got to plan, got to have an army.â
âTonight, Doug?â
âTomorrow â¦â
âNo,
tonight
! Do or die. You be captain.â
âGeneral!â
âSure, sure. Iâll get the others. So they can hear it from the horseâs mouth! Meet at the ravine bridge, eight oâclock! Boy!â
âDonât yell in the windows at those guys,â said Doug. âLeave secret notes on their porches. Thatâs an order!â
âYeah!â
Charlie sped off, yelling. Douglas felt his heart drown in a fresh new summer. He felt the power growing in his head and arms and fists. All this in a day! From plain old Câminus student to full general!
Now, whose legs should be cracked next? Whose metronome stopped? He sucked in a trembling breath.
All the fieryâpink windows of the dying day shone upon this archâcriminal who walked in their brilliant gaze, half smileâscowling toward destiny, toward eight oâclock, toward the camptown gathering of the great Green Town Confederacy and everyone sitting by firelight singing, âTenting tonight, tenting tonight, tenting on the old camp grounds â¦â
Weâll sing
that
one
, he thought,
three times
.
CHAPTER NINE
Up in the attic, Doug and Tom set up headquarters. A turnedâover box became the generalâs desk; his aideâdeâcamp stood by, awaiting orders.
âGet out your pad, Tom.â
âItâs out.â
âTiconderoga pencil?â
âReady.â
âI got a list, Tom, for the Great Army of the Republic. Write this down. Thereâs Will and Sam and Charlie and Bo and Pete and Henry and Ralph. Oh, and you, Tom.â
âHow do we use the list, Doug?â
âWe gotta find things for them to do. Timeâs running out. Right now weâve gotta figure how many captains, how many lieutenants. One general. Thatâs me.â
âMake it good, Doug. Keep âem busy.â
âFirst three names, captains. The next three, lieutenants. Everybody else, spies.â
âSpies, Doug?â
âI think thatâs the greatest thing. Guys like to creep around, watch things, and then come back and tell.â
âHeck, I want to be one of those.â
âHold on. Weâll make them
all
captains and lieutenants, make everyone happy, or weâll lose the war before it gets started. Some will do double-duty as spies.â
âOkay, Doug, hereâs the list.â
Doug scanned it. âNow we gotta figure the first sock-dolager thing to do.â
âGet the spies to tell you.â
âOkay, Tom. But youâre the most important spy. After the ravine meeting tonight â¦â Tom frowned, shook his head. âWhat?â
âHeck, Doug, the ravineâs nice but I know a better place. The graveyard. The sunâll be gone. Itâll remind âem if theyâre not careful, thatâs where weâll all wind up.â
âGood thinking, Tom.â
âWell, Iâm gonna go spy and round up the guys. First the bridge, then the graveyard, yup?â
âTom, youâre really somethinâ.â
âAlways was,â said Tom. âAlways was.â
He jammed his pencil in his shirt pocket, stashed his nickel tablet in the waistband of his dungarees, and saluted his commander.
âDismissed!â
And Tom ran.
CHAPTER TEN
The green acreage of the old cemetery was filled with stones and names on stones. Not only the names of the people earthed over with sod and flowers, but the names of seasons. Spring rain had written soft, unseen messages here. Summer sun had bleached granite. Autumn wind had softened the lettering. And snow had laid its cold hand on winter marble. But now what the seasons had to say was only a cool whisper in the trembling shade, the message of names: âTYSON! BOWMAN! STEVENS!â
Douglas leapâfrogged TYSON, danced on BOWMAN, and circled STEVENS.
The graveyard