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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 59623 ***
CHANGE SIGNALS
BY RALPH HENRY BARBOUR.
Each Illustrated, 12mo, Cloth, $1.50.
Change Signals!
For Yardley.
Finklerâs Field. ($1.25.)
Winning His âY.â
The New Boy at Hilltop.
Double Play.
Forward Pass!
The Spirit of the School.
Four in Camp.
Four Afoot.
Four Afloat.
The Arrival of Jimpson.
Behind the Line.
Captain of the Crew.
For the Honor of the School.
The Half-Back.
On Your Mark.
Weatherbyâs Inning.
D. APPLETON & COMPANY, NEW YORK.
[Illustration: âBut the ball went true, straight up and up, over the
crossbar.â]
CHANGE SIGNALS
A STORY OF THE NEW FOOTBALL
_By_
RALPH HENRY BARBOUR
AUTHOR OF âFOR YARDLEY,â âTHE HALF-BACK,â
âFORWARD PASS,â ETC.
[Illustration]
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK AND LONDON
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
1912
Copyright, 1912, by
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
_Published September, 1912_
Printed in the United States of America
FOREWORD
I am taking this occasion to thank all of my readers, boys and girls
alike, who have been so kind as to write to me. Sometimes your letters
have gone unanswered for a long time, I fear; and it is possible
that now and then, entirely by accident, one has been lost sight of
entirely. If so I am both sorry and apologetic, for your letters are
always a real pleasure to me, whether, as is so surprisingly often the
case, they are filled with praise for my stories, or, as is sometimes
the case, they call me to account for mistakes made. Your criticisms,
always just, are perhaps better merited than your praise, and are
quite as well appreciated. My thanks and my compliments, then, to all
my correspondents for their kindly expressions, and my thanks and
compliments to all my readers for their kind allegiance.
Very truly yours,
RALPH HENRY BARBOUR.
âJourneyâs End,â
Manchester, Mass.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I THE MASS-MEETING 1
II TOWNE PLAYS A JOKE 10
III KENDALL MAKES A CALL 25
IV FIRST PRACTICE 41
V KENDALL LEARNS OF A PLOT 56
VI AND FOILS IT 71
VII CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE 80
VIII THE FIRST GAME 97
IX NEW ACQUAINTANCES 108
X NED TOOKER 120
XI THE MYSTERIOUS KICKER 127
XII NED USES TACT 147
XIII GOLF WITH BROADWOOD 160
XIV DAN IS OUT OF SORTS 175
XV NED EARNS A QUARTER 194
XVI A DISSERTATION ON MUSHROOMS 205
XVII UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF MR. TOOKER 217
XVIII YARDLEY VISITS NORDHAM 231
XIX CHEERS AND SONGS 244
XX DAN IS KIDNAPPED 256
XXI AT THE âWASHINGTONâS HEADâ 269
XXII KENDALL EXPLAINS 278
XXIII THE MORNING OF THE GAME 289
XXIV KENDALL MEETS AN OLD FRIEND 296
XXV âCHANGE SIGNALS!â 305
XXVI KENDALL MAKES THE FIRST 321
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
FACING
PAGE
âBut the ball went true, straight up and up, over the
crossbarâ _Frontispiece_
âAn odd-looking figure in a pair of old gray trousersâ 42
âAt the pole stood a boy with upraised armâ 74
ââI think I can win the match if you make it worth my
whileââ 166
CHANGE SIGNALS
CHAPTER I
THE MASS-MEETING
âOld Yardley canât be beat, my boy,
Sheâs bound to win the game!
So give a cheer for Yardley, and
Hats off to Yardleyâs fame!â
The Banjo and Mandolin Club, huddled together on the right of the
platform in Assembly Hall, strummed diligently and with enthusiasm,
their zeal atoning for shortcomings due to lack of practice. For this
was the first night of the fall term, and many members had not touched
their instruments since the final chord had been twanged on class day.
(Brewster, playing second mandolin, was doing bravely with a silver
dime, having lost his pick and not being able to borrow one!) Beyond
the platform some two hundred and fifty clear-eyed, clean-skinned
boys sang the words with vim. Many, unable to satisfactorily express
their enthusiasm vocally, kept time with their feet. Across the
platform from the musicians sat the Assistant Principal, Mr. Collins,
the physical instructor, Mr. Bendix, the head coach, Mr. Payson, the
president of the First Class, Lawrence Goodyear, and the football
captain, Dan Vinton. The mass meeting had been called to formally
open the football season at Yardley Hall School. The song ended in a
final triumphant burst of sound and Goodyear arose. As he moved to the
front of the platform the applause began, the stamping of feet and the
long-drawn â_A-a-ay!_â repeated over and over until Goodyearâs upraised
hand commanded quiet.
âWeâre here to-night, fellows, to start things going. Weâre going to
hear from the faculty and from the head coach and the captain, and all
Iâm supposed to do is to introduce the speakers. But before I do that
thereâs just one thing I want to say, fellows, and itâs this. Weâre
going to win this yearâââ
The cheers burst forth deafeningly, and it was a full minute before
Goodyear could go on.
âJust as we did last year and other years before that.â (Another
demonstration, but briefer.) âBut to do it we must all get together and
stand right back of the team every minute. Itâs school loyalty that
does the business. Every fellow who has been on a team knows what it
means to feel that the school is right back of him. It means a lot, I
tell you; I donât say that it wins games, but it comes mighty near it
sometimes. The team may have its failures; it canât win all the time;
but it isnât going to help matters if you start âknocking.â There may
be mistakes made; that happens now and then; but donât âroastâ the
team for it. Donât roast anyone; get behind and push harder than ever!
Thatâs all, fellows. Mr. Collins will now speak a few words to you.â
The audience proved that it was in entire sympathy with Goodyearâs
sentiments by cheering long and loudly. And then it began again as the
Assistant Principal stepped to the front of the stage. Mr. Collins,
in spite of the fact that he represented Authority and meted out
punishment to ill-doers, was very popular. Doctor Hewitt, or âTobyâ as
the school called him, was the Principal, but the doctor was getting
well along in years now and the actual school management fell on the
younger and very capable shoulders of âMr. Warren Collins, A.M.,
Yale,â to quote the school catalogue. Mr. Collins confined his remarks
to-night to a few moments only. He said he was glad to see them all
back again, glad to see so much enthusiasm and glad that the football
prospects looked so bright. âWith a settled coaching policy well
established, a coach whom we all admire and respect and a captain who
has proved himself popular, brilliant and earnest,â said Mr. Collins,
âwe are very fortunate, I think. And I, for one, shall be very much
surprised if this season proves anything but one of the best in recent
years.â
Mr. Bendix had his meed of welcome and applause when he followed the
Assistant Principal. Although âMusclesâ was a hard taskmaster and was
often well hated by the lazier youths, he was generally liked. Besides,
this was the beginning of the term, the old boys were happy at getting
back again and the newcomers delighted to be there, and they would
have cheered even âMotherâ Walker, who was the least loved of all the
faculty, had he appeared. Mr. Bendix had quite a little to say about
physical examinations and the matter of training, and his remarks
were not especially exhilarating. But everyone heard him through with
respect and then burst into thunderous cheers as the football captain
came to the front of the platform.
Dan Vinton was a First Class boy, seventeen years of age, tall and
lithe, with an alert, good-looking face in which a pair of steady
brown eyes and a distinctly good-tempered mouth were the most notable
features. Just at present the mouth was smiling, but there was
embarrassment in the smile, for Dan wasnât much of a speaker and had
been dreading this occasion for weeks. As he waited for the applause to
cease he sunk his hands in his trousers pockets, and then, realizing
his lapse, hurriedly pulled them out again. The cheers changed to a
shout of laughter and a boy in a front seat called:
âPut âem back again, Dan!â
Then the hall quieted down, and Dan, more embarrassed than before,
began to speak.
âFellows,â he said, âI canât talk very well. In fact, Iâm just about
scared to death. I guess you can see that. But what Iâve got to say
wonât take long. Youâve made me captain and Iâm going to do the best I
know how for you. Iâm not making any promises. That would be a silly
thing to do because we none of us can tell what may happen asââas
the season advances. But weâve got a mighty good start for the team
this fall. Weâve got five of the fellows who played against Broadwood
last year and a lot of good second string fellows. So as far asââas
experienced material goes weâve got no kick coming. But I donât want
you to think that weâve got all the men we want, for we havenât. I hope
that to-morrow afternoon every one of you chaps who hasnât lost a leg
or an arm will come out for the team. I want to see the biggest bunch
of candidates that ever turned out at Yardley! And donât stay away
because you think you canât play football. Come out and get to work and
weâll tell you in a week whether you can play or not. You know theyâve
changed the rules again this year and a fellow doesnât have to weigh
two hundred pounds to be of use to the team. We want fellows who have
speed and who can handle a ball, and, above all, we want fellows who
can kick. Well, I guess thatâs all.â Danâs hands unconsciously went
back to his pockets and a cheer went up. But he didnât take them out
this time. He only smiled. âThereâs one thing more, though,â he went
on earnestly. âWhat Goodyear told you about standing back of the team
is so. I donât mean just coming down to the field and cheering. Thatâs
all right as far as it goes. What I mean is letting us know all the
time that youâre right back of us, hoping us on, wishing us on, pulling
every minute! You do your share, fellows, and weâll do ours, I promise
you!â
Pandemonium reigned for a good two minutes after Dan walked back to his
chair. Then Hammel, the baseball captain, was on his feet calling for
âa cheer for Captain Vinton, fellows, and make it good!â And it was
good, and if Oxford Hall hadnât been built of granite I think it would
have shook under that outburst.
Then Payson got up, and more cheering followed, for the big,
broad-shouldered man of thirty-two who faced them was a school idol. In
his six years as football and baseball coach at Yardley, John Payson
had turned out four winning teams on the gridiron and had done very
nearly as well on the diamond. He had quick, sharp black eyes, a broad,
strong jaw and an ease and grace of carriage that quite belied his two
hundred and odd pounds. Payson spoke quietly and seriously and the hall
was so still that you might have heard a pin drop. He agreed with the
previous speakers that the outlook was bright, but reminded them that
many a team with fine early season prospects had come a cropper before
now. And then he repeated the captainâs call for candidates, for hard
work, for self-sacrifice and devotion and for the whole-souled support
of the student body. And then, as he turned away and the stilled
audience burst into sound, the leader of the Banjo and Mandolin Club
nodded his head and the strains of âThe Years Roll Onâ broke into the
tumult. Instantly every fellow was on his feet, singing the slow, sweet
song:
âThe years roll on. Too soon we find
Our boyhood days are oâer.
The scenes weâve known, the friends weâve loved,
Are gone to come no more.
But in the shrine of Memory
Weâll hold and cherish still
The recollection fond of those
Dear days on Yardley Hill.â
Very reverently they sang it, and not many without a thrill and,
perhaps, a moistening of the eyes. Many of the older boys could
remember standing with heads bared to the cold November wind and
singing it grandly after Yardley had gone down to defeat before her
rival. All save the new boys had sung it at class day under swaying,
many-hued lanterns and with the warm breath of June in their faces.
If you are a Yardley man, young or old, you can never hear that song
unmoved:
âThe years roll on. To manâs estate
From youthful mold we pass,
And Lifeâs stern duties bind us round,
And doubts and cares harass.
But God will guard through storms and give
The strength to do His will
And treasure eâer the lessons learned
Of old on Yardley Hill.â
The last strain died away, there was a moment of silence, and then
caps were slipped onto heads, feet shuffled on the floor, settees were
pushed aside and the fellows crowded toward the doors. Then down the
old, worn stairway they went, talking and laughing a little subduedly,
and out into a mild September night lighted by millions of twinkling
white stars that seemed to shine down kindly as though sympathizing
with the glow of exaltation, of courage and kindliness and patriotism,
in all those boyish hearts.
CHAPTER II
TOWNE PLAYS A JOKE
To one at least of the audience the mass meeting had been an event
of momentous interest. Kendall Burtis, squeezed into a seat in the
very last row of settees, had followed the course of events with rapt
attention. To Kendall it was wonderful, even miraculous, for of all the
sixty-odd boys who had entered Yardley Hall School that day none, I
think, was as proud and happy as he. Kendall was a boy whose dream had
come true.
There had been a time, only four years ago, when Kendallâs ambition,
so far as schooling was concerned, extended no further than graduation
at the Roanoke High School. Even that had seemed a good deal to hope
for, for Kendallâs folks were not very well off and there were times
in the spring and fall when his services on the farm were badly needed
and when tramping into Roanoke to school savored of desertion. Had
it not been for his mother Kendall would have missed far more school
than he did. Mrs. Burtis wanted him to have what she called âa real
education,â and many a time Kendall would have remained at home to drop
potatoes or swing along behind a cultivator had she not interfered.
Then had come a year when all through the Aroostook Country of Maine
the potato crop had been an almost total failure. That failure had
spelled ruin to more than one grower, and while Farmer Burtis had
been in shape to weather the storm, it had proved a hard blow to him
financially, and when Mrs. Burtis, casting about for some way in which
to add to the slender account at the Roanoke Bank, had suggested taking
summer boarders, Kendallâs father had, after a good deal of hesitation,
acquiesced. The result was a small advertisement in a Boston paper, an
advertisement that bore fruit in the shape of four healthy, hungry,
brown-skinned college boys. That had been a wonderful summer for
Kendall. He had been only âgoing on twelveâ then, but he was large for
his age, and old, too, and the collegians had made a good deal of him
and he had had the best time of his life. He had acted as guide on
fishing and tramping excursions, had driven them to and from Roanoke,
two miles away, and had listened in wondering and delighted awe to
their happy-go-lucky talk and banter.
âWhere are you going to school, kid?â they had asked him one day. And
Kendall had told them that he hoped to finish at the high school if he
wasnât wanted too badly on the farm.
âHigh school!â they had scoffed. âThat will never do! Go to a boarding
school, Kid; thatâs what you want to do.â
But when it came to a question of which boarding school, they couldnât
agree. Two of them said Yardley Hall and two of them said Hillton. But
when it came to college they were quite agreed. There was nothing to it
but Yale.
âNo matter where you go to school,â declared the biggest one, whose
name was Dana, âcome to Yale. There may be more than one prep school,
kid, but thereâs only one college, and Yaleâs it!â
âIââI thought there was Dartmouth and Harvard,â Kendall had replied
hesitatingly, and Dana had knitted his brows and shaken his head.
âNever heard of âem,â he had answered. And his three companions had
agreed, chuckling. Finally Kendall had guessed that they were having
fun with him, something they were in the habit of having. But before
they had left Dana had spoken quite seriously to Kendall.
âKid,â he had said, âyou work for a prep school and college. Make
your folks send you to Yardley and then to Yale. It isnât altogether
what you learn out of books; itâs the friends you make and the
self-reliance you get. When the time comes you let me know; just tell
me youâre ready for Yardley and Iâll help you along. Youâre a bright
kid, and nobodyâs fool, and youâre the sort of fellow Yardley wants.â
They were all of them, it seemed, on the football team, and all in
strict summer training. The amount of eggs and steak and milk that they
devoured during the eight weeks of their stay was something amazing.
Every afternoon they produced two oval, brown leather balls and went
through remarkable proceedings in the meadow behind the barn. Strange
as it may seem, Kendall had never seen a football before, although
he had indistinct recollections of having heard or read somewhere of
the game. He looked on absorbedly and was as proud as a peacock when,
one day, he was allowed to kick one of the illusive objects. They got
a good deal of fun out of his attempts at first, but it wasnât long
before he had discovered the knack, and they professed themselves
impressed with his ability.
âThe kidâs cut out for a kicker,â declared Dana. âThose long legs of
his were just made for football. Kid, you keep it up, do you hear? Some
day youâll be a crackerjack kicker if you do.â
The four took their departure early in September to join the rest of
the football squad at New Haven. But when they went they left one of
the battered balls behind, and during a month of loneliness Kendall
made a friend of it. Day after day he went down to the old place in the
meadow and kicked and chased the shabby pigskin oval, and dreamed of
a time when he should be a Yardley Hall man and play on the football
team! But the four left behind them something even better than the old
football, and that was a seed that grew and ripened and ultimately
bore fruit. They had talked with Kendallâs father and mother, the
latter especially since she had proved the more receptive, about the
boyâs future schooling, and Mrs. Burtis had hearkened willingly and
remembered. And in the course of time she had won her husband to the
plan of sending Kendall away to a good preparatory school when the time
came, and, later, to college. But when the time did come money was
lacking, and at fourteen, instead of going to Yardley Hall, Kendall
went to the high school in Roanoke. Then came a bumper year for the
Maine potato growers, and, with itââwonder of wonders!ââa shortage
over the rest of the country and correspondingly high prices. Potatoes
reached a dollar and four cents a bushel that winter and Farmer Burtis
fared well. And Kendallâs best Christmas present was the promise that
the following September he should, if he could pass the examinations,
enter Yardley!
Pass the examinations indeed! Kendall never had a doubt of it. That
only meant study, and he would have studied twenty hours a day
if necessary! It wasnât necessary. He had passed the Third Class
examinations with flying colors. And now, behold him a Yardlian, a boy
whose dream had come true!
He had listened to the speeches and watched the proceedings with eager
curiosity. And when they had sung âThe Years Roll Onâ he had stood
up with the others and had tried, very softly, to follow the tune,
while, somewhere inside of him, something was stirring that was neither
pleasure nor pain, but seemed made of each. After the meeting was over
he followed the others out of the building and, since he knew no one
yet, set off alone along the walk to his room in Clarke Hall. He was
one of the last out of Oxford, and by the time he had reached the first
entrance of Whitson, which stands between Oxford and Clarke, most of
the gathering had disappeared. In front of him, however, three boys
were walking and as they passed a lighted window Kendall recognized
one of them as the football captain. As the trio occupied the width
of the path and as Kendall didnât like to crowd past them, he was
obliged to suit his pace to theirs, and so couldnât help hearing their
conversation.
âHow do you like your new room, Tom?â asked Dan Vinton.
âFine,â was the answer from the larger of the other two boys.
âIt seems funny, though, not to see Alf and Tom,â continued the first
speaker. âWeâre going to miss them, arenât we?â
âAwfully,â agreed the third boy. âIâm so used to dropping in at Number
7, Tom, that you mustnât be surprised if it takes me a while to get
over the habit.â
âDonât get over it,â responded Tom Roeder heartily. âMake yourself at
home. I suppose Loring and Dyer are feeling pretty big about now.â
âWell, Yale got two mighty fine chaps when she got those fellows,â said
Dan Vinton. âAlfâs one of the best there is; and so is Tom.â
They turned into Clarke Hall and climbed the stairs, Tom Roeder
consenting to âcome on up and chin awhile.â
âI ought not to, though,â he declared. âWallace is waiting for me to
help him hang pictures. Iâll get a hard look when I get back.â
âHow is he?â asked Dan. âHas he taken care of himself this summer?â
âLooks pretty fit. Maybe a few pounds heavy, but it wonât take him long
to drop that. Heâs just back from a cruise in his brotherâs boat, and
you canât help getting fat lying around on deck. You donât seem to have
put on much fat, Gerald.â
âI havenât,â was the reply. âIâve been playing tennis most all summer,
and doing a little running.â
âHeâs grown like the dickens, though,â said Dan. âLook at his
shoulders. Remember him when he first came, Tom? Doesnât look now much
like he did then, eh? Oh, weâll make a man of you yet, Gerald!â
âThank you,â laughed Gerald Pennimore. âThatâs very kind of you.â
The three turned to the left at the head of the stairs and Kendall,
pushing open the door of Number 24, saw them enter the corner room at
the front of the building. Kendallâs own room, which he shared with a
classmate named Harold Towne, was Number 21, and was on the rear of
the building, its two windows looking out past the back of Dudley to
the edge of the grove. Towne was in the room when Kendall entered. He
was arranging a row of books on the study table which, placed in the
center of the room, equidistant between the two single beds, was common
property.
âIâve taken this side of the room,â announced Towne. âI knew you
wouldnât care. Anyhow, as I was here first I had a right to change, you
know.â
âAll right,â said Kendall. âI donât care which side I have. I suppose
there isnât much difference.â
âNo. Only I was on that side last year and I thought Iâd like a
change,â replied the other. âDid you bring anything to fix up with,
Burtis?â
âN-no, I donât think so.â
Towne frowned and looked about the walls. âWeâll have to get some
pictures, I guess. Cooke, who roomed with me last year, had a lot of
stuff, but of course he took it off with him.â
âDid he graduate?â asked Kendall.
âNo, heâs moved into Whitson. A chap named Guild wanted him to room
with him. Cooke didnât want to do it much, I guess, but Guild insisted.
Weâd ought to have about three good pictures over there around the
windows. Iâd have thought youâd have brought something along with you.â
âWell, I didnât think of it,â answered Kendall. âBesides, I donât
believe I had anything to bring.â
âYou live in the country, donât you?â asked Towne.
âYes, near Roanoke. It isnât exactly country, though. I mean thereâs a
good many houses out our way. Weâre only two miles from town.â
Towne laughed. âTwo miles! That sounds like country to me, all right.
What do you call country, Burtis? I suppose Roanoke is just a village,
isnât it?â
âN-no, not exactly. Itâs got twenty-seven hundred inhabitants.â
âThink of that! A regular metropolis, isnât it? Ever been to Bangor?â
âYes, once; just for a day. Itâs a nice city, I think.â
âYou bet it is. Thatâs where I live. Know where the high school is?â
âN-no, I donât think so. I wasnât there long, you see. Why?â
âI was going to tell you where I live. Our house is pretty nearly as
big as this whole building.â
âGosh, it must take a lot to heat it!â exclaimed Kendall.
âItâs heated with hot water,â said Towne.
âLike this is?â
âNo, this is steam here. Hot waterâs better. I guess you havenât been
around much, have you?â
âAround the country you mean? No, I havenât. Have you?â
âErââsome. Iâm going to California and down through Old Mexico some day
soon. Thatâs a trip for you!â
âQuite, some ways,â agreed Kendall. âThis is as far as Iâve been yet.
It doesnât seem much different from Maine, either. Youâd think, being
as itâs so much farther south, that it would be sort ofââof different.â
âYou talk as though Connecticut was down south,â laughed Towne. âIt
gets just as cold here in winter as it does up home. I suppose they put
you in here with me because weâre both from Maine.â
âI guess so. And weâre in the same class, too. Maybe that had something
to do with it. Those books all yours?â
âYes. Iâve got twenty times that many at home.â
âHonest?â exclaimed Kendall. âGosh, you must have a regular library.
Iâm awfully fond of books, but I havenât got many.â
âWhat kind of books do you like?â asked Towne.
âAny kind; just books,â replied Kendall simply.
âWell, thereâs one kind I havenât any love for, and thatâs text-books,â
said Towne, frowning at the array before him. âYou could have a mighty
good time here at Yardley if you didnât have to study so blamed hard.â
âY-yes, but of course a fellow expects to have to study,â answered
Kendall. âI donât mind that. I guess I sort of like it. Still, I want
to have time enough to play football.â
âSay, are you one of those athletic cranks?â demanded Towne
distastefully.
âI donât believe so. I donât know anything about athletics. Iâd like to
play football, though. Do you play?â
âMe? Well, I guess not! You donât catch me wearing my young life away
doing those stunts. A good game of tennis now and then is all right,
but this thing of working like a slave for a couple of hours every
afternoon and getting your bones cracked isnât my way, let me tell you!
I donât mind seeing a good game sometimes, but Iâm no martyr. Besides,
if you make the team you have to go to training table and be just about
half starved. Not for mine, thank you!â
âThat so? I guess I could stand it if theyâd let me play. What do you
do to get on the team? Just go to the captain and tell him you want to
play?â
Towne grinned delightedly at the new boyâs simplicity for an instant,
and then, banishing his smile quickly, nodded. âYes,â he replied
carelessly, âjust see the captain and tell him. And, by the way, itâs
a good plan to see him pretty soon; so many fellows want places, you
know; they might be all gone by the time you get there. See?â
âYes, thank you. I guess Iâd better find him the first thing in the
morning. I wasnât sure whether that was the way you did it. At the
meeting to-night they said something about reporting on the field, and
I thought maybeâââ
âWhatâs the good of waiting until morning?â asked Towne, hiding his
pleasure under a grave face. âVinton rooms just down the corridor;
Number 28; why donât you run down there now and put in your
application?â
âWould it be all right?â asked Kendall doubtfully. âI donât want to
seem fresh, you know.â
âOf course itâs all right! Didnât you hear them saying to-night that
they wanted all the fellows they could get? Ever played the game?â
âNo, not yet. Maybe he wonât want me.â
âNever fear! Itâs newââerâânew material theyâre always looking for.
Take my advice, Burtis, and get in your application early. Have you got
a blank?â
âA blank? What kind of a blank?â
âWhy, an application blank, of course; to write down your name and age
and so on, and what position on the team youâd like to have.â
âNo, could I get one to-night?â
Towne looked doubtful, and finally shook his head. âNot to-night, Iâm
afraid. Unlessââunless Vinton has one heâll let you have. You could
ask him, you know. And anyhow it wonât matter, I guess. The main thing
is to let him know as soon as possible. You could fill out your blank
to-morrow.â
âYes, I could do that,â responded Kendall eagerly. âYou donât think
heâd mind my seeing him now, as late as this?â
âLate! Why, itâs only a little after nine. That isnât late. Donât you
worry about his minding, Burtis; he will be tickled to find another
fellow for the team. You see thereâs a good deal of difficulty here in
getting candidates enough. I daresay he will sleep better for knowing
that youâre going to help him out.â
Kendall looked at Towne a bit doubtfully, but the latterâs countenance
was so innocent that his misgivings passed and he pulled his jacket
down and smoothed his hair.
âIââI guess I will, then,â he murmured. âWhat did you say his name was?
Winton?â
âNo, Vinton; most of the fellows call him Dan, but you can do as you
like about that.â
âGosh, I couldnât do that!â exclaimed Kendall.
âAll right. Twenty-eightâs the number. Down the hall to the right; last
room on the other side.â
âThanks,â said Kendall, giving a last tug at his sleeves. âI hope he
wonât think Iâmââfresh.â
âNever fear, old chap; he will be tickled to death,â Towne assured him
gravely. But after the door had closed and Kendallâs footsteps died
away along the hall Towneâs gravity left him, and he threw himself on
the bed, buried his face against the pillow and laughed until his sides
ached.
CHAPTER III
KENDALL MAKES A CALL
Tom Roeder had taken himself away to Dudley, pretending alarm at the
reception awaiting him at the hands of Wallace Hammel, his roommate,
and the two occupants of Number 28 were left alone. Dan Vinton, having
discarded coat and vest, stretched himself on his bed, pillowed his
head on his clasped hands and smiled across at his chum. Dan was
seventeen years old, and a trifle large for his age. Long of limb,
tall, lithe, with a sun-browned skin and not a flabby muscle in his
whole body, he looked, as he lay there, just what he was; a healthy,
wide-awake American boy, kind-hearted, good-tempered, honest and
fearless, a born leader of his fellows. He had steady brown eyes, a
straight nose that was a little too short for beauty, brown hair and
a good mouth. He was a member of the First Class and captain of the
Football Team, an honor well deserved.
The boy who smiled back at him from the depths of the Morris chair was
a year beneath him in age and class. Gerald Pennimore was a vivid
contrast to his roommate in physical appearance. Several inches shorter
than Dan, he lacked the latterâs even development of body. Rather
slender, with hair that was almost yellow, the bluest of blue eyes and
a skin much too fair to take kindly to sunburn, he looked, in contrast
to Dan, almost delicate. But his appearance belied him to some extent,
for Gerald had proved himself a good distance runner, and while it
was not likely that he would ever grow into the rugged sort, it was
probable that a year or two would find him a very well set-up youth.
He was a good-looking youngster, with an eager, alert face that was
irresistibly attractive when it smiled.
Geraldâs home was right here in Wissining, only a short distance from
the school, but since his father, whom rumor credited with being a
millionaire several times over, was more often away from his home
than in it, Gerald had lived here in Number 28 Clarke during his two
years at Yardley. There was, too, a town house in New York, but save
at the Christmas recesses Gerald had seen little of that of late;
while Geraldâs father when in this part of the world was far more
likely to open up Sound View for a week or so than occupy the Fifth
Avenue residence. Gerald had found at first that being the son of
the Steamship King, as Mr. Pennimore was called, was something of a
handicap. There had been those who called Gerald a âmoney-snob,â and
for the first month or two he had had a rather hard time. But that
sort of thing was long since over now, for Gerald had proved that one
can be at the same time a gentleman and the heir to millions. Geraldâs
mother was dead and he had neither brothers nor sisters, and under
those circumstances it was almost a miracle that he hadnât been utterly
spoiled. Dan firmly believed that only coming to Yardley Hall had saved
him from that fate.
