<h2><SPAN name="chap10" id="chap10"></SPAN>CHAPTER X<br/> <span class="chapsub">A BATTLE FOR HONOR</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Reaching</span> Woodcraft late the next afternoon
Walter at once hurried to the dark room
adjoining Dr. Merriam’s office to develop his
plates. To his dismay he found that needed
chemicals for fresh developer were lacking,
and he was unwilling to risk his plates in the
old and necessarily weak developer on hand.
There was nothing for it but to possess himself
in such patience as he could until a fresh
supply could be obtained from the city. Dr.
Merriam promised to send at once. Leaving
Big Jim to report to the doctor the results of
their trip Walter sought the wigwam.</p>
<p>He found Tug rewinding his split bamboo
and Billy Buxby assisting with a ceaseless
stream of unheeded advice.</p>
<p>“Behold the mighty hunter!” exclaimed
Billy with an exaggerated bow of mock deference
as Walter entered.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>162]</SPAN></span>
“What luck?” asked Tug, as he tied the
final knot and reached for the shellac.</p>
<p>Walter rapidly sketched a brief account of
his two days at Lonesome Pond, but in his
enthusiasm over the deer hunt forgot to mention
his double catch of trout. “Anything
new here?” he asked finally.</p>
<p>Tug shook his head. “Nothin’ much.
Harrison came in with a three-pound brook
trout this morning, and unless some one gets
in to-night with something better that will
give the Senecas the score for this week. Say,
the gloom in this little old shanty is something
fierce. If it was any one but Harrison
there’d be no kick comin’. He’s gettin’ such a
swelled head he can’t see anybody outside his
own tribe. I’d like to punch it for him,”
growled Tug savagely.</p>
<p>“Say,” he added as he looked up, “what’s the
matter with you, you grinning Cheshire cat?”</p>
<p>“Nothing much,” replied Walter, “only day
before yesterday I landed a double, for a total
of five pounds; brook trout, too.”</p>
<p>Tug and Billy fell on him as one. “Say it
again! Say it again!” begged Tug as they
pinned Walter to the floor and sat on him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>163]</SPAN></span>
“I got two trout at one cast, and they
weighed five pounds. Does that beat it?”
gasped Walter, giving up the struggle.</p>
<p>“Counts same as one fish,” whooped Billy
joyously.</p>
<p>“Well, we win anyway, for one of them
weighed over three and a half,” said Walter,
giving a sudden heave that sent Billy sprawling.
“Now what’s the matter, you old gloom
chaser?”</p>
<p>“Walt, you ain’t foolin’, are you? Tell me,
you rabbit-footed tenderfoot, have you got
proof?” implored Tug.</p>
<p>“Big Jim’s word for it, and a photo,” replied
Walter.</p>
<p>Tug’s face cleared. “That’s good enough.
Oh, my eye, wait till that record is posted to-night!”
he chortled.</p>
<p>Tug was not disappointed. The record held,
and the Delawares celebrated that night with
a bonfire and war dance in which Walter, to
his confusion, found himself the central figure.
Harrison’s chagrin was too evident
to escape notice, and his defeat was rubbed
in with a malice born of his growing unpopularity.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>164]</SPAN></span>
The next morning when Walter met him
and offered his hand Hal passed on as if the
other lad were a stick or a stone. The insult
was witnessed by several Delawares and by
members of Hal’s own tribe. That night a
meeting of indignation was held by the Delawares,
and in spite of Walter’s protest and the
efforts of Woodhull and one or two of the
older boys, it was voted to send Harrison to
Coventry so far as the Delawares were concerned,
that is, he was not to be spoken to or
recognized in any way.</p>
<p>In his own wigwam Hal was only a degree
less unpopular. The leaders tried to induce
him to make an apology, pointing out to him
that he was violating both the spirit and word
of the Scout’s oath, but the effort was without
avail. The high-strung, undisciplined boy,
accustomed from babyhood to having his own
way, fawned upon by all with whom he had
hitherto come in contact because of his father’s
great wealth, was utterly unable to adjust
himself to the new conditions which surrounded
him, to the democracy of which he
was now a part yet of which he had no understanding.
