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th satisfaction. He pushed up the goggles and lowered them again quickly. Even the subdued light in the grove, at a point where the setting sun did not penetrate, was too much for his eyes. "Confound the things!" he exploded. "Shall I ever be anything again but an owl in daylight? Well, where shall the tent go?" "Over there," replied Josephine, promptly. "There's just one perfect spot for it--on the top of that little rise, looking toward the south, and away from the grove." "Right you are. But the trees are too thick." He pulled out a foot-rule and began to measure. Presently he announced the result: "One tree, this little fellow, will have to come down." "Do you dare?" "Of course I dare. Where can I get an axe?" Josephine glanced toward the house. Then she thought of the Ferry cottage. "The little house beyond the hedge--I know the people--at least, I've met one of them. Shall we go and ask?" Jarvis was already hurrying toward a distant gap in the hedge. "I'll go!" he called back. In two minutes he reappeared. With him was a sturdy figure. Josephine recognized the broad shoulders, the thick reddish-brown hair, the gleam of the hazel eyes. She nodded at Donald Ferry, noting that he was not now clad in a gray flannel shirt, but in one of white, with a low collar and silk neck-tie, similar to Jarvis's--hot-weather dress with an urban air about it. He carried an axe. "Thank you," said Jarvis, when they had reached the spot which Josephine had designated. He held out his hand for the axe. Ferry shook his head, smiling. "Which is the tree?" he inquired. "Give me the axe, please," repeated Jarvis. "There's no reason why you should chop down trees for us on a sweltering night like this." "It won't make me swelter as much as it will you," asserted Ferry retaining his hold on the axe. "I'm an old woodman. Come, show me the tree, or I'll chop at a venture. Miss Burnside?" Josephine pointed out the tree. Ferry lifted the axe and swung it, and it sank deeply into the trunk. Another blow; it struck the same spot. Another and another, with an unerring aim. "You are a woodman," admitted Jarvis, admiringly, watching the powerful swing and the telling blows. Ferry laughed, without abating the vigour of his work. "There's no better out-door fun that I know of," said he, "than chopping down a tree. I couldn't think of missing this chance." CHAPTER VI IN THE PINE GROVE "Sally, will you and Max
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