âBack again in the old diggings,â murmured Dan, stretching himself
luxuriously on the bed. âAnd for the last year,â he added with a note
of wonder in his voice. âI can hardly believe that, Gerald. Seems now
as though Iâd always be here; at least, for years and years yet. I
wonder how Alf and Tom feel. Iâll bet they miss this place. I suppose
weâll get a line from them some day soon.â
âThey said theyâd come over and see us,â answered Gerald.
âI know.â Dan nodded wisely. âBut I guess theyâll be too busy to do
that for awhile. I hope Alf makes the freshman team.â
âOh, he will make it all right. I wouldnât wonder if he got the
captaincy.â
âMaybe. I donât envy him it, though. Gerald, sometimes I feel as though
Iâd give a hundred dollarsââif I had itââto wake up and find I wasnât
captain after all! I get scared stiff whenever I stop and think whatâs
ahead of me the next two months. Just suppose we get beaten!â
âSuppose we do. Itâs happened before, hasnât it?â
âNot when I was captain! Thatâs where the trouble is. When youâre
captain and responsible for the success of the team itâs a lot
different, I tell you, Gerald. Why, if Broadwood beats us this fall
Iâll feel like tying a dumb-bell to each foot and jumping into the
Sound!â
âDonât be an idiot, Dan! You canât do any more than your best. If we
get beaten after that it wonât be any more your fault thanââthan mine.
You get that notion out of your head or Iâll have to put you in a
sanitarium before the seasonâs over.â
âAnd maybe Iâd be mighty glad to go,â sighed Dan.
âI donât see what youâre so pessimistic about,â said Gerald. âWeâve got
a good start for a new team, and all that sort of thing.â
âI know, butââwell, Iâll tell you, chum. Weâve won from Broadwood
two years running, and Iâve got an idea that the other fellow is
about due for a victory. We never have won three times in succession,
and it doesnât seem likely that we will now. I wish weâd lost last
yearâs game, or the one before that. Itâs fighting against the Law of
Averages, whatever that may be!â
âPshaw! We said the same thing last year, I remember. Yardley had won
the year before and so it was Broadwoodâs turn. Maybe it was, but
Broadwood missed her turn. She will miss it again. Why, look here, Dan,
there isnât any good reason why we shouldnât win every year for the
next century!â
âOh, well, thereâs no use worrying about it now, I suppose. As you say,
Mr. Pennimore, a fellow can only do his best. Iâll do my best and the
Law of Averages can take care of itself. I hope, though, there will
be a nice big bunch of candidates on the field to-morrow. You know,
Gerald, Iâve always believed that many a good football player has been
lost for lack of a chance to show his hand. Iâll give every fellow
a fair try-out. And if any of the last year men think that theyâre
certain of their places theyâre fooled. For theyâre not. Everyone of
them has got to work hard or go to the bench.â
âIâm coming out, you know, Dan.â
âAll right, chum, but donât hope too much. Youâre pretty light for the
Varsity. It wonât do you any harm to try, though.â
âYouâre not very encouraging,â Gerald laughed. âYou might at least
pretend to think I have a chance, Dan. And, after all, I guess there
have been lighter fellows on the team before this.â
âI wasnât thinking so much of your actual weight,â replied Dan. âA lot
depends on the way a chap uses his weight. I may be all wrong, chum,
and I hope I am, but it just doesnât seem to me that youâre a âfootball
man.â But I want you to come out and try, just the same. Perhaps you
can make the Second Team.â
âNo, thank you! No Second for me; First Team or none.â
âYouâre a modest little blossom,â laughed Dan. âBut, I say, what about
your cross-country work?â
âOh, thatâs all right. I spoke to Goodyear about it, and he said Payson
would let me off football practice now and then. Besides, theyâve got
a dandy lot of cross-country fellows this year and donât need me very
much.â
âI think youâre making a mistake, chum. Youâre a first-rate distance
runner, with a chance of finishing first or second in the cross-country
run, and you want to sacrifice your real talent for a bare chance of
making good in football. Thatâs silly, Gerald.â
âNo, it isnât, Dan. Iâve always wanted to play football; you know that;
and now Muscles has given me permission to play for the first time. And
Iâm going to have a whack at it. Besides, I donât see why trying for
the Football Team wonât keep me in condition for cross-country work.â
âYou donât? Well, I do. And look here; suppose you should make the
team, and suppose you were wanted to play against Broadwood. What would
you do in that case? Run a four mile cross-country race in the morning
and then play in a gruelling football game in the afternoon?â
Geraldâs face fell, but he answered stoutly: âI donât see why not.â
âYou donât?â Dan laughed. âYou would, though, before the game was very
old. Besides, Gerald, you know very well that Muscles wonât let you go
in for both.â
âHe told me I might.â
âCross-country and football both?â
âHe told me I might play football, and he knows very well that Iâm on
the Cross-Country Team.â
âHe may know it, but heâs forgotten it. And it wonât take him long to
remember it, Gerald. Anyhow, itâs a sure thing that he isnât going to
let you do both.â
âThen Iâll give up cross-country work,â said Gerald.
Dan shook his head smilingly. âI donât believe it. It wouldnât be fair
to the school, Gerald. A fellowâs got to do what he can do best; thatâs
a duty. Suppose I gave up baseball in the spring and said I wanted to
try for the Tennis Team!â
Gerald had to smile at that. âThe Tennis Team would beg you to keep on
with baseball, Dan!â
âProbably, but the ideaâs the same. I wouldnât have any right to cut
out baseball just because I wanted to do something else more. And you
havenât any right to give up cross-country running, Gerald.â
âThen I canât play football after all?â questioned Gerald
disconsolately.
âNot if youâre going to do the square thing.â
âThatâs all right,â said Gerald mutinously, âbut it seems to me that a
fellow has some right to do what he likes best.â
âPerhaps. The question is, though, how much right? You know,â continued
Dan with a twinkle in his eye, âwe have a motto here at Yardley,
Gerald. I wonder if youâve ever heard it.â
âWhat?â Gerald demanded suspiciously.
ââThe School first,ââ replied Dan quietly.
Geraldâs eyes fell and he was silent a moment. Then, âJust the same,â
he muttered, âitâs hard lines after wanting to play so long. And I
wonât be able to play baseball in the spring because Iâll have to train
with the Track Team!â
âYouâre too ambitious,â laughed Dan. âWhy not be satisfied with the
glory you have? Youâre a good cross-country runner, youâve won your
letter in hockey and track; isnât that enough?â
âBut Iâm not thinking of glory,â argued Gerald. âI want to play
football because I like it.â
âThen join your class team.â
âThat isnâtââisnât the same thing.â
âWhy not? Itâs football. And you say you donât want the glory.â
âI donât, butâââ
Geraldâs explanation was cut short by a knock on the door. He frowned
at the interruption, glanced inquiringly at Dan and cried âCome in!â
The order was obeyed and a boy of about Geraldâs own age, but taller,
larger and sturdier, entered and stood embarrassedly in the doorway.
âIsââis Mr. Vinton in?â he asked.
Dan sat up on the bed and nodded, looking inquiringly at the visitor.
The latter wasnât by any means a handsome youth. His hair was of a
nondescript shade of light brown, a sort of ashy-brown, his eyes
were gray, his nose just escaped being a pug nose and his mouth was
decidedly large. But there was something about the face, which was most
liberally sprinkled with brown freckles, that made you like it; perhaps
the eyes with their straightforward way of looking at you, perhaps
the nose with its humorous disregard for classic outline, perhaps the
good-natured mouth that seemed always on the point of breaking into
a smile, perhaps the combination of all the features together. But
whatever the cause, the result was undeniable; the face was pleasing in
spite, or perhaps because, of its homeliness.
The boy came from the country; there was no manner of doubt about that.
His hair, worn too long according to city standards, told you so; the
freckles told you so; the poorly cut, pepper-and-salt suit of clothes
fairly cried it at you. And a certain awkwardness of carriage affirmed
it. Seeing the boyâs embarrassment, Dan went to his rescue.
âHello!â he said. âCome in and sit down. Iâm Vinton. What can I do for
you?â
âWhyââwhyââmy nameâs Burtis,â stammered the other. âI just got here
to-day, and I was at the meeting to-night and heard you say you wanted
fellows to play football, and I thought Iâd come and see if you had an
application blank youââyou donât want.â
âAââa what?â asked Dan politely.
âAn application blank; to fill out.â
âOh, an application blank,â responded Dan, trying to disguise his
puzzlement. âI see. Now what kind of an application blank? What is it
you want to apply for?â
âWhy, IââI want to play football,â explained Kendall.
âIâve got you now,â said Dan gravely, fearing to glance at Gerald, who
had turned his face away from the boy at the door. âSit down, wonât
you?â
Kendall closed the door behind him carefully and took the nearest
chair. âI donât know as you want any more players?â he observed
questioningly.
âWe surely do,â replied Dan heartily. âWe want all the players we can
get. By the way, let me introduce you to my roommate, Mr. Pennimore.â
âGlad to meet you,â said Gerald after a supreme struggle with his
voice. âWeââerââwe were talking football when you came.â
âYouâve played before?â asked Dan.
Kendall shook his head. âNo, sir, but I thought Iâd like to learn how.â
âOf course. Well, you come out to the field to-morrow afternoon at four
oâclock and report to Mr. Payson. Heâs our coach. Have you any togs?â
âTogs?â
âYes, football clothes; canvas pants and jacket, you know; and shoes.â
âNo, sir, but I guess I can get some if they donât cost too much.â
âWell, they arenât very expensive. Still, if I were you, Iâd just put
on an old suit of everyday things to-morrow. Maybe you wonât like the
game after youâve tried it. In that case youâll have saved yourself the
price of your football togs.â
âI guess that would be best, but Iâm pretty sure Iâll like football.
Thatâs why I came to see you to-night. I was afraid if I waited until
morning all the places might be taken.â
Gerald had a bad attack of coughing just then, and Dan became very busy
looking for something on the table which he didnât find.
âOh, no fear of that,â he replied finally. âYou see, Curtisâââ
âMy nameâs Burtis,â corrected Kendall gravely.
âI beg your pardon, Burtis. You see, we award places on the team by
competition. That is, we give every fellow a chance to show what he can
do and then we take the best of them for the team. Every fellow who
wants to can come out and try. Of course, youâll understand that those
who have played the game before have rather the better chance of being
retained.â
âI see.â Kendall nodded thoughtfully. âMaybe I wonât be good enough,
then.â
âYou canât tell,â said Dan kindly. âIâve known inexperienced fellows
to make good the first year. Some fellows are natural-born football
players.â
âYes,â Kendall agreed. âI guess thatâs the way with me.â He was
recalling Mr. Danaâs prophecy. âAnyway, Iâd like to try it, and Iâll be
on hand surely. And Iâm much obliged to you.â
âNot at all. And come around again in a day or two and let me know how
youâre getting on, will you?â
âThanks. And theââthe application blank. Where could I find one
to-morrow? And what do I do with it when itâs filled out?â
There was a brief silence in the room. Then Dan said gently:
âI guess someone has been having a joke on you. We donât have
application blanks to fill out. If you want to try for the team you
just come out and report on the field.â
âOh!â Kendall flushed. âHe saidâââ
âWho told you that?â asked Gerald sharply.
âWhy, the fellow I room with. His name is Towne.â
Dan looked inquiringly at Gerald. âKnow him?â he asked.
Gerald nodded. âYes; Harold Towne; âWhitey,â they call him. He rooms
down the hall. You know him by sight, Dan; thin, light-haired,
pasty-faced chap.â
Dan remembered him. âOh, yes, Iâve seen him,â he said. âSo he told you
to come to me and ask for an application blank?â
âYes, he said I must fill out a blank and put down my name and age
and what position on the team I wanted to play. He said Iâd better do
it right away or I might be too late. Thatâs why I came to-night. Iâm
sorry. I didnât know.â
âPshaw! thatâs all right. No harm done. Iâm glad you came, and I hope
youâll get on finely, Burtis. Come and see me again and tell me about
it. Good night.â
âGood night,â replied Kendall. Then he fixed his straight level eyes on
Gerald. âGood night,â he repeated.
âGood night,â responded Gerald gravely.
The door closed behind the visitor. Dan smiled at Gerald.
âHis friend Towne is a bit of a joker,â he observed.
âHe ought to have his head punched,â declared Gerald hotly. âPlaying a
joke on a chap as green as that fellow is likeââlike stealing pennies
from a blind man!â
âHe doesnât seem to have much doubt as to his ability to play football,â
said Dan with a laugh. âSaid he guessed he was a natural-born player.â
Gerald grinned. âYes, that was funny. Still, I like the chapâs looks
just the same. And who knows, Dan? He may turn out a star!â
âIâm afraid it will take some turning, though,â laughed Dan. âHowever,
heâs got my best wishes. Goodness knows I can use all the stars I can
find this year!â
* * * * *
When Kendall returned to his room Harold Towne was ready for bed. He
faced Kendall with one foot between the sheets and a broad grin on his
thin face.
âWell, did you fill out your blank?â he asked with a chuckle. But the
chuckle died away in his throat, for Kendall advanced across the room
with an unsmiling countenance.
âIâve got a good mind,â he said in a low voice, âto punch you in the
face.â
Harold drew back and threw up one arm. âCanât you take a joke?â he
stammered.
âOh, that was a joke, was it?â growled Kendall. âI call it a dirty lie.
And Iâd like to lick you for it,â he added longingly. Harold backed off
toward the window, alarm written large on his white face.
âYouââyouâd better not!â he cried.
âIâm not going to,â said Kendall, turning away. âBut donât you ever
get fresh with me again, Towne, or Iâll just naturally whale you! Iâm
sorry, but I donât guess Iâm going to like you.â
CHAPTER IV
FIRST PRACTICE
The next day Kendallâs school life really began. At half-past seven
there was chapel, at eight breakfast in the big dining-room, or commons
as it was called, on the first floor of Whitson, and at nine came his
first recitation, Latin 3. At half-past nine there was French 3a. Then
came a half hour of freedom from class rooms, a half hour put to good
use in polishing up for the next trial, mathematics 3, at half-past
ten. The mathematics instructor was Mr. McIntyre, a hard taskmaster.
At eleven-thirty there was Physical Culture in the gymnasium. After
that came dinner at one oâclock, and, at two, English 3b. That, so
far as lessons were concerned, finished his day. At a little after
three-thirty observe him making his way toward the athletic field, an
odd-looking figure with his long legs in a pair of old gray trousers,
a faded brown sweater completing his costume. He wore no cap and,
since his sweater was of the âturtle-neckâ variety, his hair had been
much disarranged in the struggle with it. For shoes he had put on a
pair of rubber-soled âsneakers.â As he passed along in front of the
dormitoriesââtaking the longest way since he had only a very general
idea where the athletic field layââhe occasioned not a little interest
in beholders. Luckily he was quite unaware of the strangeness of his
attire and so had no ear for the frequent chuckles that followed his
progress.
[Illustration: âAn odd-looking figure in a pair of old gray trousers.â]
The curving path took him past the fronts of Whitson and Oxford and
Merle. Below him The Prospect fell away to the green meadows and a
half a mile away was the little railroad station of Wissining where
he had left the train two days before. Beyond the station lay, a blue
ribbon in the afternoon sunlight, the Wissining River, with the town
of Greenburg beginning at its further bank. Behind him, over the tops
of the trees, lay Long Island Sound, blue and hazy, and dotted with
sails and streaked with smoke from distant steamers. Past the Kingdon
Gymnasium he went, and then the path descended toward the river,
between the tennis courts, and he paused for a minute behind one of
the back-stops to watch a game in progress between two white-flanneled
youths whose dexterity with racquet and ball made him wonder. At
his right, a quarter of a mile away, figures moved over the rolling
hillside, now stopping for some mysterious reason and then marching
determinedly away again. Kendall had never seen golf played and the
movements of the fellows in the distance seemed exceedingly strange.
But, for that matter, there was a good deal that was strange to him
here at Yardley. And perhaps the strangest thing of all was being here!
It still seemed more like a dream than a reality, and he was constantly
in fear that he would wake up.
The field was almost empty when he reached it, for it still wanted more
than a quarter of an hour to four oâclock, and many of the upper class
fellows had three oâclock recitations. But a few boys were scattered
around, some on the stands and some, in football regalia, waiting for
work. The gridiron had been freshly marked out and the lime lines
were dazzlingly white against the grass. Kendall wished there was
somebody he might talk to, but so far he had formed no acquaintances
beyond those we know of, and to address any of the careless, laughing
fellows about him without overtures from them was quite beyond him.
So he seated himself in the sun on one of the steps leading into the
grand stand and waited. Behind him and about him there were many
amused glances and whispered remarks, but Kendall never noticed. On
the river a canoe with two boys at the paddles was working slowly
against the current toward Flat Island. Beyond the stream a wide
expanse of marshland was showing the first signs of autumn, stretches
of yellow mingling with the green of rushes and grass. Singly and in
groups of two and three the boys, players and onlookers alike, began to
appear around the corner of the stand. Then came Dan Vinton in earnest
converse with John Payson, the coach. They passed him only a few yards
distant and he wondered whether the captain would recognize him. But he
didnât, although his eyes rested idly for a moment on his face as he
passed on. Then a little red-haired Irishman appeared with a push-cart
which he wheeled to the front of the grand stand amidst facetious
greetings from the audience:
âHello, Andy! howâs the boy?â
âThe top oâ the morning to ye, Andy!â
âWell, see whoâs here!â
âAndy, I believe your hairâs faded!â
The trainer waved a freckled hand toward the seats and began to unload
his cart. There were dozens of gray blankets, a gunny sack full of
footballs, nose guards, pails, sponges, a can of water and numerous
other treasures. Andy inverted the gunny sack and the footballs came
tumbling out and went bobbing about in all directions to be pounced
on by eager hands. A whistle blew and order resolved out of chaos. The
candidates clustered around the coach and captain, Kendall following
the others. He couldnât hear very well what the coach was saying, since
he was quite on the fringe of the crowd, but he caught occasional
fragments:
â... Necessary to learn the rudiments of the game ... seem like hard
work, but itâs work that pays well in the end.... You canât build
a house without a foundation and you canât build a football team
without.... Men who played last year report to Roeder.... New men stay
here.... On the jump, now!â
I donât intend to weary the reader with a detailed account of Kendallâs
experiences that afternoon. They were uninteresting, or would have
been save for their novelty. Kendall found himself one of a group of
twenty fellows in charge of a quick-spoken, gingery little chap whom
he afterwards discovered to be Holmes, the second-choice quarter-back.
Now and then Payson made his appearance and looked on for a moment,
sometimes dropping criticism or encouragement. The work for the awkward
squad consisted wholly in accustoming themselves to the handling of the
ball. They passed it about in a big circle, passed it at a walk, passed
it at a trot. Then they tried dropping on it as Holmes rolled it along
the ground, and finally they were made to catch it on the bound and to
pick it up on the run as it dribbled along in front of them. Later they
were formed in a line on one of the white marks and taught to start
quickly as the quarter snapped the ball back.
It was tiresome work, although Kendall only discovered that when it was
all over and he was walking back up the hill, walking alone amongst
more than a hundred boys and wistfully wishing that he had someone with
whom to talk over the practice. It seemed to Kendall that he was the
only boy in school who hadnât friends or acquaintances. He had been
instructed to stop at the gymnasium and have his name entered in the
managerâs book. So he followed the crowd through the big oak doors,
down a flight of broad steps and into the locker-room. The manager
proved to be an harassed-looking youth whom the others addressed as
Cowles or Mister Manag_eer_. It seemed the proper thing to do to
confuse Cowles as much as possible, and the manager was continually
begging mercy.
âOh, for the love of mud, Jensen, cut out the rough-house, will you?â
he was imploring as Kendall edged up. âIâve got your old name down here
already.... Whatâs that, Fogg? I donât know; ask Payson.... Whatâs the
name, you fellow?â
âBurtis.â
âCurtis. What class?â
âNot Curtis, if you please; Burâââ
âShut up, you fellows, canât you? I canât hear a word. Whatâs your
class, Curtis?â
âThird.â
âWhereâre you rooming?â
âTwenty-one Clarke Hall.â
âHow old?â
âFifteen; pretty near sixteen.â
âNever mind the pretty near part. Squad D. Report to-morrow to Mr.
Bendix at twelve for examination. Come on, now, I havenât got all night
to do this!â
Kendall pushed his way through the crowded room toward the door. Most
of the fellows, he noticed, were changing their football clothes for
their usual attire in front of little closets which ran in rows at one
end of the room. Some, already disencumbered of everything save huge
bath towels, were hurrying toward a doorway from beyond which came the
sound of rushing water and eddying clouds of steam. In there, Kendall
surmised, were the shower baths. He had heard of them and would like
to have tried one, but he had neither towel nor locker. He stood
for a moment out of the way and watched the scene. Dan Vinton came
hurrying through the outer door and pushed his way through the throng.
Several fellows tried to detain him, but he kept on to a bench and
rapidly removed his togs, talking as he did so to half a dozen fellows
who had followed and quickly surrounded him. In a minute he was off
to the showers, still replying to questions as he went and eluding
the clutches of friends. Across the room Cowles was still taking
names, although his task was about over. The throng began to lessen
as the baths swallowed their quota. Kendall turning to reach the door
suddenly became aware of a boy who, a yard or two distant, was viewing
him uncertainly. It was the boy to whom Kendall had been introduced
last night in Vintonâs room, but he couldnât recall his name. He was
in ordinary attire and looked as though he had just entered. When he
caught Kendallâs eye he nodded smilingly and stepped across to him.
âWe met last night, but Iâve forgotten your name,â he said.
âI remember,â Kendall replied a trifle shyly. âMy name is Burtis.â
âBurtis? I donât think Iâve ever heard that before. Mine is Pennimore.
How did you get on at practice, Burtis?â
âNot very well, I guess.â
âOne doesnât at first. Itâs a bit discouraging. After youâve got the
hang of it, though, it goes better.â He surveyed the room and finally
called across to the manager. âCowles, whereâs Dan?â
âI havenât seen him, Gerald,â Cowles replied, waving his book and then
slipping it into his pocket.
âIf you mean Mr. Vinton,â said Kendall, âhe went into the bathroom
about two or three minutes ago.â
âDid he? I guess I wonât wait then. Coming my way?â
âIââI was going back to my room,â replied Kendall.
âLetâs walk along, then. Well, how do you like it as far as youâve
got?â Gerald held the door open and Kendall murmured âThank you,â and
went through.
âI like it very much,â he replied when they were outside on the path.
âItââitâs different, though, from what I expected.â
âIs it? How?â
âWell, everythingâs bigger, for one thing,â replied Kendall
hesitatingly. âAndââand the fellows areââare different.â
âDonât you like us?â laughed Gerald.
âOh, yes! That is, I donât know anyone yetââexcept the fellow I room
with, but you all seem very nice. I donât know that I can explain just
what I mean.â
âGo ahead and try,â Gerald encouraged.
âWell, everyone seems soââso old!â
âOld?â
âYes, more like fellows in college, you know.â
âReally? I never thought of that.â
âMaybe old isnât quite the word I want,â said Kendall reflectively.
âNo, I donât guess it is. What I mean is that the fellows are soââso
sort of confident, andââandââoh, I donât know.â
âI get you now,â replied Gerald. âYes, I know what you mean. I noticed
that myself when I came. Itâs a sort of self-possession, isnât it? You
soon catch it, Burtis. You see, after all, Yardley is a good deal like
a college. A fellow has to look after himself a good deal. They give us
lots of rope here and you can hang yourself mighty easy, Burtis. Some
fellows donât understand that when they first come. They think that
because theyâre not watched by someone every minute that they can do as
they please and it wonât matter. But it does matter, though. Thereâs no
one here to say, âNow you must study your lessons and be a good boy,â
you see. Only when you _donât_ study your lessons, and _arenât_ a good
boy, you get into trouble. A fellow can get along maybe half a term by
faking, but when the exams come thereâs aââa rude awakening, as they
say in the stories. And then itâs too late. Out you go! Good night! So
a fellow has to learn to look after himself here; has to realize that
if heâs going to stay here heâs got to do things on his own incentive,
and not wait to be told. If you donât want to study here at Yardley, no
oneâs going to make you. Only some fine day you wake up and find that
your trunkâs packed and that youâve got your ticket home.â
âI see,â said Kendall thoughtfully. âThat accounts for it, I guess.â
Geraldâs discourse had brought them to the doorway of Clarke and now
they climbed the stairs together. Kendall wanted to ask the other boy
to his room, but feared it might be considered âfresh.â Gerald solved
the problem at the head of the stairs.
âCome down to my room and chin awhile,â he said, leading the way along
the hall. âUnless you want to change.â
âNo, Iâll wait now,â answered Kendall. Gerald pointed out the easiest
chair to his guest, tossed his cap onto his bed and tossed himself onto
the window seat, stuffing the many-hued pillows behind his back.
âThereâs another thing,â said Kendall, returning to the subject.
âEveryone seems to be having such a good time.â
âWhy not? Thatâs what weâre here for!â
âYes, butââbut what about studying andââand learning things?â
âOh, donât worry,â Gerald laughed. âWe study, Burtis. But we try to
have a good time even doing that. I guess itâs a sort of pose here at
Yardley to seem careless and happy-go-lucky and keep on smiling. Life
isnât always a joke, not by any means; but we donât believe in drawing
long faces, Burtis. They say over at Broadwood that a Yardley man never
knows when heâs beaten; and thereâs something in that, too. I said a
minute ago that it was a pose. It isnât, though; itâs a habit. Oh,
youâll like us better when you learn our ways.â
âI like you now,â replied Kendall with a smile. âOnly I didnât quite
understand. Iâm glad youâve told me.â
âI suppose you donât know many fellows yet?â
âNo, none to speak of.â
âWell, you will in a day or two if you keep on with football. And you
must come over here now and then. Fellows drop in here a good deal, you
know. How do you like Towne?â
âIââitâs pretty soon to judge yet,â replied Kendall evasively. Gerald
laughed.
âWell, donât judge us all by him,â he begged.
âI guess I looked pretty much of a fool last night,â said Kendall
sheepishly. âAbout that application blank, I mean.â
âOh, yes; well, that was a bit green, but I donât know why you
shouldnât have believed Towne. Weâre all pretty innocent when we get
here first. And, by the way, Burtis, I ought to tell you, I guess, that
we donât say âsirâ to one another here. I noticed last night that you
said it to Dan.â
âThanks; Iâll remember,â replied Kendall gratefully. âOnly he was older
and the football captain and I somehow thoughtâââ
âThere was no harm done,â Gerald assured him. âNot a bit. But you
neednât say âsirâ or âmisterâ to anyone except faculty, you know, and
Mr. Payson. Letâs see, youâre in the Third, arenât you?â
âThird Class? Yes.â
âWell, any time you want help come over. Iâve been through with it and
I know itâs mighty hard sledding in places. Iâm not a âgrindâ by any
means, but I might be able to help you out of a hole maybe.â
âThank you. I will. I guess Iâll be going now.â
âAll right. Come over and see me sometimes. By the way, ever done any
running?â
âRunning?â repeated Kendall.
âYes, on the track.â Kendall shook his head.
âWell, youâd better come out in the spring and try for the Track Team,â
said Gerald. âWith those legs of yours you ought to be able to just eat
up the cinders. Good-by. See you again.â
Kendall found Harold Towne stretched out on his bed, reading.
âHello!â said Harold, âhow did you likeâââ Then he caught sight of
Kendallâs attire and a broad grin overspread his face. âWell, say,
where on earth did you get that costume?â
âWhatâs the matter with it?â asked Kendall in surprise.
âWhatâs the matter with it! You look like a scarecrow! Have you been
out for practice like that?â
âYes. I hadnât anything else. Vinton saidâââ
âWell, Iâll bet you made âem laugh, Burtis. Say, donât tell anyone you
room with me, will you?â
âI wonât,â replied Kendall emphatically. Harold stared a moment. There
was something in the tone he didnât like. Finally,
âWhere have you been since practice?â he asked.
âI stopped at the gymnasium for a few minutes and then walked home
with a fellow named Pennimore, and Iâve been in his room.â
âPennimore! Gerald Pennimore?â
âI think his nameâs Gerald,â replied Kendall, squirming out of his
sweater. Harold whistled. Then he chuckled:
âIâd like to have seen you together, you two. The millionaire and the
scarecrow, eh?â
âI donât know what you mean,â returned Kendall with a scowl.