So he went his headstrong way,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>165]</SPAN></span>
and if in his heart were bitterness and misery
he made no sign.</p>
<p>The Senecas stood by him with half-hearted
loyalty because he was a fellow tribesman,
but there was not one whom he could call
a friend. So he became more and more isolated,
spending his days fishing, the proudest,
loneliest boy in all the big camp. The
fact that he continued to score with big fish
gave him a measure of standing with his tribe,
and to maintain this became his chief object
in the daily life.</p>
<p>Walter was thinking of this and wondering
what the outcome would be as early one
morning he headed his canoe for a setback
some three miles from camp, which he had
discovered the day before. The entrance was
so hidden in a tangle of alders and brush that
it was only with the greatest difficulty that
he could pick out the channel. He had
passed the spot dozens of times without suspecting
that anything lay beyond.</p>
<p>Patiently and carefully he worked his way
through the tangle, once having to get out and
lift the canoe over a jam of a dozen stranded
logs. Beyond this the channel was comparatively
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>166]</SPAN></span>
clear. Unexpectedly it abruptly opened
into a broad body of water perhaps half a mile
long, deep in the middle, and with the upper
end covered with an acre or more of lily-pads.</p>
<p>Walter’s eyes sparkled. “Gee, I bet there’s
pickerel in here!” he exclaimed, unconsciously
speaking aloud.</p>
<p>“Bet yer life thar is,” said a voice with a
chuckle.</p>
<p>Walter turned to find a rude raft anchored
behind the half submerged top of a fallen hemlock,
and on it sat Pat Malone, catching young
striped perch for bait.</p>
<p>“Hello!” exclaimed Walter. “What are
you doing here?”</p>
<p>“Seem ter be fishin’,” replied Pat, a broad
grin spreading across his freckled face.</p>
<p>Walter grinned in return. “Well, what
are you catching?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Mostly fish—some skeeters,” was the
prompt retort.</p>
<p>Pat lifted a wriggling three-inch perch from
the water. “Do you call that a fish?” asked
Walter.</p>
<p>“Mebbe it is an’ mebbe it isn’t,” said the
lumber boy as he dropped the victim into a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>167]</SPAN></span>
battered old pail half filled with water. “How
about this?” He reached behind him and
held up at arm’s length a huge pickerel.</p>
<p>Walter allowed a long low whistle of admiration
escape him. “Are there any more like
that in here?” he asked eagerly.</p>
<p>“Shure,” replied Pat. “That’s nothin’
but a minnie ’longside some old whopperlulus
in here.”</p>
<p>“What’d you catch him with?”</p>
<p>“Bait an’ a hook an’ line.”</p>
<p>Walter laughed. “Pat, you win,” said he.
“I don’t want any of your secrets, but I
should like to catch just one fish like that
one.”</p>
<p>A crafty look swept over the freckled face
grinning across at him. “Yez licked me once.”</p>
<p>Walter nodded.</p>
<p>“An’ yez said that if iver yez had the
chance yez’d show me some o’ thim thricks
what done it.”</p>
<p>Again Walter nodded.</p>
<p>“Will yez do it now if Oi’ll show yez where
thim big fish is an’ how ter ketch ’em?”
asked Pat eagerly.</p>
<p>“I’ll do it anyway, and you don’t need to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>168]</SPAN></span>
show me anything about the fish,” replied
Walter heartily, driving the canoe ashore as
he spoke.</p>
<p>Together they forced their way through the
underbrush until they found a cleared place.
