The summer afternoon was a perfect one. Illimitably beautiful pale dappled gray clouds filled the summer sky, shutting out the fierce rays of the sun.
As they hoped, from a little distance off the three newcomers discovered Miss Frean busy in her garden.
Tory saw her first. She made a motion with her hand to suggest that they approach softly without being observed.
The older woman wore no hat, and a simple outdoor cotton dress of pale gray, with a deep blue scarf over her shoulders.
Her hair was more carefully arranged than usual in the shining, heavy brown braids Tory so often had admired.
In truth Memory Frean had begun to take more interest in her personal appearance since her meeting with Victoria Drew on the wintry road. So long she had lived alone in her little House in the Woods, with her outdoor interests in the summer time and her books in winter, that she had grown too careless.
The meeting with Tory had brought back old friends and memories. Tory had introduced her to the Girl Scouts of the Eagle's Wing. Now, as a member of their Council, Memory felt as if the girls were her adopted daughters.
Edith Linder had been in a measure her adopted daughter. She had lived for the past winter in the house with Miss Frean.
Now Edith uttered an exclamation of pleasure, which at Tory's gesture she quickly subdued.
Memory Frean was standing in the center of a plot of gra.s.s with her arms outstretched. Fluttering about her head were a family of wrens.
Two had alighted within the palms of her hands and were gazing toward her with serious intentness.
In a nearby tree stood a new bird house, which she must recently have placed in position, as not far off was another bird house smaller and shabbier. Outside the door of the new home a feast of bread crumbs had been spread.
By and by one of the wrens flying near the new abode, pecked at a crumb. Something gave him confidence and courage. Inside the open door he disappeared. Instantly the entire family followed.
The three visitors burst into a cry of admiration. Memory Frean came toward them, still with her arms outstretched.
"I have been expecting you all day. No Girl Scout has been near me since Edith came on a borrowing expedition late yesterday afternoon.
If you had waited any longer I should have been offended. See, I have put on a clean dress, and the water is boiling for tea, and the table spread in the Shakespeare garden."
Miss Frean led the way, with Edith and Tory clinging to her and Sheila Mason following.
The herbs in the Shakespeare garden were in the perfection of bloom.
In the fragrance of the summer air mingled the pungent odors of thyme and marjoram, sage and rosemary.
A bunch of the herbs decorated the small round table.
Edith Linder disappeared toward the kitchen for the tea, while the three others sat down.
"Edith Linder has been a success as a Girl Scout this summer, has she not, Sheila? We did our best to prepare for the honor last winter.
Edith and I realized that Tory opposed her joining your troop."
Tory flushed.
"Is it very kind of you, Memory Frean, to refer to one's past mistakes, especially when I am your guest?"
Memory Frean laid her large but beautiful hand, a little roughened from outdoor work, upon Tory Drew's sensitive, slender one.
"I suppose I should apologize to you, Tory. I only meant to say that I am glad you finally agreed to allow Edith to enter your Patrol. I do not believe any of you quite realize what the honor meant to her. In a brief time she seems to have changed more than any one I have ever known. She had not had much of a chance in the past. Occasionally last winter, when she was with me, she gave Tory the right to her prejudice."
The large hand had not been raised from the smaller one.
Still weary, from what cause she could not guess, Tory felt as if the strength and vitality of the older woman were flowing gently into her.
Scarcely listening more than was necessary for politeness, she leaned her head against her companion's shoulder.
"I believe one of the most difficult things in the world to realize is that when people fail to possess the characteristics we have agreed they ought to possess, the failure nearly always comes from lack of opportunity, not from choice. I don't mean to be preaching truisms, I was only thinking of this in connection with the Scout organizations.
They bring opportunities to so many who would have had no chance otherwise. Edith Linder had never had the opportunity or the spur she needed. Her ambition to be a good Scout has given her both.
"Wake up, Tory. Are you being nice to Edith as you promised me to be?
She likes and admires you, and I am sure would not mind my speaking of this."
"There are three girls in our summer camp who have the greatest personal influence over the others. It is interesting to watch," Miss Mason remarked, smiling at the older woman. "Of course, under the circ.u.mstances I do not include Kara. Her illness makes her influence of a different kind at present."
Tory lifted her head, more interested in the discussion.
"Yes, I have noticed this about Margaret Hale and Dorothy McClain. I am not so sure, I think the third girl is Joan Peters," she e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed and relapsed into quiet again.
The two women glanced at Tory and then at Edith Linder, who was at this instant coming across the yard with the tea.
The two girls were an apt ill.u.s.tration of Memory Frean's last expressed opinion.
Edith had grown tall in the past year. Her features were large and a little coa.r.s.e, but handsome in their own fashion. There was about her a look of capacity. If she had desired she could easily have lifted and carried the other girl who was nearly her own age. Edith's family had been small farmers for generations. Tory Drew's had been students and artists and writers. She had no appearance of physical strength and yet her vitality was probably as great.
She looked admiringly at the other girl.
"Edith is splendid. She knows more of cooking and practical things than any girl in camp. She was trying to teach me to cook and we were together a good deal of the time before Kara's accident. Now I see little of any of the other girls, although I really think Kara often would prefer anyone's society to mine."
Edith was by this time engaged in pouring the tea.
"I like to behave as if I were more at home in the House in the Woods than any one of the other Scouts," she explained. "After all, I am the only one who has lived here, although Tory is an older friend and my greatest rival."
Edith spoke as if she meant seriously what she was saying. Yet she spoke with entire good nature.
It had been agreed not to discuss the subject of the pageant until her return.
The next half hour the two women and two girls talked of nothing else.
"I believe you should speak to other members of the Council beside me," Miss Frean argued. "Mr. Fenton is fairy G.o.dfather to the camp in Beechwood Forest. He is Tory's uncle and I think should be consulted.
If I remember correctly he used to be a Greek scholar. He is not apt to have forgotten, and if he thinks well of the idea can be of great a.s.sistance."
Before dusk Sheila Mason and Edith Linder started back for camp. They left Tory to have supper with Miss Frean, who promised to bring her home later.
The suggestion had originated with the Troop Captain.
Tory protested that Kara would need her services and be hurt if she failed to appear.
"No, I want Miss Frean to talk to you for a special reason, Tory. I am sure you will find that the other girls, with my help, are capable of caring for Kara this one evening without you."