âI mean you and your friend, Mr. Moneybags. Didnât you know heâs the
richest fellow in school? And the biggest snob?â
âNo.â Kendall shook his head and thought a moment. âI guess this was
another Pennimore,â he said. âHe was just like anyone elseââonly
nicer.â
CHAPTER V
KENDALL LEARNS OF A PLOT
A week passed very quickly and left Kendall pretty well shaken down
into his place at Yardley. During that week there were five days of
practice on the gridiron and he reported promptly and regularly. I
wish I could say that he showed promise of becoming a good player, but
I canât. As a matter of fact, he exhibited about as little aptitude
for the game as any member of Squad D, and that isnât flattering since
Squad D was made up of what in school slang were known as âdubs.â It
wasnât that Kendall was not willing enough; heâd have worked his feet
off to learn to play football well; but he was undeniably awkward in
movement and astonishingly slow at getting started. He performed his
tasks with a kind of ferocious earnestness that ought to have shown
better results.
On Saturday of that week there was no practice, for the weather was
unusually warm for the last of September and many of the candidates
were showing the effect of the work. Kendall was left with a whole
afternoon on his hands with which he didnât know what to do. After his
English lesson at two he strolled back to his room half hoping that
Harold would be there. He didnât like that roommate of his very well,
but to-day even Harold would have been better than no one. But the
room was empty when he reached it. He tossed his books onto the table,
thrust his hands into his pockets and walked to the window. It was
too fine an afternoon to stay indoors, he decided, and so he went out
again. In the hallway he glanced undecidedly toward the door of Number
28, but his courage failed him.
He had met Gerald Pennimore three or four times since the day they had
walked back from the gymnasium together, but only for a moment on each
occasion. Once they had passed on the stairs and perhaps thrice they
had nodded and spoken in Oxford. But Kendall had not taken advantage of
the otherâs invitation to call. Since he had learned that Gerald was
the son of John T. Pennimore, whose fame had reached even to Roanoke,
Kendall had doubted the sincerity of that invitation. It didnât seem
reasonable that a boy of Gerald Pennimoreâs position should really want
to make a friend of him. To-day, though, he would have given a good
deal for Geraldâs companionship. But the door at the end of the hall
was closed and it was more than likely that the room was empty. Kendall
descended the stairs and, with no objective point in mind, mooned along
the path toward the field.
The tennis courts were filled and he stood for some time and looked on.
On the baseball diamonds two games seemed to be in progress and the
shouts and laughter of the players reached him at the courts. But when
he took up his journey again his steps led him toward the boathouse
where a number of figures were visible about the float. Up and down
the river in the warm afternoon sunlight many gayly hued canoes were
gliding. At the boathouse Kendall loitered for some minutes, watching
several craft start away and wishing that some of the merry crews would
invite him along as a passenger, since he knew no more about paddling
or rowing than the average boy whose life has been spent on a farm
where the largest body of water within five miles is a six-foot brook.
But none of the mariners asked him to accompany them on their voyages
and after awhile Kendall left the float and wandered downstream along
the bank of the river.
On the other side was Meekerâs Marsh, and at intervals enticing little
inlets emptied into the larger stream. Kendall wished he were over
there that he might explore some of them. It was quite warm, in spite
of the breeze that blew across the marsh, and Kendall pushed his straw
hat away from his forehead, dug his hands into his pockets and loitered
slowly along, whistling a tune. He was a little bit lonely, if the
truth is to be told, a little bit inclined for the first time to be
homesick. He wondered if he would ever know fellows and enter into the
good times about him.
Presently a small island came into view, and then, a little further
downstream, a railway bridge. He determined to cross that and return
along the opposite bank to the marsh. But when the railway bridge
was reached there was another just beyond, a bridge for wagons and
pedestrians, and Kendall chose that instead. Once across it a new idea
came to him. He would keep on by the dusty road and visit Greenburg.
There would be stores with things in the windows, and probably a place
where he could buy a glass of soda water or root beer; for he was
decidedly thirsty after his walk in the sun. The thought quite cheered
him and the whistled tune became louder.
Five minutes on the dusty road brought him to the edge of the town
proper and windows with fascinating goods began. Those windows had a
deal of attraction for the country-bred boy and more than once his
hand sought his trousers pocket enquiringly as some object more than
usually alluring tempted him. He had been quite lavishly supplied
with spending money by his father when he had left home, and then,
afterwards, his mother had taken him aside and thrust a whole five
dollar bill into his hand. Of course he didnât have all that wealth
with him; he had heard often enough of the danger of carrying money
about in the cities; but there was a whole half dollar in his pocket,
to say nothing of some nickels and coppers. But Kendall had never
learned extravagance, and a thing had to be pretty tempting to make
him part with any of his hoard. And so he reached the very middle of
Greenburg, where the big dry-goods store is, and the two banks, and the
Palace of Sweets, and Wallaceâs drug store, without having yielded. But
when he heard the _siz-z-z_ of the soda fountain in Wallaceâs he knew
that the moment had come.
Greenburg is quite a busy, citified place on a fine Saturday afternoon,
and the drug store was well filled with customers when Kendall went
in. They were two deep in front of the white marble counter and most
of the little wire-legged tables were surrounded by thirsty mortals
of both sexes. There were so many enticing concoctions advertised
on the wall behind the two busy clerks and the ornate fountain that
Kendall didnât know what to choose; âWalnut Fudge SundaeââââChocolate
Egg-and-MilkââââOrange and LimeââââClaret FrappĂ©ââââFresh Fruit College
IcesââââMyerâs Root BeerââââChoco-Colaâââand more besides. Kendall
fingered his coins and debated while he waited a chance to make his
wants known. When, suddenly, a clerk fixed him with imperative gaze
over the shoulder of a very stout lady who was eating a college ice,
Kendall was quite unprepared and glanced wildly at the wall. The first
sign his eyes rested on was âChocolate Egg-and-Milkâ and so he said
âChocolate Egg-and-Milkâ to the clerk, wishing the very next instant he
had chosen something he was acquainted with. The clerk held out a hand.
âCheck, please,â he demanded.
âWhat?â asked Kendall.
âGet your check at the cashierâs desk, please,â said the clerk. âWhatâs
yours, madam?â
Kendall discovered the cashierâs desk and pushed his half dollar across
the ledge. âFive, ten or fifteen?â asked the young lady behind the
grilling.
Kendall wavered. Then, âTen, if you please,â he said, and a blue
celluloid check was passed out and some change. Back at the counter he
was forced to await his chance again. When it came it was another clerk
who asked his order and Kendall passed over his blue check and said,
âRoot beer, please.â
âTwo?â
âNo, just one.â
âRoot beerâs only five cents,â was the reply. âThis is a ten cent
check.â
âOh,â Kendall stammered. âThen IââIâll take a chocolate egg-and-milk,
please.â
âThatâs fifteen cents,â replied the clerk impatiently.
âOhââerââerââice-cream soda!â blurted Kendall.
âWhat flavor?â
âErââerââwhat have you got?â
The clerk waved a hand toward the wall. âThere they are,â he said with
an air of long-suffering and a wink at a tall boy who was gathering up
four glasses of college ice. Kendallâs gaze swept the list unseeingly.
âVanilla, please,â he said meekly.
The tall boy pushed past him with an amused look and Kendall saw that
he bore his purchases to one of the small tables at the other side of
the store where three other youths sat awaiting him. When Kendallâs own
glass was handed to him, a long-handled spoon sticking out from the top
and a paper napkin thrust into the handle, he drew aside and looked for
a place to enjoy it at his leisure. At that moment a small table in a
far corner was vacated and Kendall made his way to it. A tired-looking
rubber plant drooped dejectedly above it and its surface was littered
with empty glasses and crumpled napkins. But Kendall pushed these
aside, placed his own delectable concoction before him and seated
himself.
It was awfully good, that ice cream, cold and sweet and fragrant with
vanilla, and just âsting-yâ enough with the soda. The first spoonful
brought content and the second joy. After that he decided to make it
last as long as possible, and so he leaned back in the little chair and
looked about him. At the next table, only a scant yard away, was the
tall youth and his three companions. Kendall supposed at first that
they were Yardley fellows, but their conversation was of things quite
foreign to his knowledge and when, presently, he saw that one of the
quartette wore a dark green cloth cap with a white B on it he realized
that he was looking for the first time on the enemy.
Broadwood Academy, Yardleyâs rival, was situated about two miles from
Greenburg in the opposite direction. Although slightly smaller than
Yardley in point of enrollment, it was counted among the foremost
preparatory schools of the East. Of course, at Yardley they made fun
of it; called it a âfresh water schoolâ because it stood inland, and
pretended that it was a joke. But for all of that Broadwood Academy had
long proved herself a worthy rival to the older school. Unlike Yardley,
Broadwood prohibited her students from going to Greenburg on all days
save Saturdays, unless by special permission, and as a consequence
Saturday afternoon found the main street well sprinkled with wearers of
the green.
Kendall viewed the four with new interest. They seemed rather
nice-looking fellows, he thought. But already the Yardley fealty
was beginning to take hold of him and he added to himself that they
lacked something that Yardley boys had. As though to offer evidence,
two Yardley fellows entered just then and called for sodas. Kendall
knew them both by sight and one by name. The taller of the pair was
Arthur Thompson, a First Class boy, captain of the Track Team and a
pole-vaulter of some reputation. He was trying for the Football Team,
too, for Kendall had seen him at practice several times. The other boy
was considerably younger; younger even than Kendall; later the latter
was to learn that his name was Harry Merrow. There _was_ a difference
between these two and the Broadwood quartette, although Kendall
couldnât have indicated it very clearly, and the difference, Kendall
stoutly held, was in favor of the Yardlians. They consumed their
beverages at the counter and presently passed out again to the street.
They had not gone unnoticed by the Broadwood fellows, however; Kendall
heard the latter discussing them in low voices.
âThatâs Thompson,â said one, âthe tall fellow. Heâs their crack
pole-vaulter. He was in wrong with the Office last year and couldnât
vault, but he will show us a thing or two next spring. They say heâs
about the best prep school chap in his line, and I heard that two or
three colleges have been making love to him.â
âHeâs a rangy looking customer,â said another. âI hope we donât run up
against a bunch like him to-night. I like fun, but Iâm not looking for
slaughter.â
âDonât shout,â counseled a third in a low voice.
âI wasnât. Besides, there isnât a Yardley fellow in sight.â
To make sure all four glanced about them. Their gaze passed over
Kendall unsuspectingly. It never occurred to any of them that the
countrified looking youth in ill-fitting pepper-and-salt clothes was
a Yardlian. Kendall was diligently consuming his ice-cream soda and
apparently was not even conscious of the quartetteâs existence.
âWell, anyhow,â pursued the remonstrant, âkeep your voice down. You
never know whoâs going to hear.â
âFor my part,â said another, âI wouldnât mind a little rough-house with
those chaps up there. They think theyâre the only thing in the state of
Connecticut, the conceited pups!â
âWhat time did Hurd say heâd have the carriage up there?â
âNine-thirty. I told him to stop about a hundred yards this side of the
corner and wait until we came; told him he might have to wait an hour.â
âWe wonât be able to get away until after ten. Whatâs the use having
him come so early?â
âSo he will be on time. If Iâd said ten heâd been there about
half-past, probably.â
âHow long will it take to get to Yardley?â
âThree-quarters of an hour, I guess. Weâll leave the carriage at the
foot of the hill and sneak up on foot.â
âHow many brushes did you get, Jim?â
âTwo,â replied the tall youth.
âWhatâs the matter with four, one for each of us?â
âYou can slap on the paint if you want to,â was the reply. âIâm not
crazy about it. But somebody has got to keep watch. Besides, if more
than two of us try to paint the pole weâll get in each otherâs way.â
âI think we ought to paint a few Bâs around, so theyâll know who did
it.â
âYes, that would be a fine scheme!â said another sarcastically. âYou
must want to get fired from school. Theyâd raise a row at Yardley
and weâd get found out. I donât half like the idea of that carriage,
anyway.â
âPshaw, they arenât going to tell at the livery stable. Besides, I
donât intend to walk all the way, and you can bet on that!â
âYou talk like a rabbit,â said a former speaker. âDonât you suppose
theyâre going to know who painted their old flagpole even if we donât
sign our name to the job?â
âThe fellows up there will know, but the faculty wonât be sure it
wasnât some of their own chaps. They have class colors up there, and
greenâs one of them.â
âGreen and white; Third Class,â corroborated another. âWouldnât it be a
peach of a joke if they blamed their own Third Class fellows for it?â
âDandy! Come on and letâs get back.â
They arose from their table and sauntered out. Their conversation had
been conducted for the most part in low tones and Kendall had missed a
word here and there, but more than enough had reached him to give him a
very good idea of the plot. What it all meant was beyond him, however.
Why those fellows should want to drive at ten oâclock at night all the
way to Yardley to paint a flagpole green he couldnât see. Evidently,
though, it was a sort of practical joke on Yardley. It seemed to him a
lot of bother for a small result.
He saw the Broadwood boys out of sight and then left the store himself.
He forgot all about the window displays on the way back along the
street, being busy with his thoughts. Of course he ought to tell
someone about the prank, but he wondered who. Harold Towne somehow
didnât recommend himself in such an emergency. Of course he had no
thought of telling the faculty; he had very well-settled ideas of right
and wrong, and to inform the faculty and probably get the conspirators
into trouble would be, in his opinion, talebearing pure and simple;
which is something that a right-minded boy holds in the deepest
contempt. Then he thought of Gerald Pennimore and of Dan Vinton, and he
had about made up his mind to seek the former when he reached school
when an entirely new and brilliant idea came to him. He stopped short
in the road and gave vent to an expressive whistle. Finally he said
âWhy not?â aloud, nodded his head twice and went on.
When he reached the school boundary at the foot of The Prospect he
stopped and studied the lay of the land.
âHere,â he said to himself, âis about where the carriage will stop.
Then theyâll get out andâââ
He paused there. The flagpole stood in the middle of The Prospect,
a natural terrace in front of Oxford Hall. He glanced up at it from
the foot of the hill. The stars and stripes hung motionless from the
halyards. To reach the pole the enemy might either follow the roadway,
which wound up the hill at the expense of distance, or ascend the
steep, grassy slope of The Prospect. Kendall believed they would do
the latter, since they would be out of sight until they reached the
top. Further to the left there was a footpath up the slope, but that
would bring them out almost in front of Merle and some distance from
their scene of operations. In any case, he decided, if the enemy was
to be foiled in its nefarious designs it must be when they had reached
the flagpole. Luckily, the entrance to Oxford Hall provided a perfect
place of concealment for the repulsing force. Kendall wondered whether
there would be a moon, recalled the fact that there had been none last
night and concluded that only the stars would be likely to illumine the
scene. He wanted to try the ascent up the slope himself just to see if
it was practicable, but several fellows were in sight returning from
Greenburg and he decided not to. Instead he made his way to Whitson
along the drive, found Number 21 deserted and, curling himself on the
window seat, set about perfecting his plan. Once he arose, crossed to
the table, picked up Haroldâs electric torch and dropped it into his
pocket. Then he went back to the window seat and his plotting.
CHAPTER VI
AND FOILS IT
Kendall thought Harold would never get to sleep that night. Hoping
that his roommate would follow the example, Kendall piled into bed at
half-past nine, but Harold, who usually yawned all through study hour
and got between the sheets as soon as possible afterwards, to-night
displayed a most unusual and annoying wakefulness. Even after he was
in bed and the light was out he wanted to talk, and only stopped when
Kendall simulated slumber by making hideous noises in his throat. Had
Harold been of an observant nature he would have remarked on the sudden
development of this accomplishment, for Kendall had never been known to
snore until to-night.
It was long after ten oâclock when regular breathing from across the
room told Kendall that his roommate was asleep. He waited five minutes
more to make certain and then arose softly, donned trousers and jacket
over his nightgownââKendall had not yet become so stylish as to affect
pajamasââand thrust his bare feet into his canvas âsneakers.â Making
certain that the electric torch was in his pocket, he opened the room
door noiselessly and peeked out. The dimly lighted hall was empty.
Leaving his door slightly ajar, he scuttled to the stairway and stole
down. Two of the faculty, Mr. Collins, the Assistant Principal, and Mr.
Frye, lived on the lower floor and Kendall had no desire to encounter
them. Mr. Collinsâs transom, however, was dark, and although a light
showed in Mr. Fryeâs study, it was further down the corridor and well
out of sound.
As he expected, the big outer door was locked. But the key was on the
inside and it turned without a squeak. The door was not so quiet, but
it is doubtful if it made nearly so much noise as Kendall thought. He
crept through with his heart in his throat, feeling like a burglar
leaving the scene of his depredations. In another moment he was
swallowed in the darkness.
Cautiously, treading on the grass and keeping as close as he might to
the front of the buildings, he made his way to Oxford. All was quiet
as yet. As his eyes became accustomed to the darkness he found that he
could see for some little distance. There was the flagpole, a grayish
streak in the gloom, and he thought he could make out the edge of The
Prospect beyond. Some stars showed, but for the most part they were
obscured by clouds. It was an ideal night for desperate deeds, Kendall
reflected, and he shivered pleasurably as he ensconced himself in the
doorway of Oxford. He wondered what time it was, but had no way of
determining. Suddenly a drumming sound reached him and he listened
acutely. It grew and grew and at last resolved itself into the rush
of a night freight bearing down from the east. Presently a ruddy glow
smote the darkness away to the left as the fireman fed coal to the
pounding engine. Then all was blackness again, and the roar of the
train as it rushed through the cut a little distance away filled the
night. After a moment Kendall could see the tail lights as the train
swept across the bridge into Greenburg. Hoarse and low came the distant
whistle of a steamer on the Sound. Then quiet settled down again.
Although the day had been unseasonably warm, the night held a chill
that was fast getting through Kendallâs scant attire. And the stones
felt very cold under the worn soles of his rubber âsneakers.â He wished
that the enemy would make its appearance and have done with it. And at
almost the same minute, as though in answer to his wish, there reached
him faintly the sound of a creaking carriage from beyond the slope.
The sounds ceased. Kendall, straining sight and hearing, waited, his
heart pounding against his ribs. Minute after minute passed. Time and
again his imagination peopled The Prospect with skulking figures, and
more than once he was certain that he heard voices. But when the enemy
did appear it was from an unsuspected quarter.
Kendall had been so sure that they would creep up over the edge of The
Prospect that he never took his eyes from that direction until a sound
at his left, the faintest sound imaginable, summoned his gaze. They had
come by the drive, after all, banking, doubtless, on the darkness to
remain undetected. When Kendall first saw them they were almost halfway
across the turf between the drive and the flagpole, which, from where
he hid in the entrance of Oxford, was a scant twelve yards distant.
Kendallâs hand, which had been clutching the electric torch for many
minutes, tightened and his finger sought the button. But he waited a
moment longer, waited while they reached the flagpole, four darker
blots in the darkness, and paused there. Then two of the forms
separated from the others, one advancing to the right and the other to
the left and kneeling, apparently, on the turf. Only once the sound of
a voice reached Kendall. Then he thought he heard the word âbrushâ
uttered in a low tone. And then up went his arm, his finger pressed on
the button andââ
Darkness as before!
The torch had failed to work! Frantically Kendall pressed the button,
but it was no use. What was the matter? The torch had been all right
earlier in the evening, for he had tested it more than once. Perhapsââ!
Hurriedly he unscrewed the lens at the end and felt of the tiny lamp
inside. That was it! It had become sufficiently unscrewed to break the
connection. He tightened it with trembling fingers, put back the lens,
again pointed it at the base of the flagpole and pressed the button.
A path of white light leaped before him into the darkness. In that
brilliant flood of radiance every object stood out sharp and distinct
as though in a flash of lightning. At the pole, frozen into immobility,
stood a boy with upraised arm. Beside him a second boy leaned to dip
his brush in the can of paint. At the edge of the radiance, to left and
right, the two watchers knelt on the grass like Indian scouts and gazed
with wide, frightened eyes into the glare of the torch. The picture
lasted but an instant. Then came one sudden exclamation of alarm and
four figures were scuttling for the edge of The Prospect, their
shadows fleeing before them. Then they were gone. Kendall raced after.
The light from the torch swept the long, steep slope. Two of the boys
had reached the bottom safely, but the others were rolling over and
over, pellmell, legs and arms thrashing the air as they went. But not a
sound escaped them. At the bottom they picked themselves up and plunged
into the blackness beyond the limits of the torchâs radiance.
[Illustration: âAt the pole stood a boy with upraised arm.â]
Kendall extinguished the light and stood for a moment in silent
laughter as he heard the creak of the carriage, followed the next
instant by the sound of galloping hoofs on the road. Then silence fell
again. Still chuckling, he retraced his steps across The Prospect. He
had had some idea at first of hiding the can of paint, but he didnât
know where to put it. And, now that the enemy was routed in disorder,
it behooved him to make good his own escape from a precarious position.
He wondered whether they had succeeded in putting any of the paint on
the pole before their flight, but decided that he had better not show
the light again. He would learn to-morrow.
He crept silently back to Clarke and breathed a sigh of relief when
he found the door ajar as he had left it. There had always been the
possibility that someone would come prowling around, find it undone
and relock it. But fortune, it seemed, was with him to-night. He pushed
open the door, entered, closed it behind him and noiselessly turned
the key again. Then he faced around and discovered himself looking
startledly into the eyes of the Assistant Principal!
Mr. Collins was clothed in a crimson bathgown, the tasseled cords of
which he was still in the act of tying with fumbling fingers. He had
evidently just arisen from bed, and hurriedly. Kendall, the electric
torch still clasped in his left hand, remained stock-still and regarded
the brilliant apparition with open mouth. It was the apparition that
spoke first.
âWhere have you been?â asked Mr. Collins sternly.
âJustââjust outside, sir,â replied Kendall vaguely.
âWhat for?â
âJustââjust to look around, sir; to get the air. IââI wasnât sleepy,
please, sir, and IââI took a walk.â
âHm; really?â Mr. Collinsâs tone was doubting. âDidnât you know it was
against the rules to leave the building after ten oâclock?â
âYes, sir, but IââI guess I forgot it.â
âYou guess you forgot it, eh? Whatâs that in your hand?â
Kendall looked down, saw the torch and regarded it with a vast
surprise, turning it this way and that in an evident effort to account
for it. Finally, though,
âThatâs an electric torch, sir,â he answered.
âHm; so I see. Whatâs your name?â
âBurtis, sir.â
âWhatâs your room?â
âTwenty-one, sir.â
âGo to it. Iâll talk with you to-morrow. Wait!â
Kendall âwaitedâ abruptly, almost losing his balance.
âAre you alone?â
âYes, sir.â
âNo one else with you?â
âNo, sir.â
âQuite certain of that?â
âOh, yes, sir.â
âVery well. Donât let this happen again, Curtis.â
âBurtis, please, sir. No, sir. Thank you, sir.â
âHm! Good night!â
But the encounter with Mr. Collins couldnât spoil the adventure.
Unaided and alone, reflected Kendall as he mounted the stairs to his
room, he had met the enemy and repulsed it! He had saved the school
from vandalism! He, Kendall Burtis, had done it, and from now on they
could no longer disregard his existence. He was a hero!
Of course, his thoughts continued as he crawled into bed without
disturbing the rhythmic breathing of his roommate, of course Mr.
Collins might lecture him about leaving the building after lock-up,
but what was a lecture in view of his triumph? Eventually Kendall fell
asleep to dream of the nightâs events in weird parody, little recking
of the mischievous possibilities of what is known as Circumstantial
Evidence!
CHAPTER VII
CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
Kendall awoke the next morning possessed by a pleasant feeling of
well-being for which he could not, during the first few moments,
account. Then recollection of the events of the preceding night came
and he smiled broadly and mentally patted himself on the back. He
jumped out of bed and dressed himself briskly, thinking that the world
was a very good place to be in. Harold, who was usually out of sorts in
the early morning, was visibly annoyed at Kendallâs high spirits.
âCut out that whistling, will you?â he begged between yawns. âYou give
me a headache, you do; always whistling; making a noiseâââ The words
died away in a growl as he patted the cold sponge gingerly over his
face. Kendall laughed.
âI guess you donât like music,â he said.
âMusic!â exclaimed the other with awful irony.
âYes, thatâs what the little birdies do in the morning, whistle. Iâm
playing Iâm a little birdie.â
âYouâre playing the silly fool,â growled Harold. âWhistling isnât
music. Besides, there isnât any tune to what you whistle!â
âI wasââwhat do you call it?ââimprovising,â replied Kendall. âAll great
musicians do it.â
âWell, do it outdoors then. I want peace in my own room.â
âAll right,â agreed Kendall good-naturedly. âIâm off. Youâd better
hurry or youâll be late for chapel.â
âDonât care if I am,â answered Harold defiantly. But he dropped the
towel and made a rush for his clothes as Kendall closed the door behind
him.
When Kendall reached the front of Whitson he observed a little group
of fellows at the flagpole. He hurried across to it. On the grass,
overturned, lay the paint can, with two brushes, sticky with green
paint, balanced on top. The brushes had been found on the grass nearby.
A glance at the pole told Kendall that he had not entirely saved it
from the enemy after all, for on the farther side two big streaks of
bright green marred the whiteness. The group was speculating excitedly.
Kendall listened:
âMust have been done early last night. The paintâs almost dry.â
âSome Third Class gang, of course. Greenâs their color.â
âThey ought to get their heads bumped together,â said an older boy.
âFacultyâll have something to say when they see it.â
There was an uneasy silence at that, and one or two of the smaller boys
edged away. But others joined the group and the theories kept coming:
âWonder why they didnât finish it. Must have been scared away, what?â
âOf course! Look at the paint pot. And Decker found one brush ten feet
away. They probably heard something and ran.â The speaker lowered his
voice. âKnow anything about it?â
Then the chapel bell stopped ringing and the fellows made a rush for
the entrance.
Kendall smiled to himself as he followed. He could tell them something
that would surprise them if he wanted to. Of course he would have to
tell someone or else he would get no credit for his act; and it is
only human nature to want credit for our good deeds. The best way, he
guessed, would be to just sort of mention it carelessly to someone.
When one fellow knew, it wouldnât take long for the story to get
about. And after thatââwell, at least theyâd know who he was!
But presently, when Mr. Collins reached the announcements for the day,
Kendall was reminded that life was not all roses.
âI will see the following students at the Office at twelve,â said Mr.
Collins. Then came a half-dozen names, and the last of all was Burtis!
Kendall left Oxford wondering what sort of punishment was to be meted
out to him. It seemed a very small crime, leaving the dormitory after
ten oâclock, and Kendall comforted himself with the conclusion that the
Assistant Principal would only give him a talking to. But now and then
during the forenoon the recollection of the coming interview caused a
qualm.
Meanwhile the school had worked itself into quite an excited frame of
mind over the green paint episode. Older fellows recalled the time
when, a couple of years ago, the front of Dudley had been discovered
decorated one morning with a legend in blue paint. But the boy who had
performed that startling feat could not be connected with the present
adventure for he had removed himself from Yardley a short while after.
Younger boys whispered of a mysterious secret society and hinted that
they had suspected its existence for some time. By noon the Third
Class had been made defendant. They might deny it as much as they
pleased, declared the other classes, but anyone could see that it was
their work. And, added some of the First Class oracles, the sooner they
discovered the culprits and made an example of them the better for
the reputation of the Third Class. All of which added to the rapidly
growing excitement. Of course the Third Class denied to a man all
knowledge of the affair. Well, perhaps not to a man, since Kendall
didnât put in any denial, the principal reason for which was that no
one thought of accusing him.
By the time breakfast was over the paint can and brushes had
disappeared and the janitor was busily at work removing the offending
stains. It was rumored that Mr. Collins himself had taken the paint
can, but when questioned the janitor only grunted. It was also rumored
that faculty was enormously incensed over the affair and had summoned a
special meeting that evening to consider what steps to take to discover
the miscreants, and that there was the dickens to pay generally!
Meanwhile the school waited with bated breath and enjoyed the sensation
hugely.
At twelve oâclock Kendall made his way down the long corridor of Oxford
and pushed open the ground-glass portal marked âOffice.â There were
two boys ahead of him in the outer room and Kendall sank into a chair
to wait. The school secretary glanced up across the top of his desk,
fixed Kendall speculatively for an instant and went back to his work.
The door of the inner office opened, Mr. Collins appeared, looked over
the callers, said âWatkins, please,â and disappeared again, one of the
boys at his heels. There was a solemnity about the proceeding that
Kendall found a trifle depressing. Five minutes later the same thing
was repeated and the second youth disappeared behind that forbidding
portal. Meanwhile three other boys had arrived and seated themselves
about the room. Then it was Kendallâs turn at last and he followed the
Assistant Principal across the threshold.
âTake a seat, please, Burtis,â said Mr. Collins, closing the door.
Kendall sat down in a chair at the end of the broad, flat-topped
mahogany desk and Mr. Collins lowered a shade by a few inches at one
of the windows and took his own chair. Then he looked at Kendall for a
moment in silence. Finally,
âWell, Burtis, suppose you tell me all about it,â he said in a kindly
tone. âThat will save a lot of questions.â
âWhy, sir,â replied Kendall, âthereââthere isnât anything much to
tell, sir. I didnât think about the rule, sir. I donât mean that I
didnât know it, onlyâââ
Mr. Collins frowned.
