kodak, which Peter had
never seen before. He liked it because it pulled open the way a
turtle's neck comes out, and then went in again. Oh yes, they all
showed him.</p>
<p>And meanwhile Peter Piper kept his secret and no one ever knew of
his little exploit, for which the handbook really deserved all
the credit. The adventure of the stolen car was now forgotten in
a hundred new activities, and with it the rope across the road
and the lantern and all that. Sometimes when they spoke of that,
Peter was troubled. But they did not often speak of it. And he
did not even tell them that he was a pioneer scout. Harding and
Coolidge he now kept in the pocket of his stove-pipe pantaloons.
For Peter Piper was approaching scouthood through the tenderfoot
class. Yes, they were all busy showing him.</p>
<p>Scout Harris showed him. Oh yes, he showed him. But Scout Harris
was too busy showing all the rest of them to do any exclusive
showing for the pioneer scout. And besides, Peter, who was too
new and too bashful and too awed by his companions and
surroundings to be a good general mixer, was mostly occupied with
his hero, Nick Vernon. Pee-wee, who was a mixer as well as a
fixer, went on mixing and fixing and soon he performed his
greatest of all "fixing" feats; probably the greatest fixing feat
in scout history. Perhaps the greatest fixing stunt in the
history of the world.</p>
<p>But Peter was satisfied to laugh at Pee-wee with the rest of
them, with that bashful, hesitating laugh, which endeared him to
them all.</p>
<p>It was natural that he should follow Nick Vernon about the
island, for everyone liked Nick, who was quiet, humorous, modest
and withal very resourceful and skilful. He had a kind of a
contained air, as if he knew more than he gave out, in contrast
to Scout Harris who gave out more than he knew. A bantering,
off-hand way he had, as if all the things he did (and he could do
many) were done just to kill time. Skilful though he was, he did
not take himself too seriously. Everything he did he seemed to do
incidentally.</p>
<p>He would wander aimlessly into some triumph. "Going tracking?"
they would say. "Guess so," he would answer. He never made a
fuss. The general impression that he gave was that scouting was a
good enough way to while away a summer. Peter Piper worshipped at
the shrine, winning scout personality. He hoped that his mother
would allow him to stay for the finish so that he could see Nick
receive the cup. He watched, jealously, anxiously, the stunts of
the other scouts, but none of them could be mentioned along with
Nick's signalling.</p>
<p>One morning Nick sauntered down to the shore, Peter with him.</p>
<p>"Going to wigwag?" they asked him.</p>
<p>"Maybe, if there's anyone to wigwag to. No use talking if there
isn't anyone in town to listen."</p>
<p>"Scout Harris talks whether there's anyone to listen or not," one
said.</p>
<p>"Shall I bring the card to wigwag with?" Peter asked.</p>
<p>"No, don't bother. Got some matches? Never mind if you haven't."</p>
<p>Peter ran back and got some.</p>
<p>"If you're signalling tell them not to hurry with the school, we
can wait. Scout Harris is giving us an education. He's going to
move the lake to-morrow."</p>
<p>"He's a queer duck," one of the party sprawling around the tents
said as the two made their way down toward the shore.</p>
<p>"Who, Pete?"</p>
<p>"No, Nick; jiminy, it always seems as if--I don't know--as if he
has something up his sleeve."</p>
<p>"It's his arm," commented a joker.</p>
<p>"Maybe he knows about a mystery," Pee-wee said; "maybe there's
treasure buried on this island."</p>
<p>"There'll be some scouts buried on this island if we all die
laughing at you," another scout observed. "Come on, let's dig
some bait."</p>
<p>Nick did not decide what he was going to do till he reached the
shore. That was just like him. Peter was all excitement.</p>
<p>"Are you going to signal?" he asked.</p>
<p>Nick often signalled over to town and sometimes he got an answer,
for there were other scouts over there. He did it just for
pastime. Usually it was the wigwag that he used. But on this
morning, noticing the dried leaves all about, he said, "We'll try
a smudge, that's pretty good sport; Morse Code, you know." He
looked about half-interestedly and began kicking leaves into a
pile, Peter doing the same. If Nick had any particular purpose in
this business, at least you would not have supposed so. He seemed
as aimless as a butterfly.</p>
<p>"Are you going to ask about school?"</p>
<p>"No," laughed Nick, dragging some leaves with his foot; "there's
no school for a month, we know that. If you know a thing you know
it; isn't that so?"</p>
<p>"I don't know many things."</p>
<p>"No? Well, get some water in your hat--here, take mine. These
blamed scout hats are made to hold water."</p>
<p>Peter brought some water, which Nick poured on the leaves.</p>
<p>"Now haul that old raft up here and we'll hold it up. We'll just
say '<i>hello</i>' to be sociable, show the town we're not
stuck-up."</p>
<p>They held the old raft, of about the area of a door, slanting
ways over the leaves, and Nick showed Peter how to manipulate it
so as to control the column of black smoke arising from the damp
leaves. Peter was greatly interested, even excited, over this new
kind of signalling. He was not quite as careful as he had been in
talking with Scoutmaster Ned.</p>
<p>"Make one long one first to call their attention," he said, quite
aroused by the novel enterprise.</p>
<p>"Yes?" said Nick, half interested apparently. "Who told you
that?"</p>
<p>"I--I just knew it. I know now--let <i>me</i> do it--it's easy.
Only they have to be careful over there. That's--that's the hard
part. I hope they have a--one of those books over there--and
then--maybe--I hope they keep it open at page two hundred and
eighty-four. Let <i>me</i> try it--"</p>
<p>"Ned give you one of those books?"</p>
<p>"N--no, I--I saw one."</p>
<p>"Hmm."</p>
<p>"Well, let's get busy with the message, Pete."</p>
<p>Nick Vernon did not seem greatly interested in where or when or
how Peter had seen the handbook, nor how he happened to remember
page two hundred and eighty-four. But one thing Nick Vernon knew
(it was a reflection on Scoutmaster Ned and just exactly like
him) and that was that <i>there was not a single copy of the
scout handbook on Frying-pan Island</i>.
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