<h3> CHAPTER X </h3>
<h3> THE OTHERS ARRIVE </h3>
<p>The arrival of the five North Bridgeboro scouts was the occasion of
much merriment and banter. These boys from the small village up the
river had formed themselves into a patrol but they were two members
short of the required number and they had no scoutmaster.</p>
<p>Whether they took scouting seriously it would be hard to say; if so it
must have been a great comfort to them to have wished upon their
budding organization such an instructor and propagandist as the
diminutive genius whom they were now about to meet. Whatever material
they had among them for progress in the scouting field, they gave every
indication of possessing that quality of unholy mirth which
distinguished the notorious Silver Foxes. Perhaps their silver was not
quite so bright, but they gave promise.</p>
<p>"Hey, where are you going with the apple tree?" one of them called from
the nearest canoe. "What are you trying to do? Swipe a chunk of
property? That's a part of North Bridgeboro you've got there."</p>
<p>"Why didn't you take the whole village?" another called.</p>
<p>"Hey, Roly, where are you going with the real estate?" another called.</p>
<p>"I knew you were too heavy for that neck of land," shouted another.</p>
<p>"Why didn't you take the whole orchard with you?" a third wanted to
know.</p>
<p>"<i>For the love of——</i>," another ejaculated. "Look at the sign, will
you! The place is discovered already!"</p>
<p>Pee-wee did not wait for formal introductions. "We're going to start
the Combination Scouts of Bridgeboro!" he shouted. "We're going to be
sea scouts and land scouts all rolled into one! We took possession and
it's all right! Old Trimmer can't say that he owned an island, can he?
We're going to have our pictures in <i>Boys' Life</i> and everything and
we're going to have all the apples when they're ripe and maybe we're
going to call ourselves the Crab-apple Patrol! Maybe there's treasure
buried here, how do we know? And we're going to get one of those
things—a saxophone or whatever you call it—to take our latitude and
longitude with! We're going to be better than the Ravens and the Elks
and the Silver Foxes and I know how to make apple-sauce! We're going
to be a new kind of a patrol!"</p>
<p>"In the name of goodness, what's that, a phonograph?" one of the
approaching canoeists called.</p>
<p>"That's the discoverer," Roly called back. "He took possession of the
island in the name of the King of Bridgeboro."</p>
<p>"I thought it was an earthquake," laughed a tall boy who was stepping
ashore.</p>
<p>"Oh, we have those too," laughed Roly; "all the latest improvements.
That's Pee-wee; he's perfectly harmless, step right ashore, you're all
welcome."</p>
<p>"You're stepping into the seventeenth century," Pee-wee shouted,
descending precipitately out of the tree.</p>
<p>"The seventeenth century must have been very wet," said the tall boy as
he lifted one foot out of the water only to plunge the other into the
ragged, muddy edge of the island, in his efforts to get on shore. It
was very funny to see him wallow in the water, seeking foothold on the
submerged tentacles of root, ever slipping, and always with the
soberest look on his face. "This must be the back entrance," he said.
"Where are we supposed to park?"</p>
<p>This tall boy, who turned out to be a sort of patrol leader and
scoutmaster in one, had a kind of whimsical look of inquiry on his face
which was his permanent expression, and which was made the more
humorous by red hair which he wore decidedly pompadour. There was that
in his look which indicated his taking everything as he found it, his
attitude being always quietly humorous and never surprised.</p>
<p>His demeanor, in whatever adventure befell, seemed always that of an
amiable victim placing himself at the mercy of his enterprising
comrades and going through every kind of outlandish escapade and
adventure with a ludicrously sober look on his funny face. To him
everything that happened seemed part of the game of life and he
appeared never in the least astonished at anything.</p>
<p>To see him soberly going through with some adventure which the
sprightly genius of his associates had conceived was as good as a
circus. Naturally such a fellow was called "old" and they called him
Old Rip and Good Old Rip and Doctor Rip and Professor Rip. His name
was Townsend Ripley.</p>
<p>Townsend began at the very beginning to take the irrepressible ex-Raven
very soberly indeed, and the more preposterous Pee-wee's schemes the
more in favor of them Townsend seemed to be. No doubt he got a great
deal of amusement out of Pee-wee. But Pee-wee never knew it.</p>
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