âNever mind about that part of it, Burtis. What induced you to do such
a silly, childish thing, my boy?â
âDoââdo what, Mr. Collins?â
âCome, come now! Donât beat about the bush, Burtis.â
âI donât understand what you mean, sir,â replied Kendall bewilderedly.
âIf you mean why did I go out after lock-upâââ
âI mean,â said Mr. Collins shortly, drumming with his finger-tips on
the top of the desk, âI mean why did you daub the flagpole with green
paint? What was your idea in doing such an idiotic thing?â
Kendall stared in amazement.
âWhyââwhyâââ
âWell? Come now, tell me all about it.â
âBut I didnât! You donât understand, sir! I didnât have anything to do
with that, Mr. Collins. It was the othâââ
He stopped abruptly. Mr. Collins shook his head impatiently:
âYou mean that you didnât actually do any of the painting? Does that
matter? You had a hand in the affair, Burtis. Who was with you?â
âNo one, sir,â answered Kendall, still bewildered.
âThat means you refuse to tell their names. Do you mind telling me
whether the thing was intended as a Halloweâen joke or as a mere piece
of vandalism?â
âWhy, sir, I think it was meant as a joke! But I didnât know it was
Halloweâen. They saidâââ
âWho said?â asked Mr. Collins sharply. Kendall was silent.
âCome, come, Burtis, donât be silly. Make a frank confession and it
will be easier for you.â
âIâd rather not say who they were, if you please, sir. But I know they
intended it as a sort of joke on the school. I tried to stop them, and
I did, but I was too lateâââ
âSo you were on the side of law and order, were you?â asked Mr. Collins
ironically. âVery fine of you, Burtis. Then you donât deny that you
were present at the time?â
âN-no, sir; that is, I wasââwas nearby.â
âWho did that electric torch you had belong to?â
âMy roommate, Harold Towne.â
âHm. Where was Towne at the time?â
âIn bed, sir.â
âYouâre certain of that?â
âYes, sir. I waited until he was asleep before I went out.â
âWere the others there when you arrived?â
âNo, sir.â
âYou had to wait for them? How long?â
âIââI donât know exactly; about twenty minutes, I guess.â
âWhere did you wait?â
âOn the steps of Oxford, sir.â
âI see. You had the paint with you then?â
âNo, sir! I didnât have anything to do with the paint. Youââyou donât
understand, Mr. Collins!â
âIâm trying to, my boy, but you wonât help me. You acknowledge that you
took part in the affairâââ
âNo, sir, really! I had nothing to do with it. I went out to try and
stop them.â
âThatâs rather a hard pill to swallow, Burtis. How did you know that
âtheyâ were going to do it?â
âI overheard them talking about it in the afternoon, sir.â
âWhy didnât you try to stop them then?â
âIââI didnât know them well enough.â
Mr. Collins was plainly puzzled. Kendall looked as though he were
telling the truth, but Mr. Collins had had many disillusionments in
his time. He moved impatiently. âBurtis,â he said, âhere are the clear
facts of the case. I found you last night at almost eleven oâclock
coming into the dormitory with an electric torch in your hand. This
morning the flagpole is found daubed with green paintââthe color of
the Third Class, of which you are a memberââand a paint pot and two
brushes are found nearby. As circumstantial evidence that looks pretty
conclusive, doesnât it?â
Kendall sadly acknowledged that it did. It was his first encounter with
Circumstantial Evidence and he was forced to own that Circumstantial
Evidence was getting the better of him.
âWell,â resumed the Assistant Principal, ânow you confess that you
were aware of the project, that you were present, know the other
participatorsâââ
âOnly by sight, sir!â interrupted Kendall.
âYou mean that you donât know their names?â
âYes, sir! No, sir; I mean that I donât!â
âUm; members of your class, however, are they not?â
âNo, sir.â
âWhat! Then why the green paint?â
âBecauseââbecauseâââ But Kendall couldnât answer that without
informing on the Broadwood fellows.
âWell?â
âIt wasnât used because it was a class color, sir; itââit had another
significance.â And Kendall found time to be secretly proud of that word
before Mr. Collins went on:
âNow you tell me that you went out there to prevent the others from
doing what they had planned to do. What method did you intend to use,
Burtis?â
âI meant to scare them away.â
âAh! And how did you propose to scare them away?â
âBy hiding and turning the searchlight on them, sir. And thatâs what I
did, only the light wouldnât work at first and they got some paint on
before it would work. And then they ran away.â
âYes? And in what direction?â
âIââIâââ Kendall stopped and observed Mr. Collins apologetically. âIâd
rather not tell any more, please, sir.â
âVery well, my boy, but bear in mind that you are making it harder for
yourself. Iâd like very much to believe your version of the story,
but, frankly, I canât. Now, wouldnât it be much more sensible to make
a clean breast of the whole thing? Is there any reason why the others
shouldnât take their share of punishment? Especially if, as you say,
they are the ones to blame and you are merely an innocent victim of
circumstances? Come, come, Burtis!â
âI couldnât make a clean breast of it, Mr. Collins, without telling
onââon the others. Andââand you donât think thatâs right, do you, sir?â
Mr. Collins smiled slightly. âThat question has been put up to me a
good many times, my boy, and Iâve always declined to answer it. Thereâs
something to be said on both sides. Itâs a question youâll have to
decide for yourself. I must tell you, though, that we have always
had very little patience for the sort of tomfoolery indulged in by
your party last night. Defacing property is a skulking, mean-spirited
business, Burtis. Now and then some prank comes to my attention for
which, although I am obliged to mete out punishment, I have a sort of
admiration. Ingenuity, daring, courage, all those compel admiration
even when displayed in a bad cause. But to sneak out at night under
cover of darkness and daub paint on another personâs property
has nothing of ingenuity nor courage about it. In short, Burtis,
the defacing of school property is held by this faculty as being
mischievous and contemptible and is always punished severely. I tell
you this that you may realize the seriousness of your position before
it is too late. Think it over a minute.â
âYou mean that Iââthat you will let me off if I tell who the other
fellows were?â asked Kendall unhappily.
âI mean that if you will make a clean breast of the whole affair,
fixing blame where it belongs, you will be dealt with much more
leniently than you will be if you persist inââin retarding justice,â
replied Mr. Collins kindly. âTake your time and think about it.â
He arose and passed into the front office, and Kendall heard him
address Mr. Forisher, the secretary:
âLet me have the card of Burtis, Third Class, please.â
He returned with the card in his hand. Kendall could see his name at
the top of it. It was evidently taken from the filing cabinet which
stood back of the secretaryâs desk. Mr. Collins laid the card on the
desk and looked inquiringly at Kendall. Kendall shook his head:
âIââIâd rather not, please, sir.â
âYouâre certain?â
âYes, sir. Iâd rather not tell.â
âIâm sorry.â Mr. Collins frowned slightly and picked up the card. For
a moment or two there was silence while he glanced over the record
it held. Then, âUpon my word, Burtis, this is too bad,â he exclaimed
annoyedly. âYou have good reports for the week from every instructor.
Mr. Bendix says you show first-class physical conditions and that you
are trying football. Hereâs a fine, clean card and now you go and spoil
it by such tomfoolery as last nightâs! Too bad, really! Wellâââ
He laid the card down again, drummed on the desk with his fingers once
or twice, swung his chair around so that he could look out the window
across the Yard and was silent. A minute passed. Kendall followed the
Assistant Principalâs gaze with his own and wondered how many pillows
were piled in the window seat of a room in Dudley, how you told time
by a sun-dial and what the little red discs on the golf course meant.
Then Mr. Collins swung around briskly and Kendall came back from his
dreaming.
âWell, Burtis,â said Mr. Collins in a very matter-of-fact tone of
voice, âI guess it will have to be probation.â
Kendall made no answer. He was very uncertain as to what probation
meant. He didnât like the sound of it, however. It sounded, he thought,
almost as bad as Circumstantial Evidence. Mr. Collins didnât leave him
long in ignorance, though:
âThat means that you must keep within school bounds, my boy, remain
in your room from supper time until chapel in the morning, have your
lessons perfect and abstain from athletics.â
âDoes it mean,â asked Kendall blankly, âthat I mustnât play football,
sir?â
âJust that; neither football nor anything else. And the rules oblige me
to notify yourâââhe glanced at the cardâââyour father, Burtis. I shall
write to him this evening. It would be well for you to do the same, I
think.â
âYes, sir. Thank you, sir.â Kendall was silent a moment, revolving his
cap in his hands, and looking very miserable. âIââIâm glad I didnât buy
any football clothes,â he murmured abstractedly. Mr. Collins smiled a
little:
âWell, thatâs all, Burtis, for this time, I think. Try and let this
teach you a lesson. Will you?â
âYes, sir.â Kendall got up slowly. Mr. Collins put out his hand and
Kendall placed his in it:
âBeing on probation doesnât prohibit you from paying me a call
sometimes, Burtis. You know my room. Come in and see me. Iâve got some
books you might like to see, and Iâm always glad to loan them to boys
who I believe will treat them well.â
âThank you, sir.â Kendall walked to the door. There, with his hand on
the door, he turned. âThereâsââthereâs just one thing, Mr. Collins,â
he said earnestly. âI know you had toââto do this. I guess my story
ainâtââI mean isnâtââvery likely. But I wish youâd just try your very
hardest, sir, to believe that I was telling the truth.â
âI will try, Burtis. If it is the truth, my boy, it will prove itself
some day. If it does you wonât be more pleased than I shall. Good
morning.â
âGood morning, sir.â
âOh, by the way, Burtis! I shall say nothing of this to anyone beyond
the faculty. Unless you speak of it yourself to your friends the reason
for your punishment is not likely to be known.â
When he passed Whitson the entrance was thronged with fellows awaiting
the dinner hour. It seemed to him that, as he went by, everyone turned
and looked at him, and he could imagine their expressions of amused
contempt. To be sure, Mr. Collins had seemed to think that the matter
would be kept secret, but it seemed to him that everyone must know
already. He passed by on his way to his room with lowered head. As a
matter of fact, very few noticed him, and none connected him with the
green paint episode.
In his room Kendall washed up for dinner and then sat down on the edge
of his bed and strove to think it over. He was very glad that Harold
was not there. It would be nice to tell somebody about it, but surely
not him. There was the electric torch on the table. He wondered if it
would light if he tried it. Funny how it had come unscrewed last night.
He would never forget the scene when the light had streamed out across
The Prospect. He wondered what the four Broadwood fellows thought of
it; what explanation they had fashioned to account for the sudden
surprise; whether they connected it with the boy who had sat next to
them in the drug store.
Then he pulled himself up. Why, he wasnât thinking of his misfortune
at all! He was thinking of what had happened whenââwhen he had been
a hero. He felt mighty little like a hero to-day! Probation! No more
football! That was tough. Worse than that, though, was the thought
of his fatherâs disappointment, and his motherâs. He must write that
letter and tell them the real facts of it. It wasnât doing very well,
he reflected ruefully, to get on probation within the first fortnight
of school!
Wellââ! A fellow had to eat, though, probation or no probation, and he
suddenly became aware of a very healthy appetite. After all, he hadnât
_really_ done anything very bad, and he _had_ told the truth to Mr.
Collins, andââand, oh, shucks, he was going to dinner!
CHAPTER VIII
THE FIRST GAME
Kendall wrote the letter to his father that afternoon, about the time
he was accustomed to chase the pigskin. He felt rather better after
the letter was finished, and he took it down and dropped it into the
letter box in front of Oxford Hall with a sigh of relief. At least, his
parents would know that his conscience was clear. He wondered if his
father would be very angry with Mr. Collins! To anticipate a little,
however, Mr. Burtisâs reply when it reached his son was not entirely
satisfactory to that youth. In the first place, asked that worthy
Puritan, why had Kendall been sitting around in a drug store? Had he
joined the town loafers? Satan, reminded Farmer Burtis, was still
finding mischief for idle hands to engage in. Bluntly he suggested that
Kendall remain at school and study his lessons and not go gallivanting
into the city. As for the punishment, he guessed it wouldnât do Kendall
any harm to have to stay around the school and keep away from the
football field; he had heard of boys getting their arms and legs
broken playing football!
Kendallâs mother, however, wrote a letter full of sympathy for Kendall
and indignation at Mr. Collins. That letter was like a pat on the
back. The only unsatisfactory part of it was where Mrs. Burtis said
she didnât see why Kendall needed to have shielded those bad boys who
really merited the punishment. Kendall was for a moment disappointed
in his mother. But he presently âguessed that a woman doesnât look
at those things in quite the way a man does,â and viewed her more
leniently. When he replied he explained at great length that it would
have been a most dishonorable action to have revealed the identity of
the Broadwood fellows, and hinted that nothing short of boiling oil or
melted lead would ever induce him to speak. Then he struck the pose
of a martyr for a page or so and inscribed himself âYour loving son,
Kendall.â
But these letters and replies came later, and we are getting ahead of
our story.
As Mr. Collins had suggested, there was no reason why Kendallâs
schoolmates should know of his probation, and so Kendall kept the
knowledge to himself. There were times when the temptation to tell
Harold was strong, times when Kendall felt the need of talking it over
with somebody and getting sympathy. But Harold was not what Kendall
called a very sympathetic soul, and so the secret was kept. At the
end of two or three days the incident of the green paint ceased to
interest the school and for the present it remained a mystery. Other
things happened to engage the attention of the fellows. There was first
scrimmage one Thursday afternoon, when they were allowed to get for
the first time some idea of what the line-up of the football team was
to be. And then, two days later, came the first game of the schedule,
a contest of four eight-minute periods with Greenburg High School. It
was a warm afternoon and players and spectators alike sweltered in
the sun. Kendall witnessed his first real game of football and found
it interesting, although as a matter of fact it was rather a dull and
loosely played contest. Neither team had âgot togetherâ as yet, and
fumbles, mixed signals and other misplays were frequent on both sides.
Yardley took the lead in the second period by seizing advantage of a
Greenburg fumble on the latterâs twenty yards and from there working
over the goal line for a touchdown from which Wallace Hammel missed
a try at goal by some six yards. In the next period Greenburg tied
the score, missing an even easier goal, and in the last period of
play Stearns, right half-back, got away around Greenburgâs end for a
sixty-yard run and another score. Hammel again missed a goal and the
final score stood 10 to 5.
Nobody was unduly elated over the showing of the Yardley team,
although, as Tom Roeder pointed out that evening when they were
talking it over in Danâs room, they hadnât done so badly considering
everything. âLook at the heat, Dan! Thunder, I had a regular cascade
running down my back all the time! Bet you I lost five pounds!â
âWhat did the scales say?â asked Arthur Thompson, who, a new recruit
that fall, was after Roederâs or Stearnsâs position.
âOh, they said a pound and four ounces,â replied Tom carelessly. âBut
they were probably mistaken!â
âSandy Fogg played a dandy game at center,â said Gerald.
âGood on defense,â agreed Dan, âbut he was mighty slow on getting into
the attack.â
âHe has too much fat on,â said Tom. âOr he did have before we began
playing. I guess heâs some lighter now.â
âWhat the dickens was the matter with Wallace Hammel?â asked Arthur.
Tom shrugged his shoulders.
âSearch me. Both those goals were easy enough, and he had all the time
he wanted. Heâs feeling rather rotten about it to-night; peevish as you
please; I simply had to get out of the room.â
âHe will come around all right after awhile,â said Dan. âBut I
certainly wish we had two or three good drop-kickers.â
âSimms did pretty good work last year,â suggested Arthur.
âSimms had a record of five goals last season,â replied Dan, âout of
about sixteen chances. What we need is a fellow we can depend on. We
need better punters than weâve got, too. Ridge is fair, but if he gets
put out of a game itâs up to Wallace or me, and weâre neither of us
much good. Payson says heâs going to find some kickers if he has to go
over the school with a fine-tooth comb, but I donât know where heâs
going to get them.â
âThe trouble is,â said Tom, âthat you canât develop good punters and
drop-kickers in a season, and those we had all graduated. Weâre going
to miss Loring like anything. He was a born punter, Alf was.â
âHe was a born everything in the football line,â said Arthur.
âI wish he had his job back again,â sighed Dan.
âIâll tell you who was the dandy kicker,â said Tom, âand thatâs
Kapenhysen, Dan. Remember how he used to send âem off?â
âI sure do. I wish I could get him back here this fall to take charge
of the punters. I believe Iâll write and ask him.â
âHe couldnât come, I guess,â said Tom. âHeâs on the Yale Varsity this
year.â
âI know, but he might get away for a week just before the Broadwood
game and put the finishing touches on for us. I donât believe Kap will
make the first team this season, Tom; heâs got too many good men to
beat.â
âPerhaps not. Better ask him, anyhow. By the way, Gerald, I thought you
were going to play this fall.â
âI thought so, too, but Dan wouldnât let me.â
âHeâs still trying to boss you? Kick him in the shins, Gerald. Why
wonât he let you?â
âBecause,â replied Dan, âMr. Pennimore is on the Cross-Country Team and
they need his services more than we do.â
âYou donât know, Dan,â laughed Gerald. âI may have the making of a
great football player in me.â
âBetter stick to your trade, though,â said Tom. âHowâs the Cross-Country
Team coming on?â
âHard at it every afternoon now,â Gerald answered. âWeâve got a dandy
string of runners this year, fellows. Broadwood wonât have a look-in.â
âLarry Goodyearâs captain, isnât he?â asked Arthur.
âYes. He wants to get Nordham to come in and make it a three-cornered
race this year. I wish she would.â
âWonât she?â asked Dan.
âI donât know yet. They havenât answered Goodyearâs letter. Say,
Arthur, Harryâs doing pretty well. I suppose he told you he finished
eighth yesterday?â
âHe said something like that but I didnât believe him.â
âWhoâs Harry?â inquired Tom.
âYoung Merrow, Arthurâs roommate and fidus,â Dan replied.
âFido would be better,â laughed Gerald. âHeâs always at Arthurâs heels.
Iâll bet you persuaded him to try for the Cross-Country Team, Arthur,
so you could get away from him a minute.â
âYou guessed it, son. Iâm going over to Oxford. Anyone coming my way?â
Tom Roeder decided that his path led in that direction and the two boys
departed together. After they had gone Dan asked:
âDid you mean that about young Merrow, Gerald? I thought he was a bit
of a duffer.â
âHe was. Arthur used to have to drive him out of the room every
afternoon to make him take exercise. But Arthur seems to have knocked
some sense into him somehow. I was awfully surprised last week when I
found him out for the Cross-Country Team. He told me yesterday that
heâd never done anything but play a little tennis, but heâs taken hold
in good shape.â
âI suppose,â observed Dan, âthat Merrow is Arthurâs penalty for
heroism.â
âThatâs right. Ever since Arthur pulled Harry out of the lake that time
Harryâs stuck to him like a brother.â
âYou had a hand in it, too. Itâs lucky he didnât decide to stick to you
instead of Arthur. By the way, speaking of protégés, your friend down
the hall has got tired, I notice.â
âWho is that, Dan? Oh, I remember. You mean heâs given up football?â
âYes, I was looking over the list this afternoon and saw his name
scratched off. Cowles says heâs stopped coming. Another ânatural-born
playerâ gone wrong.â
âThatâs rather funny. I told you, didnât I, that I had him in one
afternoon? He seemedââwell, not the sort of fellow to quit. I meant to
look him up again. I rather liked him. But this cross-country work has
kept me busy. Did he show anything in practice?â
âN-no, I believe not. I think you prophesied quite a career for him,
didnât you?â
âI said maybe,â laughed Gerald. âThere was something about the chap
that made meââsort of believe in him.â
âI remember there was something,â Dan agreed. âWell, he will probably
find himself in the course of time. Evidently football isnât what he
was looking for. Perhaps itâs just as well he dropped out, though, for
the first cut comes next week and I guess most of Holmesâs ârookiesâ
will retire to private life.â
âWhat does Payson think of the outlook, Dan?â
âSays itâs an average one. Thereâs no one very startling in sight. That
rather pleases Payson, though; you know he doesnât fancy âstars.â Says
heâd rather have a team of common or garden variety of peggers.â
âI thought Billy Norton was considered a âstar,ââ said Gerald with a
smile.
âHe isââby Billy Norton,â replied Dan dryly. âHeâs a star that will
suffer eclipse if he doesnât get down out of the clouds and play the
game. Sayer is hot after him these days.â
âSayer,â mused Gerald. âYes, he was rather good last year in the Porter
game. Letâs see, we dropped Porter this year, didnât we?â
âPorter? No, we dropped Brewer. We have seven games instead of eight.
Sevenâs enough, too. Well, letâs go over to Cambridge and see whatâs
doing. I havenât been near it yet.â
Cambridge and Oxford were the two school societies, with rooms on the
top floor of Oxford Hall. On their way down the stairs they met a boy
coming up. Gerald nudged Dan.
âHere he is now,â he whispered.
The boy was Kendall, and as he reached the others he glanced up, said
âHow do you do?â and would have gone by had not Gerald spoken.
âHow are you getting on?â he asked.
âPretty well, thanks.â Kendall paused on the step above.
âHowâs football coming?â asked Dan.
âNot very well. I gave it up.â
âThat so? Iâm sorry. What was the trouble?â
âNothing much. IââI just thought Iâd better.â
Dan smiled and nodded and started on, but Gerald, yielding to a sudden
impulse, said: âI thought you were coming to see me, Burtis. Drop in
some evening. Iâm not in much in the afternoon now. Will you?â
âThanks, IââIâd like to.â
âGood stuff! Donât forget, then.â
At the doorway Dan turned with a quizzical smile. âWhy?â he asked.
Gerald looked puzzled and shook his head. âI donât know. But thereâs
something about him thatââinterests me. I donât knowâââ
âMaybe itâs his hair,â chuckled Dan. âThereâs plenty of it.â
âI must get him to have it cut,â replied Gerald soberly. Then after a
moment, he exclaimed triumphantly: âI know what it is!â
âWhat what is?â asked Dan.
âItâs his mouth, Dan. Ever notice it? Itâs always on the point of
laughing and it never does it. I want to see him laugh!â
âYouâre a queer duffer,â Dan answered with amusement as they entered
Oxford. âI believe Curtis, or whatever his name is, has hypnotized
you!â
CHAPTER IX
NEW ACQUAINTANCES
Probation didnât weigh as heavily on Kendall as he had thought it was
going to. It was hard at first to reconcile himself to giving up the
football career he had dreamed of for two years, or, rather, since he
meant to try again as soon as he might, to postponing it. But after a
week or so the first sting of disappointment passed. At least, he was
not barred from watching practice, even if he couldnât take part in it.
As for the Saturday afternoon games, he missed none of them. And when,
on the thirteenth of October, St. Johnâs Academy played Yardley to no
score game Kendall was as bitterly disgruntled as anyone. The plain
truth of the matter was that Yardley should have won that contest by
two scores. That she didnât was due to two things: Wallace Hammelâs
inability to kick a field goal from the twenty-five yard line and
Simmsâs headless generalship when, in the third period, Yardley had the
ball on St. Johnâs twelve yards on a first down. Dan was not playing.
If he had been Simmsâs signal for a forward pass would have been
countermanded. The quarter-back got the throw off in good style, but
Norton, who was to have taken it, ran too far across the field and the
ball went into the eager arms of a St. Johnâs player who romped half
the length of the field with it before Simms, striving heroically to
avert the consequences of his error of judgment, brought him down from
behind. After that Holmes was sent in at quarter with instructions to
pound at the opponentâs line for a touchdown. But St. Johnâs managed to
stave off defeat until the final whistle came to her rescue, and went
home proud and elated.
Yes, even Kendall, who had had scant opportunity to study the strategy
of the game, saw where the trouble lay and groaned impotently more than
once as Yardleyâs chances of victory were thrown away. What especially
surprised him was Hammelâs failure to kick that goal. The pass from
Fogg, who played center, was perfect, the dark blue line held like a
wall and he had all the time in the world. And yet the ball missed
the left upright by a good six feet. Why, Kendall was almost certain
that he could have done better than that himself, although he had
never tried to drop-kick a goal! He wondered on the way up the hill if
anyone would object if he brought his football down there some morning
between recitations and tried a few goals. He didnât believe they
would. He made up his mind to do it.
And so on Monday morning, after mathematics, he hurried to his room,
got his old stained and frayed pigskin and went down to the gridiron.
There was not a soul in sight at that time of day. It had rained in
the night and the ground was soft and slippery. Kendall started at
the fifteen yards and missed the crossbar by five feet or so. At
twenty yards he got over once and missed twice. It wasnât as easy as
it had looked. At twenty-five yards, however, he had less difficulty.
Ten tries netted him six goals, which wasnât so bad considering that
Kendall hadnât kicked a football for a month or more.
After that he took the ball to the side of the field and tried angles.
Naturally, he wasnât overly successful at this, but he managed several
times to get the pigskin across the bar, and he became so interested
that he quite lost track of time and the hour bell found him far from
Oxford and he had to hide the football in a corner of the tennis shed
and sprint all the way up the hill.
He was back again the next morning, and several other mornings that
followed and, although there was none to watch or applaud, he didnât
get tired of conquering the crossbar with the dirty old brown ball.
When, one day he managed to put it over from placement squarely on the
thirty-five yard line he was very well pleased indeed. Place-kicking
was something he had known nothing of before coming to Yardley, and he
had to solve its problems unaided. But solve them he did. He learned
to judge the strength of the wind and allow for it, to point the ball
according to distance and direction, to keep his eye on the spot to be
kicked. Doubtless he would have progressed more rapidly with someone
to teach him, but he got along remarkably well alone. An expert would
have instructed him to have the laced side of the ball toward him so as
to use the lacings as a guide in sighting, and Kendall had to discover
the advisability of that unaided. And so the morningâs half hour of
goal-kicking became quite a regular event for Kendall, and almost every
dayââalways when the weather allowedââhe was down on the field after
mathematics recitation swinging that long right leg of his and rapidly
wearing the leather off the toe of his shoe. And then one forenoon when
he was trudging up the hill with the pigskin tucked under his arm it
suddenly occurred to him that perhaps for almost a fortnight he had
been unintentionally disobeying rules. That afternoon he sacrificed a
quarter of an hour of watching practice and found Mr. Collins in the
office.
âYou know, sir,â explained Kendall, âyou told me I mustnât take part in
athletics, and Iâve been practicing goal-kicking. Was that wrong, sir?â
âHm,â said Mr. Collins, placing the tips of his fingers together and
frowning intently for a moment. âErââon your own hook, so to speak,
Burtis?â
âOh, yes, sir. I just wanted to see if I could do it.â
âWell, no, I donât think you are guilty of any wrong, my boy, for you
say you didnât think about it. In fact, Iâm not sure that what youâve
been doing is an infringement of the rules. Still, I think that, in
order to be on the safe side, you had better drop it. Iâm sorry, but
rules are rules, eh?â
âYes, sir,â replied Kendall with a sigh. Then, after a momentâs
hesitation, âCould you tell me, Mr. Collins, how much longer probation
is going to last?â he asked.
Mr. Collins shook his head gently. âNo, I canât. I donât know, and it
would be wrong to tell you if I did. But I will say that you have been
doing very good work, Burtis, and I think I may assure you that if you
keep it up your term of probation will terminate before very long.â
âYes, sir, thank you.â
âYouâre very welcome. By the way, you havenât been to see me yet, have
you? Or was I out when you called?â
âNo, sir, I havenât.â
âI wish you would. What are you doing this evening after supper?
Couldnât you drop down and see me for a while? Thereâll be one or two
other fellows there, probably. We have a sort of a club on Friday
nights. Just to talk things over, you know, and exchange ideas. Perhaps
you may know the others; if not youâll want to. Better drop in for a
while, Burtis.â
âThank you, sir, Iâd like to very much,â replied Kendall gratefully.
And yet when the time came he felt rather shy about it and it was
nearly eight when he finally descended the stairs and knocked at the
door of Mr. Collinsâs study. It was the Assistant Principalâs voice
that bade him enter. The room was very comfortable and homelike. The
walls were lined with bookshelves, there were many easy-chairs, most
of them turned toward the hearth where the tiniest of soft coal fires
was burning, and the light was supplied by a squatty lamp on the big
table so shaded that the upper part of the room was left in a mellow
twilight. Mr. Collinsâs âone or two other fellowsâ were in reality
five. As Kendall was introduced to them they stood up and their faces
were blurred in the pleasant gloom. But two faces he recognized. One
belonged to Arthur Thompson and the other to Cowles, the manager of
the Football Team. The remaining three boys, all First Class fellows,
were Tooker, Sanford and Abercrombie. Tooker was short and round and
smiling; Sanford, tall, dark and earnest, and wore tortoise-shell
spectacles which gave him the appearance of a benignant owl;
Abercrombie was a small chap with light hair and a high-pitched voice
whose somewhat buttonish nose was straddled by a pair of glasses which
were forever dropping off when he talked and being dragged back at the
end of a length of black silk cord.
