"Cis _BAR-BER_!"--it was a shriek.
"I've told that woman, over and over, that my name _isn't_ Barber," went
on Cis, touching her hair with deft fingers.
Barber took his head out of the towel. "Go and see what she wants," he
commanded irritably. "She'll wake the old man."
"She wants me to be running up and down three flights of stairs,"
returned Cis, calmly. (It was astonishing the attitude she took these
days with Big Tom, the tone of equality she used.) "She thinks I'm still
one of the youngsters in this building, and that she can order me around
like she used to do. But I'm going to remind Madam Spaghetti that I'm
seventeen to-day." She gave a toss of her head as she went out.
Seventeen! Sure enough! Johnnie pondered her good fortune. It would be
quite a little more than six years before he would be seventeen. How
remote that fortunate day seemed! And how the time would drag! Oh, if
there were only some scheme for making it go faster!
"Let your hair alone!" scolded Big Tom, who was raking his own at the
window, his legs spraddled wide in order to lower himself and thus bring
his head on a level with Cis's mirror.
A scout is obedient. Down came Johnnie's hand. Also, a scout is cheerful
when obeying; so up went the corners of his mouth. And there was one
more point to cover: courtesy. "Yes, sir," he answered politely. He
proceeded with his petals of violet cotton and his little length of
stem. For what had Mr. Perkins said so often about all these matters of
conduct?
"Get the habit of doing them, old fellow. If being a scout means
anything, it means living up to the laws, sticking close to the spirit
of the whole scout idea, and following out what the Handbook teaches.
Put the question of Big Tom out of your mind. Whether he likes what you
do or not; and whether or not you please him when you live by the laws,
those aren't the main considerations. No! It's yourself you must think
of! your character! Remember that you're not trying to make over Tom
Barber. Body and soul, you're making over Johnnie Smith!"
And these days Johnnie Smith was getting on by leaps and bounds with his
preparation, his training to be a scout. Fortunately that meeting
between Mr. Perkins and Big Tom had made no difference whatever in his
program. The morning after it took place, the scoutmaster had made his
appearance as usual at eleven o'clock. "I can't let Mr. Barber drive me
away," he explained. "Why, that would be deserting yo
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