“This isn’t to be another fight?” asked
Walter, a sudden suspicion flashing into his
mind.</p>
<p>“Course it ain’t! What kind av a low-down
hedgehog do ye take me fer, anyway?”
retorted his companion indignantly.</p>
<p>Walter put out his hand and apologized
promptly, ashamed to think that he should
have been guilty of entertaining such a
thought. Then he began by briefly explaining
the rules governing boxing, pointing out
that a blow below the waist line constitutes a
foul, that a man knocked down is allowed ten
seconds in which to get on his feet again, and
during that time must not be touched by his
opponent; that wrestling is not allowed, and
that matches usually are conducted by rounds
of three minutes each, with a minute for rest
in between.</p>
<p>“No true sportsman will ever hit a man
when he’s down,” concluded Walter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>169]</SPAN></span>
This was difficult for the backwoods boy to
grasp, and it was equally hard for him to
understand why in a fight he should not
scratch, kick and gouge, even use his teeth if
opportunity offered, for in his hard life in the
lumber camps he had witnessed many a rough
and tumble fight where ethics are unknown,
and where fighting men sink to the level of
fighting beasts, employing every weapon with
which nature has endowed them, and giving
no mercy to a fallen foe.</p>
<p>But Pat was blessed with a strong sense of
fair play, and when he had fully grasped the
meaning of the rules they appealed to him
instantly. “’Tis jist a square deal both byes
gits in a foight!” he exclaimed, a light breaking
over his puzzled face.</p>
<p>Then Walter showed him a few of the
simplest guards, how to parry an opponent’s
blow with one arm while countering with the
other, how to protect the body with elbows
and forearms while the hands shield the face,
how to step inside, and how to duck under a
swing, how, by watching his opponent, to
anticipate the coming blow and be prepared
to avoid it. Lastly he showed him the art of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>170]</SPAN></span>
side-stepping, the little shift of the feet which
while keeping the body perfectly poised allows
the blow to pass harmlessly to one side or the
other, at the same time opening an opportunity
to counter on the opponent.</p>
<p>Naturally quick, and with an Irishman’s
inborn love of battle, Pat picked up the points
readily and when at the end of an hour Walter
flung himself on the ground for a breathing
spell Pat executed a double shuffle.</p>
<p>“Shure it be the greatest dancin’ lesson av
me loife!” he whooped joyously, side-stepping,
ducking and lunging into empty space.
“Come on, bye, come on! Oi can lick yez
now! Come on, ye spalpeen! ’Tis Pat Malone
will give yez the greatest lickin’ av yer life!”</p>
<p>Walter declined with thanks, lying back
weak from laughter, while the young giant
continued to dance around sparring, ducking
and countering on an imaginary foe. “’Tis
meself will clane out the Durant camp before
anither sun is up as shure as Oi be the eldest
son av me mither,” he chuckled, flinging himself
beside Walter from sheer exhaustion.</p>
<p>When they had rested a bit Walter proposed
that they go try the fish, and that Pat come
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>171]</SPAN></span>
in his canoe. In an instant the young woodsman
had forgotten his newly acquired accomplishments,
for a new idea had suddenly
possessed him.</p>
<p>“Tell me, bye, what’s this about catchin’
the biggest fish at Woodcraft Camp?” he asked
eagerly.</p>
<p>Walter explained the contest fully, and told
how eager he was to score over the Senecas.</p>
<p>“’Tis aisy,” broke in Pat.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” asked Walter, a bit
puzzled.</p>
<p>Pat struck one side of his nose with a
dirty forefinger and winked solemnly. “Oi
wonder now, have yez forgot the big pickerel
yez have lyin’ down on the raft? ’Twill weigh
ten pounds if it weighs an ounce.”</p>
<p>“But that isn’t mine!” exclaimed Walter.
“It’s yours.”</p>
<p>“Is ut now?” said Pat, scratching his head.