Everyone seemed very affable and gracious; those within reach shook
hands with a hearty grip. Cowles recalled the fact that Kendall had
come out for football and mentioned it, asking in the next breath why
he had deserted them. Luckily Kendall was spared an answer to this as
the tall and earnest Sanford was remarking that he had once known a
chap named Burtis in New York.
âMaybe a relative of yours?â he queried.
Kendall, taking the deep chair pushed forward by the host, expressed
his doubts of that.
âAn odd name, though, if you donât mind my saying so,â continued Teller
Sanford. âOne doesnât encounter it often, I think.â
âProbably an accident,â remarked Ned Tooker. âThe name was Curtis,
do you see, and the printer got mixed and set up a B for a C. Simple
enough. Merely a typographical error.â
âItâs no funnier than your name, Ned,â observed Arthur Thompson. âI
suppose, by the same token, your name was once Hooker?â
âNo,â replied Ned gravely, âit was formerly Ted Nooker, but owing to an
unfortunate habit of mineâââ
Everyone laughed, and Kendall, without knowing what at, found himself
laughing with the rest. Ned waited gravely and continued:
âAs I was saying, or about to say when so rudely interrupted, owing to
an unfortunate habit I have of transposing the first letters of words
it became Ned Tooker. You get me, I trust, gentlemen?â
âWe get you, Ned. It must be confusing, however, for your folks.â
âIt was at first. But I prevailed on the family to adopt my version and
now weâre all Tookers. Of course, it _took us_ some time to getâââ
But he was drowned in a howl of agony.
âMr. Gaddis told us in class last year,â said Abercrombie, dropping
his glasses from his nose and rescuing them, âthat the pun was the
lowest form of humor. I agree with him.â
Ned Tooker bowed deeply. âI shall inform him of your agreement, Mr.
Abercrombie. He will be glad to learn it.â
âI donât see why people are so down on puns,â said Cowles stoutly.
âIâve heard some mighty good ones.â
âAs far as I am concerned,â said Mr. Collins, âI think a good pun is
just as funny as any other form of humor. Sometimes I conclude that
persons who frown on punningââand Iâm not referring to Mr. Gaddisââare
incapable of doing it. The pun has its place. Dr. Holmes, if you
recollect, remarks that the pun can claim the parentage of Homer.
Doubtless you can all recall instances when that worthy gentleman
has descendedââor arisen, all according to the point of viewââto
paronomasia.â
âI beg pardon, sir?â exclaimed Ned Tooker.
Mr. Collins laughed. âParonomasia, Tooker; thatâs the scientific term
for it.â
âSounds like a disease,â observed Sanford.
âIâve known cases where it amounted to that,â replied Mr. Collins. âAnd
speaking of Oliver Wendell Holmes, the good doctor was very fond of
punning, and some he perpetrated are pretty bad. In one place among
his verses youâll find the following:
ââHard is the job to launch the dangerous pun,
A _pun_-job dangerous as the Indian one.â
That seems to show a good deal of effort, and I take it that a pun
should be launched on the spur of the moment. A studied pun is heavy,
and a heavy joke is as bad as a heavy biscuit.â
âI remember reading somewhere once,â said Cowles, âabout a fellow who
was challenged to find a pun for Mephistopheles. He replied that it was
a hard thing for a man to do, but that he âMay if heâs tough, Elise.ââ
âWow!â exclaimed Tooker. âDid they slay him?â
âHistory doesnât record,â Cowles acknowledged.
âTalking about names,â said Sanford, âI think one of the oddest I ever
heard was Sauerpickle.â
âThereâs a fellow in our town named Twelvetrees,â offered Arthur
Thompson.
âWhen I was a boy,â said Mr. Collins, âmy mother, I recall, used to
tell of an old lady whose name was Hepzibah Gandel. That has always
seemed to me about as odd a name as there is.â
âThereâs an old man who lives near us,â hazarded Kendall, âwhose name
is Meshach Fish.â
âNot bad,â drawled Tooker judicially. âReminds me of my friend Shadrach
Rowe. They called him Shad Rowe for short.â
âNed, that will be about all from you,â laughed Arthur.
âYou donât believe it?â protested Tooker. âWhy, the manâs a prominent
citizen of my town; keeps a shoot and boe storeâââ
There was a laugh at that. Tooker waited patiently and resumed. âHe
doesnât mind being called Shad; makes no bones about it!â
The talk became more serious after that, and the subjects ran all the
way from Football to Elective Courses. At nine oâclock Mr. Collins
disappeared and returned presently with a tall pitcher of lemonade and
a tin box of biscuits. The conversation again became jocular, Tooker
starting it with:
âWell, Teller, I was right after all, wasnât I?â
âAbout what?â asked Sanford gravely.
âAbout the lemonade,â replied Tooker with the straightest of faces.
âYou said you didnât think Mr. Collins would give us lemonade to-night
and guessed you wouldnât come. I told you he would, though!â
Sanfordâs shocked denials were drowned in the laughter of the rest,
from which Tookerâs voice emerged again:
âââVery wrong, I think, to consider your stomach as much as you do,
Teller. Iâll have another biscuit, please, Arthur.â
Kendall found Ned Tooker fascinatingly amusing. Kendall was not much of
a joker himself, but he was blessed with a generous sense of humor and
he enjoyed Nedâs ridiculous remarks thoroughly. Presently the little
gathering broke up, Tooker tugging at Sanfordâs sleeve with one hand
and exhibiting the empty pitcher with the other:
âCome on, Teller, itâs all gone; honest; look for yourself.â
Sanford informed him that he was a âsilly ass.â
âI deny it,â replied Ned. âI may lack tact, but Iâm not an ass. Good
night, Mr. Collins.â
âGood night,â laughed the host. âCome again, fellows.â
âComing along, Ned?â called Abercrombie from the entrance.
âNo, Iâm going home with this chap. I want to hear more about his
friend Meshach Fish.â The others laughed and went out and Ned turned to
Kendall. âMind if I go up with you and converse awhile? Those fellows
are so flippant that I really feel the need of a few moments of serious
conversation to compose my mind.â
CHAPTER X
NED TOOKER
Kendall, striving to hide his surprise, replied that he would be very
glad to have Tooker come up.
âThank you,â replied Ned, leading the way. âYouâre in 21, arenât you? I
used to be in 17 myself last year.â
âWhat made you leave?â asked Kendall politely.
âCustom, Burtis, custom. Weâre all slaves to it. In your senior year
you have the inestimable privilege of rooming in Dudley. Itâs always
done and so I did it. Left a perfectly comfortable, well-heated
room and went over there to freeze in a little two-by-twice
hole-in-the-wall. Here we are! Sure you donât mind my sticking around
awhile?â
âGlad to have you,â replied Kendall, observing with satisfaction that
Harold was out. âThat big chairâs the most comfortable.â
But Tooker chose a straight-backed chair, explaining gravely that he
believed in mortifying the flesh whenever possible. He took up a book,
glanced at the title and laid it down again:
âMayne Reid. I never read him. Is he good?â
âThatâs not mine; itâs Towneâs.â
âTowne? Harold Towne?â
Kendall nodded. Ned reached a hand across the table to him. Kendall, at
a loss, took it, and Ned gave him a long, hard pressure.
âMy poor boy,â he sobbed, âmy poor, poor boy!â
Then he dropped Kendallâs hand, placed his own hands behind his head,
leaned back in his chair and surveyed the room.
âQuite chaste,â he murmured. âI recognize some of the works of art.
That chromo effect over there used to belong to Steve Woods when I was
a boy here. And, yes, methinks yon cast-steel engraving was once in
my own abode. I sold it to Gus Cooke for fifty cents. We were never
friends afterwards. I suspect Gus changed quarters to get away from it.â
âI donât think itâs so bad,â said Kendall.
âYou donâtââat first. Itâs a peculiar picture, that one. I recall
that I really liked it myself at first. Then it became aââa sort of
nightmare. Well, never mind the picture. Tell me, what are you doing
here, Burtis?â
âDoing here?â repeated Kendall puzzledly.
âYes, what is your Great Object? Some of us, you know, come to study
our way into college, some of us come to meet fellows who will be
useful to us in later life, some of us come to play football or
baseball and some of usââsome few of us, Burtis,ââcome to Uplift and
Better our Fellow Beings.â
âI guess I just came to learn things,â answered Kendall with a smile.
âWhat did you come for?â
âTo Uplift and Better,â responded Ned sadly. âIt has been a hard task,
however. Still, I have done some good, I have had my victories, Burtis.
You should have known Teller Sanford before I took him in hand. It was
pitiful, absolutely pitiful.â
âWhy?â asked Kendall, not knowing whether the other was in jest or
earnest.
âNo sense of humor at all,â replied Ned confidentially. âIntense!
Serious! Heavy! Oh, I donât pretend that he is completely reclaimed
yet, but thereâs a big improvement. Everyone says so. It takes time.â
âDo you room with him?â asked Kendall.
âYes. It was the only way. Constant association, you know.â
âI see,â said Kendall soberly. Ned smiled. Then,
âDo you know, Burtis, I like you,â he exclaimed approvingly. âYou
have a sense of humor. One wouldnât suspect it, though. Youâre such
a serious-looking chap until that smile gets in its work around your
mouth. I daresay thatâs the New England of it. New Englanders hate to
smile if they can get out of it any way, donât they?â
âDo they?â asked Kendall. âI never thought that. Where do you live?â
âMe? Oh, Iâm one of âem; thatâs how I know. I live in a little town
called Boston. Some of my folks founded the place, I believe. You come
from Maine, I think Mr. Collins said. How do you like our school?â
âVery much, onlyâââ
âOnly?â prompted Ned.
Afterwards Kendall was very much surprised at himself, but now there
was something about the caller that loosed Kendallâs tongue, and almost
before he knew it he had confided the fact that he was on probation.
Ned Tooker whistled softly. Then he smiled.
âBurtisââby the way, what did you say your first name was when you
asked me to call you by it?â
âKendall,â laughed the other.
âGreat!â exclaimed Ned. âWhy donât you do it oftener?â
âDo what?â
âLaugh. Itâs very becoming.â
âWhy, IââI donât know.â
âYes, you do; itâs because youâre a New Englander. You ought to
practice laughing. I had to. Now I can do it almost without an effort.
Where were we? Oh, yes, you said your name was Kendall. Thatâs a good
name, Bendall Kurtis. Mineâs Ted Nookââno, I mean Ned Tooker. Call me
Ned. I foresee that weâre going to be pals, Curt.â
Kendall tried to think of something to say, and Ned came to his rescue:
âI know what youâre thinking. Youâre thinking that Iâm too blamed
friendly. Oh, yes, you are! But donât let it worry you. I used to be
like you before I threw off the shackles of New England reserve. If I
liked a fellow I threw bricks at him. Now if I like him I say so right
out in my engaging manner and it saves time. But you havenât told me
yet what you did to get the Office down on you.â
âIââI donât believe I can,â said Kendall. âIt isnât my secret alone,
you see.â
âDine and fandy!â cried Ned. âCurt, I love you! You not only have a
sense of humor, but you possess a Great Secret. Iâm positively daffy
about secrets. Keep it to yourself as long as you can, but I give you
fair warning that Iâll have it out of you sooner or later. I shall
live for nothing else, Curt!â
âWhy do you call me Curt?â asked Kendall.
âWhy not? Your name is Bendall Kurtisâââ
âItâs Kendall Burtis,â answered the other with a smile.
âI canât say that. To me you are Bendall Kurtis; Curt for short; short
and curt. Whatâs that I see? A football?â
Kendall acknowledged that it was.
âOh, do you play?â
âI was trying to whenâââ
âWhen the sword fell. Footballâs a good game. Iâve sometimes thought I
had the making of a good player.â
âHave you never tried?â
âOh, yes, many times, but the coaches didnât share my estimate of my
ability. Nowadays Iâm reduced to golfââand a little tennis.â
âIâve never seen anyone play golf,â admitted Kendall.
âYou shall. Not only that, Curt, but Iâll make a golfer of you. Iâll
teach you the game. What are you doing to-morrow? No, thereâs a
football game to-morrow. Then Monday?â
âWhyââwhy, nothing.â
âFirst lesson at four promptly. You have no clubs, I suppose. Naturally
you wouldnât have. Very stupid of you, Ned. Iâll supply those
necessary utensils.â
âI donât think I could ever learn,â said Kendall doubtfully. âYou hit a
ball around with a stick, donât you?â
âPoetically put, my boy! You hit a ball around with a stick! You shall
see for yourself.â He drew out a handsome gold watch, looked at it and
raised his eyebrows in surprise. âI must run along home. Have you a
clean collar?â
âWhy, why, yes,â faltered Kendall.
âLetâs see it. Thank you.â Ned accepted it, drew a pencil from his
pocket and wrote on the immaculate linen, â2 Dudley.â Then he hung the
collar over a corner of the mirror. âThere, thatâs my address, Curt.
Come often. I want you to know Teller better. Besides, I believe you
can be of help to me in his education. Good night.â
âGood night,â said Kendall. âThank you.â
Ned slammed the door behind him, and then, opening it again, he stuck
his head back into the room.
âEnjoyed hearing you talk so much,â he said with a grin.
Kendall heard Ned go down the stairs whistling loudly. Then he turned,
looked at the collar hanging on the mirror and sat down on the edge of
his bed and dazedly tried to think it all out.
CHAPTER XI
THE MYSTERIOUS KICKER
What puzzled Kendall was why Ned Tooker had gone out of his way to
be nice to him. Of course it was plainly to be seen that Ned was a
creature of impulse, one who did about what came into his head, but,
allowing all that, it wasnât quite explained. Kendall was not impulsive
himself, and while he had a strong capacity for affection, it was
not his way to form friendships very readily. This made Ned Tookerâs
behavior all the more strange to Kendall. Perhaps it had been just an
eveningâs prank, a means to pass an hour before bedtime, and perhaps
Ned would have forgotten all about it to-morrow. But there was the
promise to teach him golf, and, still more tangible evidence, there
was one of Kendallâs lamentably few clean collars curled about the
mirror-post and bearing the scrawling legend in the blackest of soft
pencil marks, â2 Dudley.â Kendall put aside the problem for the moment
with a sigh of despair and got ready for bed. But he hoped that Ned
had been sincere, for the older boy had quite won Kendallâs heart.
If Kendall had known of a conversation which passed in Mr. Collinsâs
study that evening Nedâs sudden attachment would have been more
understandable. Mr. Collins had asked Ned to come early as he had
something to say to him, and Ned had arrived ten minutes before any
of the others. Mr. Collins was standing in front of the little coal
fire and Ned had shaken hands with him ceremoniously, a performance he
always went through with on such occasions.
âGood evening, sir,â said Ned. âI trust I find you in good health.â
Mr. Collins replied that he was in the best of condition. Then Ned
proceeded to hand an imaginary cane to an imaginary servant, draw
off two imaginary gloves which in imagination followed the cane,
remove an imaginary top hat with an air and finally, with a hitch of
his shoulders, allowed the imaginary servant to remove an imaginary
Inverness cape. It was a very clever bit of pantomime and never failed
of applause. To-night Mr. Collins laughed appreciatively, laid a hand
on Nedâs shoulder and drew him to the fire:
âWell, everything all right, Tooker? The Optimist Society making
converts?â
âTurning âem away, sir, at every performance.â
âGood. Iâve got a new recruit for you, or perhaps it would be better to
say a new subject for you.â
âAll right, sir. Who is it?â
âA fellow named Burtis, a new boy this fall. He rooms upstairs here in
Number 21. I think youâll like him. I do. He seems to have more than
the usual amount of common sense, for one thing. And he has principles.
I believe, Tooker, that heâs the sort we like, you and I; the sort that
becomes a credit to the school. But he needs a little help right now. I
canât go into particulars, but Burtis hasnât been altogether fortunate
since he came. I think heâs a bit down-in-the-mouth just now and he
needs some fellow to chum up to him a bit. Iâve asked him here this
evening and I want you to look him over and, if you possibly can, get
acquainted with him and tide him over the next month or so. Youâre the
man for the job, Tooker. Will you take it?â
âWhy, of course, sir. Youâll see us to-morrow wandering away to the
woods arm in arm, to carve our initials on the tree trunks. Fever near,
sir!â
âI wonât,â replied Mr. Collins with a smile. âIâll leave him to
you, Tooker. By the way, I neglected to say that Burtis is not
yetââerââwhat we might call a tasteful dresser. There remains about
him a strong suggestion of theââerââbucolic.â
Ned shook his head. âIâve never had that, sir.â
âHad what?â
âThe bucolic. Is it catching?â
âI donât think so,â Mr. Collins laughed. âAnd, anyhow, Tooker, I donât
believe it could ever catch you!â
And so during the evening Ned had been studying Kendall most of the
time, even when it seemed that he hadnât a thought beyond creating a
laugh. And what he had seen he had liked. He hadnât been surprised,
for he had found that Mr. Collinsâs judgment in such matters usually
coincided with his. Nedâs verdict by the time the group broke up was
something like this: âRather homely in a nice way. Good eyes and looks
straight at you. Well-behaved. Rather shy. Doesnât butt in. Sees a joke
before it knocks him down. Has a good voice. Dresses like a farmer and
needs a hair-cut and a manicure, but looks as though he knew the use of
bath-tubs. On the whole an interesting subject. Get busy.â
And he had got busy, with what results we know. If there was some
measure of duplicity in Nedâs first evidences of interest and
friendship, the duplicity was in a good cause. Before he had taken
himself away, however, Ned had ceased to play a part, and his
disconcerting âDo you know, Burtis, I like you!â had been very genuine.
But on the way back to his room Ned had owned to himself that it might
not prove an easy task to convert the outward appearance of his new
protégé to Yardley standards.
âHe must have some other clothes,â murmured Ned as he crossed the Yard
to Dudley. âAnd first of all he must have his hair cut. The hair-cut
wonât be difficult, but itâs a mighty delicate matter to tell a chap
that his clothes arenât right. Well, Iâll go at it gently. Tact, Ned,
tact and diplomacy!â
âI wonder,â he reflected after he was in bed and listening to the
musical efforts of his slumbering roommate, âI wonder what the dickens
that kid did to get probation! He doesnât strike you as much of a
cut-up. I canât just see him putting a tack in Bertieâs chair!â (Bertie
was Mr. Albert Von Groll, Instructor in Modern Languages.) âBesides, he
said the secret concerned others. I suppose thatâs what Collins meant
when he said the chap hadnât been altogether fortunate since he came. I
should say not! Itâs going some to get on probation within three weeks
of the opening of school! Well, Iâll look him up again to-morrow. I
simply _must_ know why heâs on pro!â
Yardley played her third football game the next afternoon. Her opponent
was Forest Hill School. Forest Hill was not considered very dangerous
and there was a rumor that Payson meant to put in a team of substitutes
in the last two periods. Ned Tooker reached the field only a few
minutes before the time of starting the game and the two teams were
already running through signals and punting. As he turned the corner
and walked along in front of the crowded stand many hails reached him:
âNed, come on up; hereâs a seat!â
âOh you Took! Come and sit in my lap, Ned!â
But Ned only waved and smiled and went on, searching the stand with
his gaze. It was not until the whistle had sounded and Sandy Fogg had
lifted the ball from the tee with the toe of his shoe that Ned found
whom he was looking for. Then he climbed the stairs, nodding and
eluding the detaining hands thrust toward him, and crowded his way
along one of the seats until he reached Kendall. The latter, absorbed
in the gameââthe Forest Hill left half-back was charging back up the
field with the pigskin nestled in his armââhadnât seen Nedâs approach,
and when the latter crowded down beside him and Kendall turned to see
who it was the smile that came into his face was well worth seeing.
âHello!â he said rather shyly.
âHello, Bendall Kurtis,â replied Ned. âHow are you to-day? Whoâs going
to win the game? Youâre a football sharp, arenât you?â
âWhy, we are, of course,â returned Kendall confidently. âBut I wish you
had seen that Forest Hill fellow run that ball back. He must have made
twenty yards!â
âGood stuff! Whoâs playing for us?â
âMost of the regulars. Foggâs at center, Ridge and Merriwell are the
guards, Jensen and Mitchell tackles, Vinton and Norton ends, Roeder and
Stearns half-backs, Simms quarter, and the full-back I donât know.â
âThatâs Marion. Whatâs the matter with Hammel, I wonder? That isnât
Jensen at right tackle, though, Curt; thatâs Stark.â
âIs it? But it looks like Jensen. No, heâs got dark hair, hasnât he?
And thereâs Jensen on the bench down there; next to Holmes.â
âJensenâs hair, by the way, is about the same color as yours, Curt.
I donât like to see them wear it as long as that, though. Nowadays,
when headguards are the fashion it isnât necessary.â Ned glanced at
Kendallâs hair and displayed much embarrassment. âI didnât meanââ
Honest, Curt, I hadnâtââ You wear yours long, too, donât you?â he
ended lamely.
âMe? Why, no; at least, not like Jensenâs. I guess mine needs
trimming.â Kendall laughed. âMotherâs always after me to have my hair
cut, and now that Iâm away from home I guess itâll be down on my
shoulders if I donât watch out. It grows awfully fast.â
âThen you donât wear it long because youâre a footballist?â asked Ned.
âIâm glad of it, because youâll look better when itâs trimmed a little.
Iâve got to have mine done, too. We might go through the agony together
next week, eh? Hello, look at that for a punt!â
âA dandy!â sighed Kendall. âSimms has got it. No! Missed it! Got it
again, though. Heâs down!â
âNow letâs see what our chaps can do with the ball,â said Ned. âHere we
go! Good work, Roeder! Five yards easy! And right through the center!
Watch that Forest Hill left end, Curt. He was off-side about a yard
that time. There he goes again. I thought so! Penalty for you, Mr. Man!â
The whistle had blown and now the umpire was carrying the ball five
yards nearer the Forest Hill goal.
âNow will you behave?â murmured Ned. âThis is a fake. Marion canât
punt. I thought so. Stearns outside tackle for three yards. That was
very neat. Hello! Whatâs wrong?â
âStearns fumbled,â said Kendall sadly. âItâs Forest Hillâs ball.â
âAnd rather too near our goal to be comfortable. About the thirty-five
yard line, isnât it?â
âI think so,â answered Kendall, sitting forward on the edge of his
seat. Three cheer leaders jumped from their places and called for âA
regular cheer, fellows, and get into it!â
And then, while the cheer was crashing forth, a brown-clad youth hurled
himself against the Yardley line, broke through, eluding player after
player, and circled toward the center of the field and the Yardley
goal. The watchers leaped to their feet. Pandemonium reigned. Then
Simms dived for him and brought him fiercely to earth on the twenty
yards.
But it was first down again and only four white lines separated the
eager opponents from a touchdown. The cheering began again, the
leaders, their commands drowned in the noise, waving their arms in
frantic encouragement. From around Kendall and Ned cries of â_Hold_
âem! _Hold_ âem!â arose and gathered rhythm and volume. The Forest Hill
quarter, hand to mouth, was bellowing his signals. Then back went the
ball, confusion reigned for a moment and another scant two yards had
been conquered.
âRight through Stark that time,â said Ned. âI guess theyâd better bring
Jensen on. Second down and eight to gain. Hold âem, Yardley!â
But Yardley couldnât, it seemed. What looked like another plunge at
the line resolved itself into a delayed pass to left half, who tore
along behind the line, squirmed past Mitchell and got away around the
end for a good twelve yards. It was first down again then, and Forest
Hill, despite the frenzied implorations of the Yardley supporters and
the best efforts of Yardleyâs players, gained the three yard line in
two plays and crashed through and over for the final distance and
a touchdown amidst the ecstatic cheers of some twenty Forest Hill
rooters. Unluckily for the visitors they had secured their touchdown
near the side of the field and the subsequent punt-out was lost. But
five points looked pretty big at that stage of the game and pessimists
amongst the audience were already predicting defeat for the home team.
The first period ended after four more plays and the teams donned
blankets and rested. Then the whistle blew again and the game went on.
Yardley pulled herself together then and managed to stop the Forest
Hill plunges, although the latter twice won her distance in that
second period. Once Yardley got to Forest Hillâs thirty yards, but only
to lose the ball on a fumble. The second period ended with the score
still five to nothing and the two teams trotted off the field and up
the hill to the gymnasium.
A boy further along the row engaged Ned in conversation, and Kendall,
leaning back in his seat, studied his new friend. Although Ned was two
years Kendallâs senior he was scarcely any taller; there was perhaps
the difference of an inch between the two. Ned was fleshy without
being fat, carried himself very straight and had a round, good-natured
face from which a pair of shrewd brown eyes twinkled. Kendall had
already learned that it was only by watching Nedâs eyes that he could
tell whether the latter was in earnest or only joking, for Ned could,
and did, say the most outlandish things with the face of a truthful
undertaker. Ned always looked trim. To-day he wore a suit of blue
serge, a soft flannel shirt of gray, a blue knitted silk tie, black
socks and rubber-soled tan Oxford shoes. And there was a little gold
pin in his tie, a plain seal ring on one finger and from his watch
dangled a leather fob with a Yardley seal in silver and enamel. Kendall
mentally resolved to have one just like it. He had seen them in a
jewelerâs window in Greenburg. And Kendall wondered why Nedâs clothes
fitted him so well, and why his lisle socks showed never a hint of
a wrinkle over his ankles. Kendall knew that some persons had their
clothes made to order by tailors, and came to the conclusion that Ned
was one of these fortunate mortals, a conclusion quite erroneous. Nedâs
talk with the other boy was all about golf, and much of it Kendall
couldnât understand. When the teams trotted back to the field and Ned
settled into his seat again Kendall asked:
âAre you at the head of the golf, Tooker?â
Ned looked amused. âIâm captain of the Golf Team,â he explained. âWeâve
got a five-man match on with Broadwood here next Saturday. Thatâs what
Kirk was talking about. Weâve never won a match from Broadwood yet,
although weâve met them three times.â
âWhy is that?â Kendall asked.
âWe havenât the players they have. As a matter of fact, although it
sounds like boasting, Curt, Iâm the only member of our team that has
a show with those chaps. Kirk isnât bad, but heâs always unlucky,
and heâs been beaten every time. This year he says heâs going to get
revenge. Heâs been practicing every day except Sundays, I guess, since
school opened. Last spring he played a dandy game but drew Frost, who
is Broadwoodâs best player, and so didnât have any show from the
start. By the way, donât forget that youâre coming out to learn the
game Monday. There goes the ball. Now, Yardley, get down to business.â
Perhaps the talk they had received from Payson in the gymnasium helped.
At all events, Yardleyâs players did get down to business, almost with
the sound of the whistle, and in the ensuing ten minutes of playing
time scored two touchdowns. Hammel missed both goals. It was Tom Roeder
who proved the hero of that game. Tom tore through the Forest Hill line
for short and steady gains that took the ball down the field in short
order. Once Stearns got loose for an end run and once Simms worked a
very pretty forward pass to Dan, but for the most it was persistent
line-bucking that won the day.
In the fourth period, with the score 10 to 5, Yardley sent in many
substitutes, one of them Arthur Thompson, who went in for Stearns.
Arthur did very well, especially on defense. Holmes took Simmsâs
position at quarter-back and ran the team in good shape. He was a
gingery chap, and, while he knew less football than did Simms, and
was a less spectacular player, he got more speed from the team in
spite of the fact that, towards the last, it held six substitutes.
Yardley added a third touchdown to her score in the final minute of
play, and Dan elected to try the goal himself. The handful of Forest
Hill supporters jeered derisively as the ball left his toe, for it was
apparently much too low. But some happy chance took it over the bar by
an inch or soââthere were some who declared the ball actually brushed
the beamââand added another point to the final score of 16 to 5.
On the whole the game had been encouraging to Yardleyâs hopes. Clearly
outplayed in the first period, the Blue had managed to hold her
adversary in the second and then, in the last two periods, âcome backâ
and rush Forest Hill off her feet. It was what Ned, walking up the hill
with his arm linked in Kendallâs, called âa fine recovery.â
Ned led Kendall across the Yard to Dudley and down the corridor to
Number 2. Sanford was not at home. The room was small in comparison
with those in Clarke, but it was more comfortable and had an open
fireplace which Kendall envied Ned the possession of. For a half hour
Ned showed golf clubs and explained their uses, told stories of matches
won or lost and managed to get Kendall quite interested in the ancient
and royal game. He even illustrated strokes with his clubs, to the
imminent danger of the furniture. Then Kendall discovered a line of
mugs on the mantel and had to know about each. And about that time
Teller Sanford came in, and Kendall, after a few moments, took himself
off, Nedâs last words being, âDonât forget, Curt; Monday at half-past
three!â
There was a gathering of the talent in Number 28 Clarke that evening
after supper; Tom Roeder, Al Simms, Sandy Fogg, Arthur Thompson,
Grafton Holmes and, of course, Dan and Gerald. They replayed the game,
as boys will, and gave and took criticism in good part. Neglected
opportunities were regretted, mistakes explained and many âifsâ
indulged in.
