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Pemrose Lorry, Camp Fire Girl Part 7

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That right arm, racked, fell limply back.

The blue of her eyes, hooking to the spur, if her fingers couldn't, grew glazed like enamel.

She felt as if she were tumbling backward already, the daring essence of her, to break her too s.p.u.n.ky backbone among those glowing pine-dwarfs far beneath.

Spread-eagled against the rock's cruel breast, she turned a blanched face, a convulsed face, upward!

CHAPTER IX

JACK AT A PINCH

"Keep cool! Don't stir! I'll reach you in a moment!"

As the cry, the rea.s.suring cry, came ringing down to her, Pemrose felt the blood start again from where it was frozen at the back of her neck and surge through her flattened body, which, greenly spread-eagled against that gray rock, the head turned slightly aside, was not unlike the quaint Indian figure of the Thunder Bird upon a pedestal,--the emblem of her father's invention.

As the first blind moment of terror pa.s.sed--the blankness of the discovery that, strain as she might, she could not reach that spur of the rock, the nearest hand-hold, and draw herself up to safety--she saw two rescuing figures loom out on high.

[Ill.u.s.tration: "Keep cool! Don't stir! I'll reach you in a moment!" Page 86.]

The first was that of the chauffeur, Andrew, summoned by a piercing cry from Una--Una whose delicate face was white and square now as the marshmallows in the box under her arm, with which she had bribed her friend to the madcap feat of sliding backward down a twelve-foot rock and sitting in the Devil's Chair.

And Andrew the Scot saw the danger, heard it skirling in his ears, for he had been brought up among mountains.

He did not quite see what good he could do, that staid Church Elder, by joining the girl in the Devil's Seat.

But he came of a Campbell clan which never flinched.

He was preparing to slide down, himself, when an arm--a left elbow rather--thrust him rudely back.

"T-take hold of this rope-end. Throw yourself flat on the ground there.

Sit on him, you girls, so that he may not be drawn over!" cried a voice, pointed, vigorous.

Pem knew that it was the fiery voice of the nick.u.m, the broad-shouldered youth, who had sat in the chair before her, whose crowing had been responsible for her feat.

Her colorless face was turned upward then and she had seen him push up the lower folds of his sweater with his left hand--even while its elbow sent the chauffeur back--and while his right, lightning-like, uncoiled a rope, a lariat, worn under it around his waist.

It was then that he shouted to her to "keep cool"; and that she, turning her head aside against the rock, became a living effigy of the Thunder Bird.

Not waiting to make the rope fast around his own body--or his body fast to it--he slid down.

The next moment he was standing beside her in the chair.

"Ha! So the 'pep' was in the wrong box that time," he said coolly.

"Yes. Last time it was in the ice-box," snapped she, as coolly, not to be outdone. "So you _did_ remember--know me--us!"

"How could I help--remembering--that icy train-wreck?" He was slipping the rope in a noose under her arms. "Perhaps, some day.... Well! I'm glad to be 'Jack at a Pinch' again, anyway."

"R-ready!" he shouted then.

And Pem was drawn up, to face a Highland squall from Andrew.

"Hoot! la.s.sie, an' air ye sech a fechless tomboy that a mon mun keep his een sticket on ye a' the time?" the Scot angrily demanded. "How cud ye be sech a nick.u.m as to try sitting in yon--Deev's Chair?"

"Ask--ask the other nick.u.m; he did it first," flung back the rescued one.

But under cover of the broad scolding, the other, the Jack at a Pinch--friend in need for the second time--had again slipped off, without a word from either of the girls.

"Bah! he is a nick.u.m--a mysterious imp," snapped Pemrose, the fire that smoldered behind her white face leaping up. "Can't be shyness with him; he doesn't look the least bit shy! Oh-h! what a fool I was to give him a chance to help me--save me--in a 'pinch', again."

Tears were springing to her eyes now,--tears of reaction.

She felt that an eighteen-year-old youth, privileged to save her life twice--it seemed a privilege at the moment--might, at least, have had the manners to let her thank him for it.

"Oh! he's the nicest and the--hor-rid-est--boy I ever saw," wailed Una, in tribute to the train-wreck, still a nightmare on her mind.

Both girls were dumfounded, as well they might be.

Pemrose, with her blue eyes under jet-black lashes--girdled, moreover, with her father's growing fame--Una, with lighter eyelashes and hair, and that little fixed star of angry excitement blazing in one sweet dark eye, they were the kind of girls whose good graces a boy would be the last to spurn, fair even for daughters of Columbia who, democratic in beauty, as in all else, never hatches out an ugly duckling.

They gazed in stormy bewilderment now after Jack at a Pinch walking off with his party whom, indeed, he had herded away.

Andrew was looking gloweringly after him, too.

"An' so he's the loon that sat in the Chair first!" grumbled the still angry chauffeur. "Aw weel--" the "dour" expression upon the speaker's long upper lip softening a little--"weel! he may be ill-trickit, but he's a sw.a.n.ky lad, for a' that. Aye, fegs! an' braw, too."

"Oh! he's 'sw.a.n.ky' enough--swaggering--but I don't think he's 'braw', handsome--not with that little stand in his eye--just like Una's, only more so." Pem added the last words under her breath. "But, oh! for goodness sake! let's get away from here," she cried wildly; "over to the other side of the Pinnacle, anywhere--anywhere--so that we won't see him again, before his strutting over what he's done, makes me--makes me--"

"Yes--it's pretty on the other side of the hill, easy climbing, much smoother--green and spring-like," a.s.sented Una soothingly, pouring balm.

"It's all covered with young pine trees and just a few, very few, tall silvery birches. Not rough and rocky as it is this side!" glancing shiveringly down the precipice.

"Not another Deev's Chair in sight, I'll be hoping--fegs!" muttered Andrew, picking up a basket which he had carried from the automobile up the low mountainside, and in the late emergency had set down.

It contained cocoa, sandwiches, fruit and other toothsome dainties for a picnic supper.

"We have permission to make a fire, a Pin-na-cle blaze, to--to boil water and toast our marshmallows. Oh! of all things, all-ll things on this planet--I don't know what we may find on any other--that's 'banner', it's a marshmallows toast out-of-doors--isn't it?" chanted Una, intoning her delight to the trees, the low spruce and pine scrub, as she skipped among them, an evergreen sprite, herself, for she, too, now wore the "bonnie green", the Camp Fire short skirt, middy blouse and captivating Tam-o'-shanter--most nymph-like note in dress for daughters of the woodland.

"And--and I just know the dear-est, loveliest pin-ey nook," she went on in a choir-boy sing-song; "half-way down the Pinnacle's softer side it is, where we may build our fire. Halleluiah! I suppose I'll have to get busy and gather f.a.gots, as in Camp Fire rank I'm a Wood Gatherer. Oh, dear! Will you listen to old Andrew. Now what is _he_ singing?"

The Scot, indeed, relaxing from prim silence and chauffeur ceremony here upon the Pinnacle's height, with only two young girls to marshal instead of the mechanism of lever and brake--although the former, as he had found to his cost might prove the worse handful of the two--was alternately whistling, with lips drily pursed, and crooning in the burr-like accents which adhered like a thistle to his tongue, his version of a very old song:

"Young la.s.sie! Daft la.s.sie, I tell ye the noo, I'm keepin' some f.a.gots, An' a stick, too, for you!

"Singing whack fol de ri do!

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Pemrose Lorry, Camp Fire Girl Part 7 summary

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