“Shure Oi disremimber ketchin’ ut. Oi’m
thinkin’ yez must hev caught ut in yer shlape
an’ didn’t know ut.”</p>
<p>Walter laughed and thanked his companion
heartily, while he refused the gift. Then seeing
the look of hurt disappointment on Pat’s
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>172]</SPAN></span>
face he hastened to make clear why he could
not accept the fish. “You see,” he concluded,
“a Scout’s honor is always to be trusted, and it
would not be honorable to try to win with a
fish I did not catch myself. A man’s honor
is the greatest thing he possesses.”</p>
<p>The other pondered this in silence for a few
minutes trying to adjust his mind to a new
idea. When he spoke it was slowly, as one
feeling his way.</p>
<p>“Yez mane that ter score wid thot fish would
be loike hittin’ a man when he’s down, or
shtalin’ from a blind pup.”</p>
<p>“Exactly,” replied Walter.</p>
<p>“An’ do all the other byes feel the same
way?”</p>
<p>“Of course they do.”</p>
<p>“No they don’t! Anyway, there’s wan
that doesn’t.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” cried Walter startled.</p>
<p>“Oi mane thot there’s wan dirty blackguard
has been winnin’ points roight along
wid Pat Malone’s fish. Oi mane thot thot
spalpeen thot yez call Harrison, the wan with
his pockets lined with money, has been buyin’
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>173]</SPAN></span>
me big fish fer the last mont’ an’ payin’ me
good money fer ’em. Oi mane thot if yez
hadn’t happened in here this marnin’ yez
moight hev seen him luggin’ in thot big
pickerel this very noight. ’Tis his last fish
he’s had from me, the low-down blackguard.”
Then he added ruefully: “Sure ’tis a glad day
fer Pat Malone an’ a sorry wan fer his pockets
ter hev found out what honor manes.”</p>
<p>The two boys returned to the canoe and
spent the remainder of the morning in a vain
attempt to land another big pickerel. When
they parted it was with a mutual respect and
liking and a promise on Walter’s part to return
the next day in quest of the big fellows.
“Oi’m goin’ ter hunt frogs fer bait this
afternoon an’ Oi’ll be waitin’ fer ye at sunup,”
were Pat’s parting words.</p>
<p>It was a sober boy who paddled back to
Woodcraft that afternoon. What he had
learned that morning filled him with mingled
feelings of contempt and gladness—contempt,
for the fellow Scout who had so perjured himself
and violated his Scout’s oath, and gladness
that his faith in the unkempt boy of the woods
had been so fully justified. Any lingering
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>174]</SPAN></span>
doubt of Pat Malone’s innocence of the theft
of Mother Merriam’s pin which he might have
entertained had been banished by what he
had learned of the boy that morning.</p>
<p>And in his own mind the boy was fighting
a battle. Where lay the path of duty? What
did his honor as a Scout demand of him? To
go report what he had learned? To become a
bearer of tales? The very thought was
abhorrent to him! On the other hand had
he any moral right to allow his fellow tribesmen
to suffer through the dishonesty of which
he held the proof? And Hal’s own tribesmen,
was it fair to them to allow them to profit by
points to which, though no fault of theirs,
they had no right?</p>
<p>It was a relief to see Harrison’s canoe approaching
the landing as he pulled his own
out. He would put it up to Hal to do the
square thing—redeem himself by playing the
man for once.</p>
<p>“Hal,” said Walter in a low tone as the
other landed, “I know where you get your
fish.”</p>
<p>Hal turned and faced him. “What are
you talking about?” he said roughly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>175]</SPAN></span>
Walter flushed and instinctively his fists
doubled, but he kept a check on his temper.
“You have bought your record fish of Pat
Malone,” he said evenly.</p>
<p>It was the other’s turn to flush, but he
maintained his air of bravado.</p>
<p>“That’s silly,” he jeered.</p>
<p>“No it isn’t, and you know it,” replied
Walter.</p>
<p>“Well, what are you going to do about it?”
asked the other sulkily, seeing that denial was
useless.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” replied Walter sadly.
“Say, Hal, why don’t you go own up to Dr.
Merriam and ask him to try and put you
right with the fellows?”</p>
<p>“What do you take me for? I’m in bad
enough now. If you don’t blab who’s going
to know it? And if you turn telltale I guess
my word’s as good as yours,” sneered Hal.</p>
<p>“For two cents I’d punch——” began
Walter hotly, then pity for the unfortunate
boy before him calmed him. “Hal, I’m not
going to say anything to-night, anyway. Do
the right thing. Remember your Scout’s
oath,” he begged.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>176]</SPAN></span>
“Remember it yourself,” growled Hal.