âI donât believe,â said Sandy Fogg, the broad-shouldered, good-natured
center, âI ever played in a game where there was less punting.â
âThatâs so,â said Dan. âIt was âold-fashioned footballâ from start to
finish. We should have had another score, though. In the second period
we had a dandy chance down there on their thirty yards.â
âThat was me,â said Simms. âI donât know how it happened. Seemed as
though that ball just jumped away from me!â
âI donât regret what didnât happen so much as what did,â observed Tom.
âWe ought never to have let them get that touchdown.â
Everyone assented more or less gloomily to that.
âOh, well,â said Holmes cheerfully, âwhatâs the good of post mortems?
We beat âem, and could have done it again right afterwards. We were
slow in getting started, thatâs all.â
âIt wonât do to be so slow next Saturday,â said Dan. âCarrelâs has a
pretty good team this year, I hear.â
âTheyâre light, though,â said Tom.
âThereâs one thing we ought to find, Dan, if you donât mind my butting
into your affairs,â said Fogg, âand thatâs some fellow who can kick a
goal once out of twenty times.â
âI know,â assented Dan with a frown. âAnd donât you think Iâm not
worrying about that as much as you are, Sandy. We all thought last year
that Hammel was going to make good, but he doesnât seem to get down to
it at all. Paysonâs going to have him out for morning practice next
week and says all he needs is a little more confidence. I wish Iâd let
you try those goals this afternoon, Al.â
But Simms shook his head. âIâm glad you didnât, Dan. Iâd have slipped
up sure on âem. I was so afraid you were going to, after that second
score, that I was afraid to look at you!â
âYou should have put in the chap who was kicking goals down at the
field one morning last week,â said Arthur. âI watched him from the
window for about ten minutes and it looked as though he couldnât miss
them.â
âWho was it?â asked Dan.
âI donât know. I couldnât make him out. One of the subs, I suppose.â
âWhere was he kicking from?â asked Gerald. âThe five yard line?â
âAbout thirty, I think. And from an angle, too.â
âOh, come, Arthur,â laughed Dan, âyou were looking through one of those
crazy panes of glass in Oxford.â
âI was in Oxford, all right; Room C, it was; but there wasnât anything
the matter with my eyesight. I guess the fellow made ten or twelve
tries and kicked more than half as many goals.â
Dan glanced about the room questioningly. âWho the dickens could it
have been, fellows?â he asked in perplexity. âI donât know any sub who
can do that.â
âOr any regular, either,â murmured Tom.
âThis was in the morning, you say?â asked Sandy Fogg.
âYes, just after my Latin. I was waiting for some papers that Collins
had.â
âWell, I donât like to cast asparagus on your eyesight, Arthur,â said
Tom, with a smile, âbut your story sounds fishy.â
âWhat was he kicking, Thompson, drop or place?â asked Simms.
âDrop at first, and then he tried placement.â
âFrom the thirty yards?â asked Dan skeptically.
âYes; certainly not nearer, Dan; I wouldnât swear it wasnât nearer
forty.â
âWhat did he look like? Had you ever seen him before? Was he alone?â
âYes, he was all by his lonesome, and he looked sort of tall; about
your height, maybe. He had his coat off and wore darkish clothes.
Thatâs all I could see.â
âBut why the dickens didnât you say something about it? Have you seen
him since?â
âNo, but I havenât looked for him. I didnât say anything about it
because I forgot it. And, anyway, I supposed you knew; thought youâd
sent him down there to practice.â
âI wish I did know! A chap who can kick five goals out of ten would be
a find. Youâre not joking, Arthur?â
âOf course Iâm not,â responded Arthur impatiently. âIf you really donât
know who he is I advise you to find him, for he certainly could kick
goals that day!â
âYou bet Iâll find him! Iâll find him if I have to hire a regiment of
detectives! Anyone guess who he is?â
But they all shook their heads.
âThe only explanation I can offer,â said Tom, âis that Arthur went to
sleep and dreamed it. I donât believe thereâs a fellow in school who
can stand on the thirty yard line and drop-kick a goal from an angle
once out of two tries. Either you were dreaming, Arthur, or what looked
like goals werenât.â
âThatâs so,â agreed Dan. âAt that distance it would be hard to tell.
Sometimes youâre mistaken from the end of the field.â
âYou fellows have it your own way,â said Arthur with a sigh of
resignation. âI know what I saw.â
âWell, we will have to keep a lookout and see if we can catch him at it
again,â said Dan. âAnd, for goodnessâ sake, fellows, ask everyone you
know. If there really is a goal-kicker in our midst we can surely find
him.â
âWell, he will have to show me,â said Tom, still unconvinced. âLook
here, Arthur, it wasnât Wallace, was it?â
âNo, Iâd know Hammel a mile off. Besides, I met and spoke to him ten
minutes later in the corridor. No, it wasnât he.â
âLetâs advertise,â suggested Holmes. âA notice in Oxford might fetch
him.â
âSure,â Simms agreed. ââIf the student who practiced goal-kicking on
the field last week will call on Dan Vinton he will hear of something
to his advantage.â Something like that, eh?â
âIâll try that if everything else fails,â said Dan grimly. âA good
drop- or place-kicker will be worth about a million dollars to me this
season.â
âWeâll find him all right,â said Fogg. âHeâs probably one of the subs
who has discovered he can kick and hasnât the sense to say anything
about it.â
âAs for me,â said Tom, âIâm like the countryman at the menagerie when
he saw the hippopotamus; I donât believe thereâs no such critter!â
CHAPTER XII
NED USES TACT
On Monday Kendall took his first lesson in golf. He appeared at Nedâs
room wearing his old brown sweater and a pair of heavy shoes, one toe
of which showed the effects of many collisions with the football. Ned
looked him over and shook his head.
âYou canât do anything with that sweater, Curt,â he said. âIt binds
your arms too much. It isnât cold to-day. Leave your sweater here.â
âBut I havenât any vest on!â
âYou donât need a vest. Thatâs it. Hello! whereâs your belt?â
âI wear suspenders,â Kendall replied.
âSo I see. Take âem off and Iâll find a belt for you. Hereâs one of
Tellerâs.â
âWonât he mind my using it?â asked Kendall doubtfully as he removed his
suspenders.
âHe will esteem it an honor,â answered Ned gravely. âThere you are.
Slip your coat on again. Isnât that more comfortable? Now, about
shoes.â
âThese are all right; theyâre quite easy.â
âThey look it! Never mind, I guess theyâll have to do. I havenât an
extra pair. Now then, come along.â
Kendall had hoped that they would find the links deserted, since he
didnât at all fancy making a public display of his awkwardness and
ignorance, but he was doomed to disappointment. At least a half-dozen
couples were making the rounds, while four or five fellows were
loitering about the first tee. One of them was the boy who had talked
with Ned at the football game. He was George Kirk, a good-looking
Second Class fellow. Kirk brandished a golf club and hailed Ned with
joy.
âWant to play a round, Ned?â he shouted as they approached.
âThanks, George, but Iâm going to show Burtis here something about the
game. You fellows ever met?â
They shook hands, Kirk very affably. He showed no surprise at Nedâs
announcement. In fact, he felt none, for he had become quite used to
Nedâs vagaries.
âMind if I go around with you?â he asked of Kendall. Kendall hesitated
and glanced at Ned. The latter shook his head:
âCanât have you, old man. This is Burtisâs first lesson and he doesnât
want a gallery. Whereâs Morgan?â
âHeâs over there with Jack Simpson. I thought Wainwright might show up,
but he hasnât come yet.â
âPeteâs gone to Greenburg to the dentist. Youâll find someone, though.
Come on, Curt. Hereâs a ball for you. And hereâs a driver. It is an old
one of mine, but itâs a dandy.â He made Nedâs tee for him, placed him
in position and pointed out the first hole. âNow then, just swing your
club back as though you didnât care, keep your eye on the ball and hit
it.â
âI canât,â muttered Kendall nervously, darting a glance at the little
audience who were watching proceedings.
âYes, you can. Now let me tell you something. These fellows have all
had to learn just as youâre learning. You wonât do any worse than they
did the first time. Go ahead now. I donât care where the ball goes,
only hit it. Easy back. Thatâs right. Now downâââ
Kendallâs driver swished through the air and the ball, disturbed by
the passing club, rolled off the tee. Kendall smiled foolishly. The
onlookers smiled too, but more with Kendall than at him. Ned picked up
the ball and replaced it.
âAll right. Try again. But donât try to kill it, Curt. Just give it a
nice little rap. And keep your eyes on it all the time.â
Kendall, very flustered, raised his driver again, swung down, dug the
head of it in the earth some four inches behind the ball.
âYou werenât looking at the ball,â said Ned severely. âOnce more now,
and _keep your eyes on the ball_.â
Perhaps it was only luck, but Kendallâs next attempt resulted in a very
clean forty-yard drive, and the glow of satisfaction that came to him
more than atoned for what had gone before.
âGood stuff!â said Ned, and the others murmured approval. Kendall tried
to dissemble his delight and drew aside to make room for Ned.
âWatch the way I do it,â said Ned. Kendall watched, but it is doubtful
if he learned much. Nedâs club went back for a full swing, swished
down, there was a clean _click_ and away sailed the white ball high and
far to drop safely over the first bunker.
âRotten!â said Ned.
âNot so bad; a little too high,â observed Kirk. âGood luck, Burtis.â
Kendall followed Ned to where his ball had fallen and Ned handed him a
midiron.
âYouâre going to play with three clubs until you get the hang of it.
This is a midiron, Curt. Now, as you havenât any tee to help you get
under the ball, youâve got to hit back of it; try to clip a bit of the
turf. And the swing is different. Let me show you.â Ned illustrated.
âDonât try to hit very hard; just try to put the ball up near the
bunker.â
âIs that mound the bunker?â asked Kendall.
âIt is. Now see the way I swing this. Get it? Keep that wrist stiff.
No, youâre hunching up your right shoulder. Donât do that. And donât
set your muscles all stiff like that. Relax! Thatâs the stuff! Now
then, have a shot.â
Kendall missed the ball entirely twice and finally topped it so that
it trickled along for about twelve feet. The next time he buried
the whole head of his club six inches behind the ball and looked up
apologetically at Ned.
âIâm an awful duffer,â he said.
âWell, youâre learning the talk, anyway,â laughed Ned. âWeâre all awful
duffers when we start. Go ahead now. But try and keep your eyes on the
place you want to hit. Thatâs half the secret of golf, Curt; _keep your
eye on the ball_. And itâs the hardest thing of all to learn. See if
you canât give that a nice little rap that will put it over the bunker.â
And Kendall did, and again the glow of satisfaction spread through
him. He laughed nervously.
âI thought I was going to miss it entirely that time,â he said. âBut I
did keep my eyes on the ball, Tooker.â
âYou sure did. But donât call me Tooker. Itâs an awful name to have to
listen to. Call me Ned.â
âYou said the other night that your name was Ted,â laughed Kendall.
âTed, Ned or Ed; it doesnât matter. Only never Tooker. And now hereâs a
bit of information for your future guidance. Never climb over a bunker,
Curt; it breaks it down. Further along you will observe a nice little
passage left for you; see?â
Kendall saw and started for the break, supposing that Ned was
following. As he went through he looked back. Ned was not there.
Instead he was in the act of jumping from the top of the bunker.
âI thought you said I mustnât do that,â said Kendall.
âYou mustnât,â replied Ned gravely. âEver.â
âButââwhyââyou did it!â
âAnd so will you when youâve played longer. Now, then, youâre away.â
âIâmââwhat?â asked Kendall.
âAway; your ballâs farthest from the hole. That means that you play
first. Give it a good clean swipe this time.â
Kendall managed to send the ball some twenty yards and looked at Ned
for approbation. But Ned shook his head.
âAll wrong. You let your club slip in your hands and you brought your
shoulder up. Watch this.â
Click! Away sailed Nedâs ball, straight and low for the distant green.
It struck, bounded and rolled and finally trickled to within some six
yards of the flag. Kendall sighed. He had a lot to learn, he feared,
before he could ever equal that performance. But he struggled on and
finally his ball lay almost beside Nedâs. Then he was given another
and quite different implement which Ned explained was a putter. And
nowââluck again very probablyââKendall distinguished himself by holing
out in some marvelous manner in one!
âWell, Iâll be jiggered!â breathed Ned softly. It took him two to make
the hole. âFour,â he said. âThatâs the best Iâve ever done this hole
in. That iron shot of mine was a dandy.â
âWhat do you mean by âfourâ?â asked Kendall.
âFour strokes.â
âOh, and what did I make?â
âI think you were sixteen,â replied Ned carelessly. âYou did fairly
well, Curt.â
Kendall thought a minute. Then, âSixteen to your four,â he murmured.
âSay, TookââI mean Nedââhow many shots would I have taken if Iâd done
poorly?â
Ned laughed. âYou might have taken thirty,â he answered. Then he
clapped the disconsolate Kendall on the back. âCheer up, youâre doing
fine. It takes time and weâre all duffers at first.â
âI guess Iâll watch you for a while,â said Kendall sadly.
âI guess youâll take this driver and come over here and knock the
spots off this ball,â answered Ned. âAnd no mutiny, if you please, Mr.
Bendall Kurtis.â
âButââbut it must be very tiresome for you,â said Kendall.
âDonât you worry about me. Iâm as happy as a clam as long as I can
swing a golf club. Donât get discouraged, Curt. Remember that Bome
wasnât ruilt in a day.â
âRemember what?â asked Kendall, puzzled.
âWhy, that Rome wasnât duilt in a bay,â answered Ned. âNow then, here
we go!â
They played five holes that afternoon, and after that Ned made Kendall
practice swinging his club for ten minutes or so at the fifth tee. And
then he made him drive several times, always patiently correcting and
explaining. When Kendallâs first lesson in golf was finally over he
went back to Clarke with an unwonted aching in his arms and shoulders.
There was only one more lesson that week, for Ned had to look after the
work of the Golf Team. But on Wednesday, Kendall did rather better and
was terribly proud and delighted. Ned had insisted on Kendallâs using
his spare clubs and suggested that the novice could learn a good deal
by playing a few holes alone. Kendall tried that on Thursday and did so
poorly, seeming to have lost what little science he had attained, that
he went home quite discouraged. On Friday, Ned sought him after school
and announced that they were going to Greenburg to have their hair cut.
âBut I canât go,â said Kendall. âIâm on probation, you see.â
âI thought of that and so I saw Collins and got permission for you to
leave school for two hours. Come on now.â
Nedâs hair didnât really require trimming, but he went through with it,
and he was glad he had afterwards, since by doing so he had brought
about the shearing of Kendallâs abundant locks. Kendall looked at least
twenty-five per cent. better when he left the barber shop and Ned,
whose courage had been failing him, took heart again. âIf,â he told
himself, âa mere hair-cut will work that improvement in him, what will
a decent suit of clothes do?â
They strolled along the street, looking in at windows and enjoying
themselves hugely, until they reached Wallaceâs. There Ned stood treat
to a wonderful concoction called a âmaple-nut sundae.â If you donât
think it was good, try it yourself some time. It was vanilla ice cream
with chopped walnuts and maple sugar lavishly sprinkled over the top
of it. It was so good that Kendall begged to be allowed to stand treat
in turn, and so they each had another glass of the delectable mixture.
Then Ned observed carelessly:
âI wonder if youâd mind walking down to the New York Store with me,
Curt?â
âOf course not. What sort of a place is it?â
âDonât you know it? Itâs the best clothing store here. I want to see
what theyâve got there. Iâll have to be buying a winter suit some day.â
Once inside, the rest was far easier than Ned had dared hope. He had
some ten or fifteen suits produced for their inspection and asked
Kendallâs opinion and advice constantly. Then he âjolliedâ the clerk
until that young gentleman would have pulled half the stock down for
them. At last Ned remarked casually:
âThis wouldnât be a bad chance for you to get rigged out with some new
togs, Curt. How do you like this?â
âI hadnât thought of buying any new clothes,â said Kendall. But the
idea, once presented, had attractions. He looked at the neat gray suit
Ned was displaying and thought that he would like to see himself in it.
Besides, he had never before really shopped for himself and the sudden
realization of his independence was oddly exhilarating. He looked
longingly at the clothes. Then he tentatively held a coat up to the
light, Ned observing him out of the corners of his shrewd eyes.
âThat one youâve got there would look fine on you, Curt,â he said. âWhy
donât you just slip it on?â
âOh, no!â exclaimed Kendall.
âGo ahead! Thereâs a room right back of you. Where are the trousers?â
âThose would be a little large for the gentleman,â said the clerk.
âJust a moment, please.â In a jiffy he was back again and Kendall,
almost before he realized it, was behind a curtain in a little
closet-like apartment with the gray suit on his arm. When he emerged
Ned exhibited the utmost enthusiasm:
âMy word, Curt, but that suit was made for you! And fit! Why, it
couldnât be better, could it?â He appealed to the salesman.
âIt would require almost no alteration,â replied the latter. âPerhaps
the least bit off the sleeves. And the buttons might be set over a
trifle.â
âItââit doesnât look badly, does it?â murmured Kendall, turning and
twisting in front of a long mirror.
âBad! My dear misguided youth, it becomes you horribly! Donât hesitate
a minute; take it along!â
âOh, butââbutââI hadnât thought of buying!â explained Kendall.
âThink now, then. You donât want to lose that suit, Curt. If you put
off getting it someone will take it.â
âThere are probably more of them,â answered Kendall, torn between his
desire for the suit and the promptings of economy.
âThatâs the only one of your size, sir,â said the clerk. âIf you really
think of getting it, sir, Iâd advise you to do it to-day.â
âWe-ellâââ began Kendall.
âYou can make the alterations and deliver it to-morrow, canât you?â Ned
asked. The clerk agreed that he could.
Then a man whom the clerk referred to as a bushelman appeared with a
tape measure and a square of chalk and the die was cast.
âBut I havenât enough money with me,â whispered Kendall to Ned.
âThatâs all right. Theyâll charge it to you if you like, or you can pay
them when they deliver it.â
âIâd rather do that,â said Kendall. âItâs twelve dollars, isnât it?â
âTwelve-fifty. Want anything else to-day?â
âOh, no!â
âThen weâd better be hitting the trail. Weâve only got twenty minutes
to get back in.â
âItâs funny about that suit,â mused Kendall after they were across the
bridge. âI hadnât any sort of idea of buying anything when I went in
with you. You were the one who was looking for clothes, Ned, and you
didnât buy a thing!â
âI was just looking. You certainly surprised me, Curt. I hadnât any
idea youâd be such a sport. Itâs funny how things happen like that.
Sometimes a fellow hasnât any idea of doing a thing, and then, first
thing he knows, heâs gone and done it! Queer, isnât it?â
âYes,â murmured Kendall. âButââitâs a mighty good-looking suit of
clothes, isnât it?â
CHAPTER XIII
GOLF WITH BROADWOOD
All that week Kendall had wished that there were two of him that
he might both follow football practice and pursue the tantalizing
intricacies of golf and the friendship of Ned Tooker. He had attended
football practice only twice, on Tuesday and Thursday, and practice was
getting very interesting and exciting now, for there was a scrimmage
every afternoon between the first and second teams, and, since it was
now the height of the season, those scrimmages were no love-feast.
Every player was animated either by the stern determination to hold
his place at all costsââif he was a first-string manââor to wrest
someone elseâs place from himââif he was a substitute. And so it was
nip and tuck between many good friends. There was an exciting contest
on between Norton, the regular right end, and Sayer, a younger fellow
who was the first choice substitute. And Arthur Thompson had created
a mild sensation by beating out both Green and Fayette and standing
an excellent show of playing for a time at least in the remaining
games as a substitute to Stearns. The rivalry for the position of
quarter-back was less intense just for the reason that it was Paysonâs
policy to use both Simms and Holmes to about the same extent. Hammel,
Simms, Ridge and Norton had been receiving special instruction in
punting and drop-kicking every day for a week past, but Simms and
Norton were the only ones who it seemed had profited much. Simms was
getting off better punts and Norton was gradually developing into a
fair drop-kicker. It was this dawning ability that might insure him his
position and defeat Sayerâs ambition.
On Saturday the team left early in the forenoon for East Point to play
Carrelâs School, and with the team went fully half the student body,
almost all, in fact, who could obtain permission and enough money to
meet the expenses of the trip. Kendall, of course, was barred from
going by his probation. And he gathered comfort from the thought that
even if he had not been on probation he still would have been forced
to remain at home, since in purchasing that suit of clothes he had
virtually bankrupted himself. However, Fate provided him with a fairly
satisfactory substitute for the football game in the golf match that
afternoon between Yardley and Broadwood. The Broadwood representatives
were on hand early; seven of them in all. They were a nice-looking lot
of boys; Kendall mentally called them âswells,â but in no derogatory
sense, since, now that he was the possessor of a new suit of clothes
and had discovered a blue necktie among his belongings, he secretly
considered entering that class himself!
When Kendall reached the course, the drawings had been made and the
first two competitors, Kirk of Yardley and Osgood of Broadwood, were
just starting off. Ned was busily talking with a group of boys and so
Kendall joined the small gallery of stay-at-homes. Kirk had the best of
the first drive and the two boys strode off. Presently Wainwright and
a tall youth named Linton drove, and they too took their departure. A
third couple followed them, Morgan of Yardley and Carter of Broadwood.
Kendall let them go, although a few of the onlookers had dribbled
away at the heels of the various pairs. Kendall meant to go around
with Ned. The latter had loaned him a book of rules and a book of
instructionââvery interesting, the latter, with many pictures and
much puzzling adviceââand Kendall had been absorbing them both in his
leisure moments. At least, he had managed to obtain a fair idea of the
general principles of the game, although a great deal of it was still
Greek to him.
Ned and his rival, who turned out to be Frost, Broadwoodâs best
player, started next, leaving Simpson, Yardley, and Sawyer, Broadwood,
to follow. Kendall remembered that Ned had termed Frost Broadwoodâs
crack exponent of the game and wondered whether Ned had met his match.
Most of the onlookers, like Kendall, had been waiting for this contest
and now gathered around the tee. Ned caught sight of Kendall while
Frost, whose honor it was, was fixing his tee.
âHello, Curt!â he said, âhow are you to-day? And where are those new
clothes we got yesterday? Didnât they send them?â
âOh, yes, but I thought I wouldnât wear them to-day. Theyâreââtheyâre
sort of best, donât you see.â
Ned stared for a moment and then a grin spread over his face and he
began to chuckle. Kendall viewed him with surprise.
âWhatâs the matter?â he asked.
âNothing, nothing at all,â laughed Ned. âJust a joke I happened to
think of, a joke on yours truly. Iâm glad I did think of it, too, for I
just needed a good laugh to start this match on.â
âAre you going to beat him?â asked Kendall, lowering his voice. Ned,
watching Frost prepare to drive, shook his head:
âI donât know, Curt. I think so, but weâll sait and wee. If I have luck
and do beat him weâll probably win the match. Wasnât it luck that I
drew Frost? Kirk ought to win his game from Osgood without much trouble
and Jim Morganâs sure to beat his man. That would give us our three out
of five. Well, coming around? Good! See you later.â Ned walked toward
the tee. âThat was a peach, Frost,â he said, as his opponentâs ball
went arching away across the bunker.
Nedâs own drive was a few yards shorter but left him on the right side
of the hazard, and players and gallery started off. Kendall knew one
or two of the fellows to speak to, notably Teller Sanford who had come
out to watch his roommate play. Sanford ran across Kendall presently
and seemed quite cordial in his rather stiff way. They kept together
more or less during the match and, since neither of them knew much
golf, asked each other many questions and gave what answers they could.
They both were anxious that Ned should win, however, and that was a
bond between them. The first hole, 230 yards, was reached in 4 by both
players. Four, Teller explained, was bogey. Ned looked wise and nodded,
secretly determining to find out what âbogeyâ might mean.
The course at Yardley is fairly level, and, save for the seventh,
none of the holes are very difficult. The distance for the nine holes
is 2170 yards and the bogey is 35 strokes. (Ned had once done it in
38, equaling the school record.) It was stroke competition to-day and
the match was to go to the side winning three out of five games of
eighteen holes. The second was reached by both Ned and Frost in 4,
one over bogey. So far their cards were even at 8 strokes. But on the
next hole Ned had a piece of bad luck, slicing his drive so that it
took him an extra stroke to cross the bunker and Frost took the hole
in 5 to Nedâs 6. By that time it was apparent even to Kendall that the
Broadwood player was superior to Ned with his driver. Frostâs drives
were quite remarkable. They had both length and direction. Ned drove a
slightly shorter ball and was more uncertain as to direction. (Kendall
overheard one knowing spectator observe that âTooker tees too high;
thatâs the trouble with him.â) But with the iron Ned was better than
his opponent. He seemed able to place his ball just where he wanted it
on approach shots and more than once so far he had gained the hole with
only one putt. When it came to the use of the putter there appeared
little choice between the two boys. Each seemed possessed of a deadly
certainty with that implement in hand. The fourth hole was halved and
at the fifth Ned had evened the score. Each made the sixth in 5 and
the seventh in 6. That was the one difficult hole of the course. It
was 375 yards long and combined a âbowlâ and a bunker in such a way
that a perfect approach to the green was an impossibility. The bogey
was 5, and in doing it in 6 each of the players won applause. Ned took
the lead at the next hole by an eight-foot putt that was a marvel of
precision and finished the first round by another 3 to his opponentâs
4, leaving him two strokes to the good. Ned came over to where Kendall
and Teller Sanford were standing and talked a minute before the next
round began.
âWhat do you think of Kirk?â he asked in disgust. âHeâs four under
Osgood at the ninth! I thought that for once he meant to win his match.â
âHow are you feeling?â asked Kendall anxiously.
âDine and fandy,â replied Ned flippantly. âSay, canât that fellow
drive, though? Heâs a lot better than he was in the spring. Has anybody
heard how Jack Simpson is getting on?â
Kendall and Teller shook their heads.
âMorgan was four to the good at the ninth, I heard. I guess heâs safe.
Well, here goes.â
The first hole was halved again, as in the first round, at four each.
At the second Frost made a remarkable drive that left him well up. An
iron shot laid the ball within four feet of the hole and he went out
in 3, which was bogey. Nedâs drive was twenty yards shorter than his
adversaryâs and his iron shot left him on the edge of the green. He
holed out in 4. The third and fourth holes were taken by each in 5 and
6 respectively. At the fifth Ned again got the worst of it, overrunning
a short putt, and on the sixth foozled a short approach shot. The score
then for the round was, Ned 29, Frost 26; for the two rounds, Ned 68,
Frost 67. Broadwood was one stroke ahead and there were three holes to
play.
On the way to the seventh tee Ned sought Kendall and drew him to one
side. âIâm one stroke behind, Curt,â he said, âbut I think I can win
the match if you make it worth my while.â
[Illustration: ââI think I can win the match if you make it worth my
while.ââ]
âMe!â exclaimed Kendall. âWhy, what can I do?â
âIâll tell you. Iâll make a bargain with you. If youâll promise to wear
your new suit every day Iâll win the game. What do you say?â
âWhy, I donât seeâââ
âOh, just a fancy of mine, Curt. Iâm such a whimsical cut-up! What do
you say?â
âWear my new suit every day?â
âWell, Iâll let you off sometimes. Let me see; I have it; you may wear
your old clothes on the thirty-first of the month.â
Kendall smiled. âI suppose itâs some sort of a joke,â he said, âbut I
donât see it.â
âNever mind. Itâs a go, eh?â
âWhy, yes, Iâll wear my new clothes if you like, only I donât seeâââ
âI know you donât. Itâs a mystery. All right, then. Hereâs where I win
the game. Wish me luck, Curt.â
âOf course. And, Ned, I heard a fellow say a while ago that he thought
you teed too high. I donât know just what he meant, butâââ
âHe was right. Iâve always known it, though. Itâs a fault I canât
correct, Curt. I hate to be stingy with the sand. So long!â
Bogey for the seventh hole was 5, but no one in the history of the
links had ever done it in that. The tee was on the edge of the hill
in a space cleared of trees and the hole was 375 yards away in a line
with the boathouse. From the tee the ground sloped abruptly to a
hollow called The Bowl. Then came a rise to a bunker, a further rise
beyond that to the summit of the knoll and then, out of sight from the
approach, lay the green. An average drive laid the ball on the side
of the hill, just short of The Bowl. A long drive took you into the
hollow. In either case it meant two strokes with lofter or mashie to
get over the bunker. From there to the hole had always been a matter
of two at the least. There was a âlonger way round,â however, generally
affected by the poorer players. By this route The Bowl was entirely
avoided, the player driving along the edge of the slope and crossing to
the hole past the end of the bunker. This, however, usually meant an 8
for the hole; possibly a 9.