“There’s mighty little honor in telling tales.”
And with this parting shot he strode off to
the wigwam.</p>
<p>Walter’s preoccupation and sober face were
bound to attract the attention of his mates,
and he came in for a lot of guying.</p>
<p>“Who is she, Walt?”</p>
<p>“Is her papa a big chief?”</p>
<p>“Take us round and give us a knock-down,
Walt.”</p>
<p>“Romance of the big woods! Walt, the
tenderfoot, falls in love with an Indian
princess!”</p>
<p>Walter’s replies to all these sallies were
only half-hearted, and seeing that something
was really amiss with him the boys dropped
their banter. He retired to his bunk early,
only to twist and toss uneasily all night long.
Over and over till his brain grew weary he
kept repeating the perplexing question,
“Ought I to tell? Ought I to tell? Ought I
to tell?”</p>
<p>The problem was no nearer a solution when
in the gray of dawn he slipped a canoe into
the water the next morning and turned her
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>177]</SPAN></span>
bow toward the setback. Pat was waiting for
him on the old raft and, true to his word, he
had a pocket full of lively little frogs, which
were giving him no end of trouble in their
efforts to escape. Walter took him aboard,
and they were soon skirting the lily-pads at
the upper end.</p>
<p>Here Pat bade Walter rig his rod and, producing
a lively green frog from his pocket, he
impaled it on the hook by thrusting the barb
through its lips, explaining that in this way
the frog’s swimming was not seriously interfered
with. He then took the paddle and
handled the canoe while Walter cast. The
frog had hardly struck the water before there
was a swirl at the very edge of a patch of lily-pads
followed by a strike that made the reel
sing. A couple of good rushes and then, as is
the way with pickerel, the fish was brought
alongside with hardly a struggle. Pat deftly
scooped it into the canoe and killed it with a
blow that broke its spine. It was fair for a
beginning, weighing perhaps four pounds, and
Walter prepared to try again.</p>
<p>For half an hour they worked along the
pads, taking several smaller fish.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>178]</SPAN></span>
At length they approached an outlying
patch of pads where the water was deep and
black. Two canoe lengths short of it Pat
stopped the canoe. Then he sorted over his
remaining supply of frogs till he found one
that suited his critical fancy. With this he
rebaited Walter’s hook. “Now, ye throw
roight over ter the very edge o’ thim pads,
and don’t ye be in no hurry,” he commanded.</p>
<p>The first cast was short, but at the second
attempt the frog landed with a spat at the
very edge of the pads and began to swim
vigorously in an effort to reach and climb up
on them. Suddenly the water fairly boiled,
and Walter all but lost his balance and upset
the canoe, so sudden and vicious was the
strike.</p>
<p>“Ye have him! Ye have him! Shure ’tis
the king av thim all, an’ ’tis mesilf that
knows ut, for ’tis tree times thot the ould
feller has walked off wid me line and hooks!”
yelled Pat excitedly. “Don’t let him get
foul o’ thim pads!”</p>
<p>Walter soon found that he had the fight of
his life on to keep the wary old warrior in
clear water, but inch by inch he worked the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>179]</SPAN></span>
fish away from the pads until finally he felt
that the danger was past and that it was only
a matter of time when the prize would be his.
A few more heavy lunges, which threatened
by the mere weight of the fish to break the
slender rod, and the battle was over. Softly
Pat slid his hand along till his stout fingers
closed in the gills and the prize was in the
canoe, where Pat speedily put an end to the
snapping of its cruel looking jaws by severing
the spinal cord with his knife.</p>
<p>Walter brought out his scales, and could
hardly believe that he read them aright.
“Thirteen pounds and a half!” he gasped.</p>
<p>“An’ there’s two av me hooks in his
mouth, bad cess ter him,” said the matter-of-fact
Pat, deftly extracting his property.</p>
<p>Pat was for trying for another big fellow,
but Walter had had enough for that morning.
Besides, he was anxious to show his prize at
camp, so reeling in his line they started for
the mouth of the backset.</p>
<p>“Pat, did Harrison ever have much luck
in here?” asked Walter.</p>
<p>Pat stared at his companion for a minute
before he found speech. “What, do ye mane
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>180]</SPAN></span>
ter tell me ye be thinkin’ Oi iver showed him
where Oi was ketching the fish he bought?”
demanded Pat. “Not he nor any ither o’ the
Woodcraft byes knows about this setback.
’Tis lucky ye was ter be findin’ the way in yer
own self. Ye will kape ut ter yerself now,
will ye not?”</p>
<p>Walter promised that he would.</p>
<p>“Say, bye, did ye tell the docther av the
low-down thrick this Harrison has been
afther playin’?” Pat suddenly inquired.</p>
<p>Walter confessed that he had not. Then in
a sudden burst of confidence he told the Irish
lad all about the dilemma in which he had
become involved. “What would you do,
Pat?” he concluded.</p>
<p>“Me? Shure Oi dunno at all, at all. Oi’m
thinkin’ Oi’d side-step,” replied Pat, with a
twinkle in his eyes.</p>
<p>“But that’s the trouble, I can’t side-step,”
responded Walter.</p>
<p>The freckled face of the woods boy sobered.
“’Tis a quare thing, this honor ye be tellin’
about, but Oi’m thinkin’ ’tis a moighty foine
thing too,” he said. Then, his Irish humor
rising to the surface, he added: “There be
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>181]</SPAN></span>
wan thing Oi wud do; Oi’d knock the block
clane off av that blackguard that’s made all
the throuble.”</p>
<p>Walter laughed. “I’d like to,” he confessed.</p>
<p>They were now at the entrance and setting
Pat ashore Walter turned his canoe toward
camp. His arrival with the big pickerel, to
say nothing of the smaller ones, created a
wave of excitement among the boys who
were in camp, and great jubilation among the
Delawares. It happened that Harrison was
among those present.</p>
<p>“So,” he sneered when no one was near,
“you’ve tried the silver bait! How much
did you pay for the bunch?”</p>
<p>Walter turned on his heel and walked
away. All the joy of the day had vanished.
He wanted to be alone to fight out to a finish
the battle of honor. So immediately after
noon mess he slipped away unseen, and
sought the cool depths of the forest to find in
the peace of the great woodland the solution
of his difficulty.</p>
<p>Late that afternoon, his mind made up, he
turned toward camp. As he approached he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>182]</SPAN></span>
became aware of an air of suppressed excitement
about the camp. Buxby was the first
to see him.</p>
<p>“Hi, Walt! Have you heard the news?”
he shouted.</p>
<p>“No,” said Walter. “What is it?”</p>
<p>“The Senecas’ records have been wiped out;
Harrison’s been buying those fish,” whooped
Billy.</p>
<p>Walter’s first thought was that Hal had
done the right thing and had confessed, and a
great load fell from his shoulders. But Billy’s
next words brought him up short.</p>
<p>“Pat Malone came in this afternoon and
told the big chief that he’d been selling fish
to Hal right along. Brought in what money
he had left, and said he guessed it wasn’t
quite the square thing for him to keep it.
What do you think of that?”</p>
<p>“What did the doctor do?” asked Walter.</p>
<p>“Told Pat that as he had sold the fish in
good faith the money was his, especially as the
camp had had the benefit of them. Then he
called Hal in and paid him back all that he
had given Pat. Then he wiped out from the
Senecas’ score all of Hal’s records. Don’t
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>183]</SPAN></span>
know what he said to Hal, but the word’s
been passed that the incident is closed. Gee,
but I’d hate to feel the way Hal must! I
guess Pat’s squared himself with the bunch on
that pin business. A feller that would do
what he did wouldn’t steal.”</p>
<p>After the first burst of indignation the feeling
of the camp settled into contempt, mingled
with pity, for the boy who had so besmirched
his honor. No reference was ever
made to his disgrace, but for the most part he
was left severely alone, only a few, of whom
Walter was one, endeavoring to hold out a
helping hand. So the camp settled down to
the usual routine once more.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>184]</SPAN></span></p>
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