It was Frostâs honor and he teed his ball very carefully, using the
merest pinch of sand. Conversation had dwindled away of late. Much
depended on these last three holes and both contestants were saving
their breath and thinking instead of talking. The gallery whispered
amongst themselves, but very generally respected the playersâ desire
for silence. Frost took his stance, weighed his driver, looked at the
slope beyond the bowl a moment and swung. Back came the club until
it hung for an instant behind his left hip. Then up it went, slowly
at first, then faster, the head traveling a wide arc ere it swooped
down upon the ball. There was a hard, crisp _click_ and away sped
the guttie, a white speck in the sunlight, straight in line with the
distant hole and at just the right height. There was a little spurt of
gravel on the slope beyond the hollow where the grass was thin, the
ball leaped into the air, came down again several yards beyond and then
nestled to earth. It was the longest drive Frost had made that day,
and probably the longest ever made from the seventh tee, and a murmur
of applause came from the gallery. Frost stepped aside, an expression
of pleasure showing in spite of his efforts.
Ned smiled. âSome drive, that, Frost,â he said as he dipped his hand in
the sand box. âAs pretty as I ever saw.â
âNot so bad,â replied Frost modestly.
âI should say not!â Ned walked to the far corner of the tee and placed
his little pinch of sand on the ground, carefully shaping it between
his fingers. Then he put his ball on it. But he took it up the next
moment and flicked away a half inch from the top of the little cone.
When he faced the ball the gallery saw with surprise that he was going
to play the âlongest way round.â The surprise became audible and some
of the older boys frowned their neighbors into silence. Ned lost no
time in preliminaries. Back came his club and then up in a wide sweep
and down again. Off went the ball, low and hard. A dead leaf fluttered
down from a branch, showing where the guttie had just escaped coming
to grief against an out-reaching limb. Straight along the edge of the
hill it sped, ten feet or so above the ground at the top of its arc,
and struck, bounded and rolled. It was a good drive, a remarkably good
one for Ned, and the galleryâs approval was loud and continued, even
while they failed to see Nedâs reason for driving in that direction. He
had put his ball almost as far from the tee as Frostâs, but it lay much
farther from the hole. The players parted company and the gallery split
up into two groups, more than half of them choosing to follow Nedâs
fortunes.
âIt doesnât seem to me,â ventured Kendall, âthat he gained anything by
putting his ball up there.â
âIt doesnât look so,â replied Teller, âbut itâs all right. Ned will win
now. Heâs laughing. He always laughs when heâs at his best. Iâve seen
it lots of times.â
âI hope so,â murmured Kendall as he followed the others along the edge
of the woods. When Ned reached his ball he looked at it for several
moments. Then he studied the course ahead. Below him at the right lay
The Bowl. Between him and the little red flag at the hole lay a hollow,
with a corner of the bunker elbowing into line. One advantage was with
him. He was now only a scant yard or two below the level of the bunker,
whereas Frost must work uphill all the way to the green. Nedâs ball lay
on a slight slope, so that he had to stand several inches above it.
But it was not cupped. It lay nestled in a little tuft of dry grass,
with a tiny twig holding it from rolling further down the slope. Ned
thoughtfully picked out his lofter. Then he as thoughtfully slipped
it back into the bag and drew forth a brassie. Several of the knowing
ones shook their heads. It seemed a bad lie for a brassie shot, they
thought. But Ned faced the hole, swung the club and had luck with him.
The ball struck the opposite hillside, bounded high in the air and
fell dead only four yards from the bunker! A yell of astonishment and
delight went up from the watchers.
âWhat did I tell you?â demanded Teller with a pleased smile on his face.
âButââbut he oughtnât to have used that brass club, then,â objected
Kendall. âThe book says so!â
âI guess the book was wrong.â Teller nodded at the distant ball.
âThereâs the answer to that.â
Below them Frost was making his second stroke. Up the hill went the
ball, landed, jumped a foot or two into the air, came down and trickled
back a yard before it found lodgment.
âHe will be lucky if he gets over from there in one,â Kendall heard one
of the gallery remark. âHeâs thirty yards from the bunker and way below
it.â
But he did get over, making a very pretty shot with a niblick and
just grazing the top of the bunker. Ned went over neatly and the ball
bounded out of sight toward the green. Frostâs fourth stroke took him
well onto the green, but at the left of the hole. It was apparent that
Ned, playing 4, could at least tie the hole in 6. But when his ball was
found it lay only twenty yards or so from the hole and visions of a
bogey score floated before the eyes of the excited audience. Smilingly
and, as it looked, almost carelessly, Ned took his mashie, cast one
short glance at the flag and hit the ball. Up and away it went in a
short arching flight.
âToo hard,â someone groaned behind Kendall. But Kendall, his heart in
his mouth, saw the ball drop, make one feeble effort to bound, and then
lie dead within a yard of the flag!
Something that was like a hushed cheer went up from the gallery which
had now reunited and had drawn aside at the edge of the green. Ned
slipped his mashie back into his bag with a fine unconcern and took out
his putter. Frost at the side of the green was looking rather serious
as he bent over his ball. His fifth stroke left him within a scant
two feet of the hole. The audience literally held their breath as Ned
brushed aside an invisible obstacle in his path to the goal, measured
the distance and direction with his eye and swung his putter back
gently. _Tap!_ Forward rolled the ball, straight for the hole, but oh,
so slowly! Three inches away from the edge it seemed about to stop, but
it changed its mind and trickled onââonââand then, pop, it was out of
sight!
A breath of relief went up from the watchers, but it was not until
Frost had holed out that the applause came. Then a dozen fellows
pressed around Ned to slap him on the back and shake his hand. âFive,
Tooker! That bogey! Itâs never been done before! Oh, you Ned Tooker!â
Frost shook hands with him, too, hiding his discomfiture as best he
could. As they took up the journey to the eighth tee the score for the
two rounds stood at 73 each, and the match depended on the next two
holes.
CHAPTER XIV
DAN IS OUT OF SORTS
The eighth hole is a short one, 150 yards, and the bogey is 3. A long
drive, a short approach and youâre on the green. The hole has been done
in 3 a good many times, and to-day both Ned and his adversary equaled
bogey. At the ninth tee the excitement amongst the audience had grown
intense. The ninth was five yards shorter than the last hole and was
an easy one. There was a bunker near enough the tee to punish a weak
drive, but after that it was fair sailing. Ned made a hard, straight
drive that was a fraction too high. Had there been even a mild breeze
he would have suffered in direction. Frostâs ball went lower, skimming
above the bunker with only a half-dozen feet to spare, and doing a
remarkable amount of rolling after it had struck the smooth turf. It
was a fine long shot and bettered Nedâs by fifteen yards. The gallery
unanimously agreed as they took up their way across the links and
skirted the bunker that the match depended now on the next strokes.
Frost had the advantage in distance, but it was felt that Ned was
quite capable of overcoming that handicap, since on midiron plays he
had shown himself superior to Frost all the afternoon.
Ned was away and played first, using his mashie. The ball went away
high and the gallery watched its arch with breathless interest. It
struck on the green, about two yards out of line with the flag, and
apparently quite near the hole. One of the players who had finished his
game and, with the others, was standing near the home green, waved his
hand and cut a caper. Frost selected a midiron for his approach. For
the first time that day he seemed nervous, and was an unusually long
time in making his shot. It had good direction, struck well this side
of the green and rolled smoothly on until it lay within four yards of
the hole. The gallery hurried to the green, the two players following
more leisurely. Nedâs lie was almost but not quite as good as Frostâs,
being just over four paces distant from the hole, while Frostâs was
just under. Kirk stepped forward and lifted the flag from the hole,
treading across the short turf as though presiding at a funeral. The
gallery ranged itself around the green, determined not to miss a thrill.
Ned looked critically along the line to the hole, swung his putter once
or twice from the wrists and addressed his ball. Had a grasshopper
sneezed at that moment every member of the gallery would have jumped
a foot! Ned swung his club back gently, brought it smoothly forward,
there was a little tap and the ball ran swiftly toward the hole. Ned
had put too much force into the stroke, for the ball reached the edge
of the cup, leaped across and trickled on for a yard! A murmur of
dismay went up. Kendallâs heart sank. Frost gripped his putter, brushed
aside a tiny pebble, settled himself and tapped his ball very gently.
His direction was good, but, having determined not to fall into Nedâs
error, he erred on the other side and the ball traveled a scant two
yards. A sigh of relief arose about Kendall; he caught a boy grinning
at him and grinned back; Teller Sanfordâs black eyes were gleaming
with excitement. There was only a tied match to hope for now, but that
was better than the defeat that would have come had Frost holed out
in his first try. But even a yard is a long way sometimes when much
depends on the result, and there was a good deal of suspense while Ned
measured the distance and swung his putter. But this time the ball
behaved itself and dropped into the hole with a comforting thud. A sigh
of relief went up from all around. Then every eye fixed itself on the
Broadwood player. Two yards was not a long putt for Frost, but there
was always the chance that he wouldnât make it, and as he sped the
little ball forward more than one onlooker gripped his hands. It began
to slow down soon after it left the club; a foot from the hole it was
barely rolling; at the very brink of the hole it paused, seemed to look
into the abyss before it, shudder and stop. For an instant no one moved
or breathed. It seemed that the ball would drop over the edge at any
instant. But it didnât. Frost, watching it, shrugged his shoulders and
walked toward it.
âOh, call it in!â cried Ned, and jumped in the hope of jarring the
ground sufficiently to set the ball in motion. But the thing was
obdurate. It never stirred. Frost tapped it with his putter and it
rolled out of sight. Then he turned to Ned with outstretched hand.
âYou win, Tooker,â he said, with a smile. He was a little bit pale. Ned
shook hands, butââ
âNonsense!â he said. âIâm not going to take the game on a fluke like
that. Weâll call it a draw, Frost, and play another nine.â
âOh, no!â replied Frost. âIt was a fair win.â
He reached down and rescued his ball from the hole. Then he walked very
deliberately to the edge of the green, dropped the ball on the turf,
swung his putter and sent the offending guttie flying into the river.
Then he came back, a smile on his face.
âI feel better,â he said to Ned, with a laugh. âWell, we had a close
game of it, Tooker, and you deserved to win. Wonder how the other games
came out.â
âItâs two to two,â said Linton. âThe match depends on those chaps.â He
nodded across to where Simpson and Sawyer were preparing to drive off
from the ninth tee.
âWho won?â asked Ned of Kirk.
âI lost,â answered Kirk unhappily. âIt was 86 to 90. Iâm awfully sorry,
Ned.â
âIt doesnât matter. How did the others come out?â
âPete lost to Linton and Jim Morgan beat Carter. What was your score,
Ned?â
âI was 79 and Frost 80. Anyone heard how Simpson is getting on?â
âHe was four to the bad at the end of the first round,â replied Kirk.
âI guess heâs out of it.â
And he was. Sawyer, of Broadwood, finished triumphantly with a lead of
6 strokes under Jack Simpson and Broadwood had won the match, three
games out of five.
âWell, we will have to try you again in the spring,â said Ned to Frost.
âWeâll be glad to,â the other answered. âAnd I hope you and I, Tooker,
can get together again. Youâre the best I ever ran up against, but Iâm
not convinced I canât beat you.â
âI daresay you will the next time,â laughed Ned. âGood-by. Weâve had a
dandy time.â
Ned, Kendall and Teller Sanford walked back together, Ned a little
disappointed.
âI donât care if we did get beaten,â said Kendall, âas long as you won
your game, Ned.â
âI do,â Ned replied. âI thought sure weâd get a fall out of them this
time. Hang âem, weâve never managed to win since Iâve been here! But
you wait until next spring! Gee, but Iâm tired! Iâm going to have a hot
and cold shower, fellows. Iâll see you later.â
The Football Team came back to school in time for a late supper,
wearied and happy. Carrelâs School had been vanquished to the tune
of 22 to 3, and it seemed that at last Yardley had found her pace.
Carrelâs three points had been made by a field goal in the first three
minutes of play. After that the home team had never had a chance and
Yardley had scored a touchdown in each period and had kicked two goals
out of four, Hammel succeeding once out of three tries and Dan Vinton
securing the other. Only one incident had marred the game. Arthur
Thompson, playing right half in the third period, had sprained his knee
and would be out of the game for the rest of the season.
The school in general was too happy over the size of the score to pay
much attention to this misfortune at first. But by the next day it was
realized that the team had sustained a serious loss in Thompson. He
had proved himself head and shoulders above any of the other half-back
substitutes, and it was scarcely to be supposed that both Roeder and
Stearns would be so fortunate as to play through the rest of the season
uninterruptedly. Now, in case either was forced to retire, his duties
would fall to Green or Fayette, neither of whom could be called a
first-class back.
Gerald hurried over to Arthurâs room in Whitson as soon as he heard the
bad news and found a very despondent-looking invalid. Arthur had had
his supper in bed, and the doctor had just gone, after wrapping the
injured knee in yards of gauze.
âHowâs this for luck?â asked Arthur miserably. âI can stand not playing
football any more this fall, but what about pole-vaulting? Iâll make a
fine Track Team captain if I have to hobble around with a cane!â
âIt isnât as bad as that, is it?â asked Gerald anxiously. âWhat did the
doctor say?â
âOh, he didnât say much of anything. Said it would be all right in a
week or two, but that Iâd have to be careful of it for a month or so
after I got out. I asked him if it would interfere with pole work and
he just hemmed and hawed and looked wise in that silly way doctors
have. Iâd like to kick him!â
âWhy, of course it will be all right by spring, Arthur,â Gerald said
with conviction. âLook at the people who sprain their ankles and wrists
andââand things every day!â
âWell, why didnât he say so, then?â asked Arthur crossly. âBesides,
pole-vaulting puts a lot of work on a fellowâs knees, and if mine is
stiff and creaky I wonât be able to do ten-feet-six!â
âOh, sure you will! Buck up, Arthur. Tell me about the game.â
âThe game? Oh, it was all right, I guess. Tom was a wonder to-day; went
through âem as though they were paper. And Hammel was a dandy, too,
even if he did miss two goals.â
âHow did Dan play?â
âRotten, if you want the unvarnished truth, Gerald. I donât know whatâs
the matter with Dan. I suppose, though, itâs just being captain thatâs
queering his game. He dropped two passes to-day and was as slow as
molasses down the field. I guess Danâs gone fine.â
Gerald nodded. âI thought he seemed to have the dumps this evening,â he
murmured thoughtfully. âDo you know, Arthur, Iâm a bit worried about
Dan.â Arthur looked a question and Gerald continued: âHe isnât the same
chap he was last year. Heâs cross about half the time, and nervous as
aââaâââ
âAs a hen. Hens are awfully nervous, Gerald.â
âYes, he is. He worries all the time because heâs afraid Broadwood may
lick us, and every time a player stubs his toe or skins his knuckles
Dan has a fit.â
âI know.â Arthur nodded. âWhat he needs is the rest cure. He ought to
take my place for a week.â
âI wish he could,â said Gerald.
âSo do I!â
âHe said he was coming over here later to see how you were.â
âWell, Iâll have to be smiling and happy or he will jump into the
river, I suppose,â Arthur growled. âOh, hang the luck, anyway!â
âIâm awfully sorry,â said Gerald sympathetically. âIf you want anything
while youâre laid up, or if thereâs anything I can doâââ
âThanks. There isnât, though. Hello! Come in!â
It was Dan who had knocked and who, at Arthurâs invitation, entered. At
his heels came Tom Roeder. Dan had a frown on his forehead and looked
tired and worried.
âHello!â greeted Arthur cheerfully. âHello, Tom! What price me?â
âItâs a shame, Arthur,â said Dan. âI donât know what the team is going
to do without you, either.â
âGoing to win,â laughed Arthur. âDonât let that bother you.â
âHow are you feeling?â asked Dan anxiously.
âOh, fine! I could get up and walk around, only that brute of a doctor
wonât let me.â
âYouâd better not try it,â said Tom sternly. âWhat does he say about
the knee?â
âAll right in a week or so.â
âItâs my fault for insisting on your coming out for the team,â Dan
grieved.
âYour fault! Poppycock! Thatâs nonsense to talk like that,â responded
Arthur. âBesides, thereâs no harm done. My old knee will be as fit as a
fiddle in a few days.â
âWeâre going to miss you on the team, though,â said Dan mournfully.
Arthur laughed. âYouâll never know Iâve gone,â he said. âNow, for the
love of mud, Dan, stop looking like a bereaved cow. Cheer up!â
âIâve been trying to get him to cheer up all the evening,â said Tom,
âand he hasnât smiled a single smile yet. Honest, Dan, things arenât
half as bad as you look!â
Dan did smile then rather wanly. âIâm tired,â he said. âThatâs all
thatâs the matter with me. Payson says Iâve got to lay off for a day or
two, though. I guess Iâd better, after the exhibition I put up to-day.
Pretty poor, wasnât it, Tom?â
âSo-so,â replied Tom untroubledly. âDonât let it bother you. We all go
to pieces now and then. Paysonâs right, though, old man, and you do
need a bit of a rest. Next Saturday youâll feel like a fighting cock
and play like a house afire!â
âHope so. Well, I told Payson Iâd go down and see him for a minute. Iâm
awfully sorry about this, Arthur. If thereâs any sort of thing I can
do, let me know, wonât you? Good night. Good night, fellows.â
Dan departed. For a moment no one said anything. Arthur, however,
raised his brows, and Tom shook his head as much as to say, âDonât ask
me!â
âHeâs got it bad,â remarked Arthur finally. âWell, I daresay itâs not
much fun being football captain at a school where nearly three hundred
fellows are watching you all the time and expecting you to turn out
a winning team no matter what the conditions may be. I guess itâs
natural enough to get nervous now and then.â
âThatâs so,â Tom agreed. âIâll bet Iâd be batty in no time if I was
cap. I hope Dan gets over it before next Saturday, though.â
âHe will. Payson will steady him down all right.â
âI daresay. Poor old Dan sure did play a punk game to-day.â
âHe kicked that goal in good shape, though,â said Gerald.
âYouâre right,â Tom agreed. âIt was a dandy. Almost as good as that
friend of yours could have done, Arthur.â
âWhat friend of mine?â
Tom winked at Gerald. âWhy, that chap you saw kicking goals in your
sleep that day.â
âI wasnât asleep,â answered Arthur with a frown. âI donât care if he
couldnât be found; I saw him all right.â
âWell, if there is such a chap,â said Tom, âwhy doesnât he show up?
Payson has hunted the whole school through.â
âI have an idea,â said Gerald, âthat he wasnât one of our fellows at
all, that he was some village chap who came up and used the field
knowing there wouldnât be anyone there in the morning.â
âI hadnât thought of that,â Arthur replied. âIâll just bet that was it!â
âThe explanation,â agreed Tom gravely, âis plausible. I am glad to hear
it, Arthur. It restores my faith in your veracity.â
Dan did no work on Monday, Tuesday nor Wednesday. The coach even
refused to allow him to visit the field the first two days. By
Thursday, Danâs attack of nerves had apparently departed. There was an
extra hard practice that afternoon in preparation for the game with
Porter Institute. Porter was known to have what Tom called âa corking
lot of huskies,â and was expected to give a good deal of trouble. And
so it turned out.
Saturday was a miserable day. It had started to rain Friday evening and
had kept it up all night. At eleven the sun shone for a few moments and
it was hoped that the afternoon would be fair. But by dinner time the
rain was coming down again âfently but girmly,â to use Ned Tookerâs
phrase, and so it continued all during the game, clearing finally when
the Porter team was rolling stationward with Yardleyâs scalps hanging
from their belts. For Yardley met her first defeat that day.
Porter Institute had a fine team; there was no gainsaying that; but
it must be also acknowledged that Yardley did not play up to form. A
fumble by the Porter full-back a few minutes after the game started
gave the home team its one lone score. Dan picked up the ball and, with
Mitchell assisting for a time, sprinted down the field for seventy
yards and a touchdown. Hammel missed the goal with great ease.
After that Yardley was on the defensive for the rest of the first two
periods and managed to hold Porter from scoring, although the Blueâs
goal was twice threatened. Porter, however, came back strong after
the rest and hammered out a touchdown in the third period and kicked
a goal. Yardley brought everything to bear that she knew after that
and succeeded in reaching Porterâs twenty-six yards. From there, had
she possessed a drop-kicker of fair ability, she might have made a
field-goal. But Dan and Simms consulted and decided that they had
better not risk it, although Norton had been showing fair work in
practice. Instead, they went at Porterâs line again and after two
downs, which netted them a scant four yards, tried a forward pass that
went to a Porter back and lost them the ball. That was Yardleyâs only
chance to score. In the last period Porter found her adversaryâs line
less easy and tried end runs and forward passes and on-side kicks. When
the game was almost over Porter had the ball on Yardleyâs thirty-three
yards, made two on a wide run around Norton, and worked the ball back
into the center of the gridiron by a whirlwind shift followed by an
attack at the guard-tackle hole. With two yards to go the Porter right
half stepped back and put the pigskin straight over the bar by a
drop-kick, adding another three points to her six. That was the last
scoring, and the final account stood 9 to 5.
Dan redeemed himself that day, playing his position brilliantly. The
principal fault with the team as a whole was slowness and lack of
aggressiveness. The center of the line was especially lacking in the
latter. Some two hundred rain-coated youths splashed up the hill after
the final whistle had sounded looking rather glum. There were many
criticisms. Most of the fellows held that Dan had erred in not trying a
goal from the field in the third period. Others pointed out that even
had Yardley kicked that goal she would still have been beaten by a
point, and maintained that Dan had done the proper thing in trying for
a touchdown, which, had it been secured, would have given the contest
to the home team. But by the time supper was over the critical attitude
passed. After all, Porter Institute was only Porter Institute, and no
one really cared very much about her. It was bad to be beaten, but the
defeat might act as a tonic and nerve the home team to a grand and
impressive victory over Broadwood. And the defeat of Broadwood was the
chief aim and consideration.
But Dan was once more in the depths. He had hoped for a clean slate
that fall and now here was a beating to be chalked up against him.
Payson shrugged his shoulders and smiled, but Dan took the defeat very
tragically and refused to be comforted.
âThereâs something wrong with our fellows,â he declared in Paysonâs
room in the village that evening. âThey donât _play_! They donât seem
to have any _punch_! Theyâââ
âThe teamâs all right,â interrupted Payson quietly. âThey arenât
playing the best they know how, Vinton, but they will two weeks from
to-day; and thatâs what we want, isnât it? We donât want a team that
reaches high water mark a fortnight before our big game, you know.
Theyâre coming all right. This week weâll hammer some speed into them
and give them the new signals. We wonât have to fuss with more than
six new plays, and thatâs fortunate. If the fellows come on slowly, as
theyâve been coming and as they ought to come, we can work them hard
right up to the Broadwood game and not be afraid of having them go
fine. And thatâs what Iâm hoping for, Vinton. We havenât had what I
call a simon-pure slump all season, and I donât want one now. Porter
had a well-developed team, my boy, a team at least a week ahead of
us. And they outplayed us. If we had won from them to-day our fellows
would have gone into a slump next week as sure as fate. Donât ask me
why, because I canât tell you; but I know Iâm right. Itâs a matter
of psychology, I fancy. Iâve seen it too often. No, weâre doing well
enough. Thereâs no need to worry. So donât do it. The first thing
you know youâll be all worked up and no use to the team just when
youâre wanted the most. Get out of doors to-morrow, Vinton, and take
a long walk. Take someone with you who will talk of something besides
football. Forget football for a day, will you? Just try, eh?â
âAll right,â replied Dan with a smile. âI suppose I am getting sort of
cranky. But you donât happen to know where Iâm likely to find a fellow
at this time of year who wonât talk football, do you?â
âOh, you can find one,â laughed Payson. âTake a fellow who has some
other interest. You football chaps are likely to think that everyone
is just as interested in the game as you are. Did you know that the
Yardley Golf Team had a match with Broadwood last Saturday?â
âNo,â replied Dan uninterestedly. âWho won?â
âBroadwood, I believe. I just mention it to show that while you and
most of the school were âfootballingâ there were a few chaps who were
absorbed in something entirely different. By the way, do you know
Tooker, the golf captain?â
âYes, fairly well.â
âAll right. Thereâs your man. Get him to walk with you. Start out after
church and take a good long tramp. Go over to Lloyd and have your
dinner there. Itâs six miles or so over there and thereâs a very good
little hotel. After dinner sit around and come back in time for supper.
I wish youâd do that, Vinton. Will you?â
âWhy, yes, if you really want me to,â said Dan doubtfully. âBut I donât
see much use in it. And I donât believe Ned Tooker will care to go.â
âWell, ask him. If he wonât, find someone else. But donât take any of
the team along. Get away from football for one day. Youâll be surprised
to find how it will tone you up. By the way, howâs your appetite?â
Dan made a face. Payson nodded:
âI thought so. Well, Iâll wager you anything you like that if youâll do
what I say to-morrow youâll eat enough dinner for a dozen men. And you
neednât stick to training diet, either. Eat whatever they give you, and
lots of it.â
âWhy donât you take your own medicine?â asked Dan. âCanât you go along
with me?â
âI could, but youâd be dragging in football every minute. And,â laughed
the coach, âif you didnât I should! No, you do it the way I said.
Tookerâs a good chap; he will make you laugh, and thatâs what you need.â
After Dan had taken his departure, in a much better frame of mind than
he had arrived in, the head coach went to the telephone and called up
Dudley Hall. The telephone there was in Mr. Austinâs room, and when the
chemistry instructor came to the line Mr. Payson said: âIs that you,
Mr. Austin? This is Payson. I want very much to get hold of Tooker. Is
there any way you can get him to the âphone without much trouble? You
can? Thank you very much. Yes, Iâll hold the line.â
CHAPTER XV
NED EARNS A QUARTER
âWalking,â replied Ned the next morning with enthusiasm, âis the very
best thing I do. As our English cousins say, Iâm awfully keen about it.
When do we go and whither?â
âI thought we might start right after church service and tramp over to
Lloyd. Payson says there is a good place to eat over there.â
âAll right. That suits me.â
âYouâre sure you werenât going to do something else?â asked Dan. âWe
arenât likely to get back much before supper, you know.â
âI wasnât going to do a thing, Vinton. If I had been Iâd give it up,
because on a dandy day like this thereâs nothing finer than a good
tramp in the country. Iâll get into a pair of easier shoes, though, I
guess.â Ned observed his patent leather Oxfords disapprovingly. âAnd
Iâll meet you outside Clarke at eleven-ten sharp.â
And so at a quarter-past eleven Dan and Ned took the road together.
Each had togged himself in an old suit of knickerbockers and had put
on a pair of good stout, easy shoes. The morning was just what one
might expect in early November after a day of rain. There was a bright
blue sky overhead, a wealth of golden sunshine and a little breeze
from the southwest that held a tang of the sparkling Sound. After they
had crossed the bridge over the river and taken the inland road that
led to Broadwood, they had the broad marsh on their right. The marsh
this morning was a wonderful far-stretching expanse of faded green and
russet and gold and red, with, here and there, a brilliant blue ribbon
of water winding across. On their left as they trudged over the road
made firm by the rain, was a hillside of maples and beeches. The storm
had almost stripped the former of their scarlet livery, but the beeches
were still brightly yellow, while the ground was thickly carpeted with
the fallen maple leaves.
For the first mile or so Ned did most of the talking, rattling along
unceasingly of every subject under the sun, drawing Danâs attention
to a bit of landscape or a brilliant burst of color between whiles.
Infrequently a carriage or motor passed them, but for the most of the
way they had the curving road to themselves. At the Old Cider Mill,
Danâs memory turned to the time the spring before when a number of them
had gone over to Broadwood late at night and perpetrated an April fool
joke on the rival school. He mentioned it to Ned, and Ned said:
âTell me about that lark. I never got the rights of it. You neednât
mention names, you know.â
So Dan recounted the adventure and told how he had tried to keep Gerald
in ignorance of the project for fear the boy would insist on going. âI
didnât want him to, you see, because I felt sort of responsible to his
father.â And how, when they had reached the mill, they had paused to
eat some sandwiches they had brought along, and had looked up the road
in the moonlight and seen someone coming. âWe went inside to wait for
him to go by. But he didnât pass and after a while we peeked out and
there he was sitting over there eating up the sandwiches. And when we
got out it was Gerald himself! He had found out about it and played
âpossum until we had started and then followed us.â
âAnd didnât the gardener over at Broadwood hear you and chase you off
the place?â
âHe did. And he saw Gerald and recognized him and came over and pointed
him out to Collins. We had a merry chase through the shrubbery and over
the wall. The gardener chap got mixed up with my foot once when he was
chasing Gerald and took a header. I fancy it didnât improve his temper
any.â
âI didnât know anything about it until I got home,â said Ned. âThen my
dad passed the morning paper over to me and pointed out the story they
had about it. Of course he suspected me of having a hand, but I proved
a clean bill of health. Itâs funny, Vinton, they never tried to get
back at us for that trick.â
âThey havenât enough ingenuity,â replied Dan. âPerhaps, though, theyâll
think up some scheme by next first of April.â He chuckled. âIâll never
forget the way that strip of white cloth looked in the moonlight up
there that night. We planted it square in front of Knowles Hall. Itâs a
wonder someone didnât see us.â
âWhat was it you put on the sign? Iâve forgotten.â
âAlf Loring got that up, I think. It was: âFather, is this a school?â
âNo, my son, it is Broadwood.â âO you April Fools!ââ
âThat was a hot one,â laughed Ned. âI guess that sunk in! Iâll bet they
were snorting mad.â
âThey were. And poor Gerald had to go on probation for a dickens of
a time. So did Thompson, later. I had to explain things to Geraldâs
father, which wasnât much fun.â
âWhat sort is the old man?â Ned asked.
âHeâs a dandy. And he isnât really old. Youâve seen him, havenât you?â
âOnce when he came up to the school and spoke to us in the hall. I
didnât remember him very well.â
âHe got home Friday. Gerald wanted me to go to dinner at Sound View
to-day, but I begged off. Thereâs a kid who has improved since he came
to Yardley. You donât remember him two years ago, do you?â
âOnly dimly. I donât know him very well. I used to think he was a bit
stuck-up, but several fellows have told me I was wrong.â
âYou were,â replied Dan earnestly. âGeraldâs just as decent a chap as
there is in school, and Iâm not saying that because heâs my roommate
or because I sort of brought him up. But I will acknowledge that he
wasnât very promising when he first came. His father had pretty nearly
spoiled him without realizing it a bit. But Yardley is a great place to
take the nonsense out of a fellow. Gerald had his troubles for a while
and then, having plenty of common sense, he took a tumble and knuckled
down.â
âI ran across quite a character the other day,â said Ned. âI guess it
was two or three weeks ago now. A fellow named Burtis.â
âBurtis? I met him. He came to my room one night just after school
opened and told me to put him down on the list of football candidates,
or something like that. I remember it tickled Gerald and me to death.
But he was rather a smart-looking chap, as I recall him. Howâs he
getting on?â
âOh, having his troubles too, Vinton. We all do at first, I guess. But
he will make good, unless Iâm very much mistaken. Iâm showing him golf
just at present.â
âBy the way, you fellows played Broadwood the other day, I hear. How
did you come out?â
âThey won three out of five. Theyâve got a pretty good team. Golf is
one of their strong suits.â
âThey do some things fairly well,â Dan allowed. Then, after a pause,
and with a smile, he went on: âFunny, isnât it, how rabid we are at
first; when weâre juniors, say? I used to think that the Broadwood
chaps were a lot of thugs and assassins. My patriotism was absolutely
murderous! After a while you meet some of the Greenies and itâs quite a
shock to discover that theyâre really a very decent lot of fellows, not
much different from your own crowd.â
âI know,â Ned agreed. âI remember once when I was a youngster here;
it was my second year, I think; I went home on the train with
some Broadwood fellows. They sat across the car from me. I really
expected them to be a lot of bounders and instead of that they were a
fine-looking set and behaved themselves all the way to New York. As you
said, it was something of a shock. And thereâs the school, by the way.
You can just see a corner of a building through the trees.â
âYes, I see. Thatâs the gym, I think. Theyâve got a mighty good
location for a school, havenât they?â
âNice and high, but too far from the water. Hereâs where we turn off,
isnât it? Whatâs the sign board say?â
ââLloyd 3œ miles,ââ Dan read. âWeâre almost halfway, then. It hasnât
seemed far. How are your legs?â
âJust getting limbered up,â replied Ned stoutly. âAnd itâs only a
little after twelve. We can make it by half-past one without hurrying,
I guess. Forward, brave comrade!â
The new road, which led northward at right angles from the turnpike,
was narrower and offered harder walking, but they made good time and
at one oâclock were out on the Saybrook road with their destination
only a mile distant. Lloyd was a tiny hamlet at the intersection of two
main lines of travel, but it was a pretty, old-fashioned place, with
huge elms drooping over comfortable white houses and many tiny gardens
still vivid with autumn flowers: phlox and nasturtiums and cosmos. The
railroad passed Lloyd fully a mile away, but for all that the hotel
when they reached it was by no means deserted, a fact readily explained
by the four or five automobiles standing in front or in the little yard
at the side. It was a rambling white building with a veranda running
along in front, and a swinging sign hung from a big elm at the corner.
âWashingtonâs Headâ was the original legend on the board, and under
it was a weather-faded likeness of the Father of his Country. But, so
the story went, a visiting artist, finding, perhaps, time heavy on his
hands, had some years before turned the capital H into a D, so that now
the sign informed the world at large that âWashingtonâs Dead.â
âI donât know how you feel,â said Ned as they went up the steps, âbut
Iâm starved to death.â
âI feel a bit hungry myself,â acknowledged Dan. âI wonder if dinner is
ready.â
It was, and after washing the marks of the road from their hands and
faces they graciously allowed the proprietor of the inn to conduct them
to their seats in the dining-room. What followed after may be left to
the imagination. There was an old-fashioned vegetable soup to start
with of which Ned remarked that they had managed to get everything
into it save the kitchen stove. And then there was fish and roast
chicken and vegetables and apple fritters and salad and ice cream and
lemon pie and cake and cheese and crackers and coffee. And if Ned
missed a single item or Dan allowed anything to get by him I have been
grossly misinformed. And afterwards they struggled out to the veranda,
sank into two chairs, placed their heels on the rail and stared
somnolently across the street at a funny little old story-and-a-half
house almost hidden by shrubbery and box hedges. There was little
conversation for a while. The sun was nice and warm, the breeze was
broken by the corner of the veranda and life was very blissful and
sleepy. Finally,
âI suppose we ought to start back before long,â murmured Ned drowsily.
âYes.â Dan lifted his eyelids and nodded lazily. Then he shut his
eyes again and returned to a condition halfway between slumber and
wakefulness.
âGood night,â muttered Ned. Later by ten minutes,
âHow many of those fritters did you eat?â he asked.
âFour,â replied Dan, this time without opening his eyes.
âI only had three,â said Ned regretfully. âI think Iâll go back.â
âToo late, too late!â murmured Dan. âYe cannot enter now!â
âPerhaps if we hang around here theyâll give us five oâclock tea.â
Dan groaned. âNot if Iâm strong enough to resist,â he said. âWhat time
is it?â
âHavenât you a watch?â
âYes, but I canât get at it.â
âThatâs my case exactly.â
Five minutes afterwards Ned remarked weakly: âI think itâs about a
quarter-past three.â
âWe ought to be going,â sighed Dan.
âWe ought,â groaned Ned. After that silence fell again.
But presently a motor began to throb around the corner of the house and
a big touring car, dusty and dirty, backed up to the curb before the
door. The two boys opened their eyes with sighs and frowns and watched.
A party of two men and two ladies emerged from the hotel. The man at
the wheel of the car called to them:
âSee if you can find someone to bring that suitcase out, Jim,â he said.
âItâs in front of the desk there.â
Nedâs chair came down with a bang and he jumped to his feet.
âYes, sir; right away, sir!â he said briskly. In a moment he had dashed
into the office and out again, bearing a big leather suitcase. Danâs
chair came down and he stared in bewilderment.
âWhere shall I put it, sir?â Ned was asking solicitously.
âStick it in back there, my boy. Thatâs it.â
Ned deposited the bag, swung the tonneau door open and stood
respectfully at attention while the party seated themselves. The man at
the wheel put his hand into his pocket, selected a coin and handed it
back.
âHere you are, boy,â he said.
Ned touched his forehead sketchily, âThank you, sir!â
The car bounded forward and Ned, grinning delightedly, danced up the
steps.
âIâve made a quarter! Iâve made a quarter!â he chanted.
CHAPTER XVI
A DISSERTATION ON MUSHROOMS
âYouâre the craziest chap I ever saw,â laughed Dan. âIs it a good one?â
Ned tried it with his teeth, tapped it on the edge of the railing and
eyed it anxiously. âPerfectly good,â he replied finally. âIt seems to
be made of silver.â
âThought it might be a lead quarter,â said Dan.
âFever near, sir; fever near!â
âEh?â
âI said fever near.â
âWhatâs that?â
âThatâs a phrase of reassurance spoken in my new universal language.â
âYour new _what_?â
âUniversal language,â replied Ned gravely, seating himself on the
railing. âItâs away ahead of Esperanto, while as for Volapukââwhy,
Volapukâs dead and buried. The beauty of my systemâââ
âWhat do you call it?â
Nedâs hesitation was infinitesimal, and he answered without the
flicker of an eyelash. âTookeranto. As I was saying, its greatest
beauty is its simplicity. You merely change the first letters of
your words; I think transpose is the word I should have used. For
instance, I say to you, âThatâs a pice shair of noes you have,â and you
understand me at once.â
âThe dickens I do!â Dan laughed.
âYou donât? But you would get me if I told you you were pitting on the
sorch of the Hashingtonâs Wead?â
âOnce more, please, and give me something easier,â begged Dan.
âVery well; set me lee. I suppose you know that you had choast ricken
for dinner?â
âRoast chicken! But how the dickens do you do it so quickly? Iâd have
to think an hour.â
âHink a thour, you mean,â Ned corrected. âItâs serfectly pimple. It
pomes with cractice.â
âFor goodnessâ sake, shut up!â laughed Dan. âYouâll have me crazy. Itâs
a wonderful language, though. I shall study it. Have you written a book
about it yet?â
âYot net,â replied Ned, shaking his head, âbut Iâm toing go. When I do
I shall dedicate it to Van Dinton.â
Dan put his hands to his ears and jumped up. âCome on,â he cried, âand
let me take you home before you get any worse!â
âYou mean,â began Ned gravely.
â_No, I donât!_ Shut up! Have we paid for dinner yet? Iâve eaten so
much Iâve forgotten what has happened.â
âWe have not. Letâs find mine host and settle up.â
âNow I know why you worked so hard for that tip. Youâre going to help
pay for your dinner with it.â
âThat quarter? Never! Do you realize, sir, that that is absolutely the
first money I ever earned? Is not that a beautiful thought? I shall
always keep that quarter, always treasure it.â He slipped it into his
vest pocket and patted it fondly. âYou never realize the value of
money, Vinton, until you earn it by the sweat of your brow.â
âYour brow hasnât sweated ten centsâ worth,â laughed Dan. âCome on and
letâs hunt up Mr. Washington.â
âI wish,â murmured Ned regretfully when they had each enriched the
hotel exchequer with a dollar bill, âI wish I had eaten that fourth
fritter!â
They walked back rather more leisurely through the late sunlight,
reaching school just as twilight descended.
âI never thought,â Ned confided as they parted in front of Clarke,
âthat Iâd have any appetite for supper, but, to quote our English
cousins again, I feel a bit peckish, donât you know.â
âIâm hungry again myself,â Dan answered. âI say, we had an awfully good
time, didnât we? Letâs try it again some day, eh? Much obliged to you,
Tooker, for coming along. I suppose you thought I was sort of crazy,
but it was Paysonâs idea; he thought I needed a tramp, and so I asked
youâââ
âThank you,â said Ned gravely. âI may be a tramp, but you neednât throw
it in my face.â
âIâm sorry; hope I didnât hurt your feelings. Come and see me, will
you? Come over to-night for a while.â
âNot to-night, for I told Burtis Iâd drop in on him. But Iâll be around
soon. Lo song.â
âEh? Oh, so long. Iâm crazy about your Tookeritisâââ
âTookeranto, please,â Ned corrected.
âWhatever it is; and Iâm going to study it so I can understand what
youâre saying now and then.â
âUnkind, unkind!â murmured Ned sorrowfully. âI fid you barewell, Van
Dinton.â
Kendall had news for Ned that evening when the latter called on
him, but owing to the fact that Harold Towne was in the room he
couldnât confide it for a time. Harold entertained a large respect and
admiration for Ned Tooker, and whenever he was on hand on the occasions
of Nedâs visits he always set out to make himself agreeable. Haroldâs
notion of being agreeable was to monopolize most of the conversation,
carefully selecting subjects which he believed Ned to be interested in
and rattling away on them with an assurance that was at once irritating
and amusing. Ned detested Kendallâs roommate heartily, but managed to
be polite no matter how much Haroldâs chatter annoyed him. To-night
Harold quite surpassed himself, playing the rĂŽle of host from the
moment of Nedâs appearance.
âHello, Tooker!â Harold cried. âAwfully glad to see you. Kendall, pull
that chair around for Tooker. Throw your cap anywhere; this is Liberty
Hall.â
âMuch obliged, but Iâll sit here. Well, how are things with you, Curt?â
âOh, heâs been grinding at his books all the afternoon,â said Harold.
âI tell him heâs after a scholarship.â
âVery commendable ambition,â said Ned soberly. âI tried it myself once
and came within one of getting a Burrows. I wrote home about it and my
dad wrote back that he guessed that was about as near as Iâd ever get
to making fifty dollars. Such ingratitude was naturally discouraging
and I never tried again.â
Harold laughed uproariously and Ned observed him in grave surprise.
âI made a quarter to-day, though,â he went on. âWalked over to Lloyd
for dinner and held a manâs auto for him and he gave me a quarter. Here
it is. Looks all right, doesnât it?â He passed it to Kendall.
âSeems to be real money,â laughed Kendall. âWhat do you mean by saying
you held a manâs auto? Looked after it for him?â
âYes, held it by the bit. It was rather nervous, you see; tried to jump
out of the shafts every time a leaf rustled.â
âOh, it was a horse?â said Harold.
âNo, an automobile! a dark bay with coppery points. It was very
good-looking, too. Very deep in the radiator, and had an arched neck
and fine quarters. This is one of them.â
âYouâre crazy, Ned,â laughed Kendall. â_Was it a horse or was it an
automobile?_â
âOh, I donât know, but I got a quarter. And all I did was hold its
head, bring a pail of water for it and polish the brass. My, but itâs
easy to earn money if you know how! Want to play some golf to-morrow?â
âYes, Iâd love to, if you care to bother with me,â answered Kendall.
âBut I would like to know about that horsomobile.â
âIâve told you everything,â answered Ned with dignity. âIf you doubt my
story, why, hereâs the quarter.â
âWhat were you doing at Lloyd?â asked Harold. âThatâs ten or twelve
miles, isnât it?â
âItâs quite a jaunt. I was looking for mushrooms,â answered Ned calmly.
âMushrooms? What for?â
âOh, I collect them. Havenât you ever seen my fungi? You must come over
some time and let me show them to you.â
âHonest, Tooker? Iâd like to see them. Did you find any to-day?
Anyââerââinteresting ones?â
âUmââa few. I got a good specimen of the canardius antarcticus; and a
few of the Washingtonii and Danvintonii. Itâs getting late for them,
though. What I was especially anxious to find was the pufum mobilis, or
rolling mushroom. Youâve seen that, I suppose.â Harold looked doubtful
and murmured that he didnât think he ever had. âReally? I thought most
everyone knew the rolling mushroom. Itâs called that because it rolls
along the ground.â
âRolls along the ground!â exclaimed Kendall. âI donât believe it!â
Ned smiled kindly on his ignorance. âThe mobilis,â he explained,
âis one of the puff-balls, a small, round puff-ball. It is found on
hillsides. Most puff-balls disseminate their poresââI mean sporesââby
the aid of the wind, remaining where they grow. But the mobilis as
soon as it attains maturity detaches itself from its stalk and begins
to roll. As I have said, they always grow on the sides of hills.
Consequently they roll to the bottom, sowing their spores as they go.
We always look along the foot of a hill until we find the dead mobilis.
Then we know that we shall find growing ones further up.â
âJimminy, thatâs quite interesting!â exclaimed Harold. âDo you know, I
rather think Iâll go in for mushrooms myself! It must be lots of fun
collecting them.â
âNot bad,â replied Ned. âBut of course thereâs always the element of
danger.â
âHow do you mean?â Harold asked.
âWell, there are certain kinds that are poisonous not only to touch
but to approach. Thereâs the leoparditus, for instance, a large, angry
mushroomââalthough it would be more correct to give it the popular
name of toadstoolââthat has a purplish body with small livid spots on
it. The leoparditus is certain death if you touch it. Even if you
only inhale its noxious fumesâââNed choked a little thereââânoxious
fumes you will break out with a very painful rash all over the body,
more especially the exposed portions. Then there is the Gumponicum
eachewupus, which hides in the deep woods and springs out at you as you
unsuspectingly pass. Its bite is certain death.â
Ned paused and stared gravely at the drop-light. There was a moment of
silence. Then Kendall began to chuckle and Harold got rather red in the
face.
âYou were just stringing us, werenât you?â he asked, with an attempt at
a laugh. âI suppose that was pretty funny, Tooker.â
âFar be it from me to praise my own efforts,â replied Ned modestly.
âYou asked me what I was doing at Lloyd. As I didnât care to tell
you the truth and am far too polite to request you to mind your own
business I did the best I could. I hope you found it amusing.â
âYes, but I knew all the time you were stringing,â said Harold
uncomfortably.
âYour penetration, Mr. Towne,â answered Ned graciously, âis most
remarkable.â Then he began to talk golf to Kendall, and five minutes
later Harold said he had promised to see a fellow and took his
departure. Ned heaved a sigh of relief when the door had closed behind
him.
âI canât stand that fellow,â he said. âHe gets me so nervous!â
Kendall laughed. âI donât mind him as much as I did,â he said. âHe
means well enough, I guess.â
âAll right in his way, but doesnât weigh enough,â replied Ned
flippantly. âWell, out with it, Curt.â
âOut with what?â
âI donât know. Whatever it is. Youâve been fairly dying to tell me
something ever since I got here. So letâs have it.â
âI donât see how you knew,â said Kendall. âI was just going to tell you
that Mr. Collins called me down to his study this afternoon andâââ
âWait! Donât tell me that youâre off probation!â
Kendall nodded. Ned made a gesture of disappointment.
âIsnât that the dickens?â he exclaimed. âJust when I was getting
interested in you, too! Iâve never been chummy with a âreal devilâ of a
fellow before, and now you go and reform!â
âI havenât reformed,â laughed Kendall. âIâve just been pardoned for my
former sins.â
âAh! And youâre just as wicked as you ever were?â
âJust!â
âThatâs better.â Ned sighed his relief. âI was afraid you were a
reformed character, Curt. You see there are plenty of good, moral
chaps in school; I know dozens of them; but youâre the first desperate
character I ever got to know at all well. And so theyâve lifted the
ban, eh? Well, that will help, wonât it? Now youâll be free to take
up your career of crime again. Whisper, Curt; what are you thinking
of doing first? Had any experience with bombs? They tell me bombing
is a pleasant and fairly safe amusement. Would you mind beginning on
that roommate of yours? Incendiarism is another cute little way in
which to pass an evening. Iâve often thought that Oxford would make
a dandy blaze if you could get it started. Have you ever seriously
considered murder? So many of our prominent citizens are going in for
murder nowadays. And I can think of so many beautiful subjects for your
attentions. Why, one neednât look beyond his immediate acquaintances!â
âIâm going to try and get back on the Football Team the first thing,â
said Kendall.
âSeriously?â
âYes. Of course, I couldnât make the First Team now; itâs too late, I
guess; but I might make the Second. What do you think?â
âI admire your courage. But I regret that you choose football when you
might play golf. I was going to make a gandy dolfer out of you, Curt.â
âI can play golf after the football season,â said Kendall.
âUm; yes; but the two sciences are widely opposed. Iâve never known
a football man who could swing a golf club decently. Football seems
toââto deaden the sensibilities, whatever those may be, Curt. And a man
must have sensibilities to play a good game of golf. However, if you
are really determined, come with me.â
âWhere?â asked Kendall as Ned jumped up and rescued his cap from the
floor.
âTo see Vinton. If thereâs a chance for you he will tell you.â
âOh, but I wouldnât like to do that, Ned!â
âYouâll do as I tell you! Iâm going to make something out of you or
bust. If you wonât be a golfer you shall be a footballer. Come on and
Iâll make arrangements.â
CHAPTER XVII
UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF MR. TOOKER
âVinton, I want to present to you Mr. Bendall Kurtis,â announced Ned.
âMr. Kurtis desires to join your aggregation of thugs and pursue the
agile pigskin across theââthe verdant meed. Not bad, what?â
They had found Dan alone in Number 28, studying some new plays which
were to be taught to the team that week.
âVery poetic,â laughed Dan. âSit down, fellows. Burtis and I have met
before, I think. Now kindly tell me all over again, Tooker; what is
troubling you?â
âNot a thing. And please donât assume that air of patient fortitude, as
though you were humoring an idiot from sheer politeness. Iâm talking
perfectly good sense. Mr. Kurtisââor Burtisââwishes to join your team
of footballers.â
âOh, I see. But isnât it a little late, Burtis?â asked Dan with a smile.
âYes, I know it is,â said Kendall. âIââI didnât want to bother you, but
Ned insisted that I should come over. I thought perhaps I might be
able to play on the Second Team.â
âI see. Well, the Second is pretty well settled now, you see, and I
donât believeâââ
âMay I interrupt?â asked Ned very courteously. âI merely wish to say,
Vinton, that you perhaps do not realize the magnitude of the favor I
am trying to do you. Mr. Burtis here is no common garden variety of
footballer. He isââhe is a positive wonder! I have never seen him play,
nor have I ever heard him speak of hisââhis prowess, but I have tried
him at golf, and, while I donât say that he might not with patience and
perseverance, become a golfer of some ability, yet truth compels me to
acknowledge that he would not be likely to become the United States
amateur champion. You catch the idea?â
âHanged if I do!â laughed Dan.
âWhy, donât you see that the mere fact that he is only an average
golfer makes it more than probable, nay, almost certain, that he is a
natural-born footballer? In other words, Vinton, if a fellow isnât a
golfer he must be able to do something, and what is easier to do than
football?â
âYouâre an idiot, Tooker! But Iâll see what can be done for you,
Burtis. Perhaps Staniford may be able to take you on as a sub. You had
some training early in the season, didnât you?â
âA little,â answered Kendall.
âWere you dropped or did you get tired of it?â
âIââIâââ
âFess up, Curt. The fact is, Vinton, that this seemingly innocent youth
is one of the most depraved characters in school. You wouldnât suspect
it, would you? Why, man alive, heâs been on probation for a month!
Fancy that! And thatâs why he abandoned football. He had no choice, you
see.â
âSo that was it? Iâm sorry, Burtis, you couldnât keep on. That was
hard luck, wasnât it? Well, Iâll speak to Staniford to-morrow; heâs
captain of the Second, you know; perhaps he will find something for
you, although, as you know, I suppose, there are only two weeks more of
football. Whatâs your line, Burtis?â
âLine?â asked Kendall vaguely.
âYes; I mean what position have you played?â
âMy dear Vinton,â Ned interrupted before Kendall could reply, âmy
client is an all-around footballer. He can play anything from
quarter-back to manager. Hisââahââdomain, if I may use the word, has no
limits, Vinton; heâââ
âOh, please dry up, Ned,â begged Kendall laughingly. âHe will think Iâm
a perfect fool!â
âNone of us,â replied Ned, shaking his head sadly, âare perfect.â
âWell, you come down to the field to-morrow afternoon,â said Dan to
Kendall, âand weâll see. But donât bring your advertising manager with
you. First thing I know he will have you captain of the team!â
âThank you,â said Kendall gratefully. âWould it matter if I didnât wear
regular things to-morrow?â
âRegular things?â asked Dan. âWhat sort of things?â
âI mean regular football clothes. You see, I didnât get any becauseâââ
âYou shall have mine,â exclaimed Ned. âIâve got a perfectly magnificent
array of football attire! I shall never use them again; they are yours
unconditionally, Curt. My football experience was brief but lurid.
Perhaps I didnât know as much about playing the game as some; in fact,
the coach as much as hinted that; but I will say that when it came
to outfit, Vinton, I was head and shoulders above the whole field!
Complete, thatâs the word for it. I donât believe in doing things by
halves, and when I determined to lend my assistance to the football
team I obtained a catalogue from a dealer in football necessities and
luxuries and bought one of everything. I think I owned everything
in any way connected with the game except a gridiron. I even had an
assortment of leather and felt pads for my ankles, knees, elbows and
shoulders in case I should meet with an accident some time while
plunging through the enemyâs line for a touchdown. And I hadââand still
haveââa rubber thing that strapped around my head and covered my little
nose; I held one extremity of it between my pearly teeth, and I can
still remember how very unpleasant it tasted. All these things shall
be yours, Curt. I intend you to be the Beau Brummel of the football
field. All I ask is that some day you will allow me to dress you in
full panoply, with a complete assortment of rubber bandages, arm and
leg guards, nose guard and head guard, and have your picture taken!â
They were still laughing over Nedâs extravagances when the door opened
and Gerald Pennimore came in. He shook hands with Kendall and seemed
very glad to see him. âI thought you had forgotten your promise to come
and see us, Burtis,â he said. âHow are you, Tooker? I havenât seen much
of you this fall.â
âBeen over to Arthurâs?â Dan asked.
âYes. Heâs getting on all right. The doctor says he can try crutches,
if he likes. The sprain wasnât as bad as it seemed at first, he says.â
âWhoâs that, Pennimore? Arthur Thompson?â asked Ned.
âYes, he sprained his knee in the game last week.â
âI heard about it. Too bad. Iâm glad heâs getting well, though. I
suppose that keeps him out of football for the rest of the season,
doesnât it?â
âYes,â Dan replied. âI hope, though, that he will be able to hobble
into the Broadwood game for a minute so as to get his Y.â
âThese the new plays?â asked Gerald, taking up the sheets of paper on
the table. âWhen I see a thing like that Iâm glad Iâm not on the team,â
he laughed, holding up one of the diagrams.
âHow is the Cross-Country Team getting on?â asked Ned.
âFine. We have our trials to-morrow afternoon to select the fellows
to run against Broadwood a week from Saturday. Weâve got twenty-two
fellows trying, which means that ten of us will get left.â
âTen?â said Dan. âI thought you had only ten in the race.â
âThatâs all, but Andy picks a dozen and two of them are substitutes in
case someone canât run. How are you getting on, Burtis?â
âFirst rate, thank you.â
âYou gave up football, didnât you? You know you were quite full of it a
while ago.â
âYes, Iââthat isâââ
âHeâs going to try again to-morrow,â said Dan. âThat is, if I can
convince Staniford that he needs another sub. Tooker has accepted the
position of Burtisâs press agent and manager.â
âI should think heâd make a good one,â said Gerald, with a smile.
âOne of the best,â agreed Ned. âAfter the football season is over I
shall be at leisure again. Anything needed in my line?â
âNo, I think not,â laughed Gerald.
After Ned and Kendall had taken their departures, which they did a few
minutes later, Gerald turned a puzzled face to Dan.
âWhat did you mean by saying that Burtis was going to try again?â he
asked.
âI meant,â replied Dan ruefully, âthat that idiot Tooker came in here
with Burtis and hypnotized me into promising to get Burtis on the
Second Team if I could. Donât ask me how it happened, because I donât
know. But one thing I do know,â he added as he took up the diagrams
again, âand that is that Tooker can talk you out of house and home.
I was afraid all the time he was here that he would decide to make
Burtis captain, and that Iâd have to resign.â
âYesterday,â laughed Gerald, âyou were aching to resign. Iâm glad
youâve changed your mind about it, Dan. Things looking brighter
to-night?â
âLots, chum. That walk sort of cleared my brain, I guess. I wonder why
I never knew Tooker better. Heâs a dandy sort.â
In spite of Danâs request to the contrary, Ned accompanied Kendall to
the field the next afternoon. Kendall was clothed in Nedâs football
togs, which fitted him fairly well. In appearance they were brand-new,
for Nedâs football career had been brief and the immaculate khaki
trousers held not the tiniest smooch. What Dan had said to the Second
Teamâs captain isnât known, although Ned secretly wondered how the
former had managed to put such an extraordinary request. To instate
an inexperienced player even on the Second at the tag end of the
season was an outlandish proceeding, and Ned knew that Dan had done it
only to show his appreciation of Nedâs companionship on that walk to
Lloyd. As for Kendall, it never occurred to him to wonder about the
proceeding. He was still pretty green in such matters. Staniford was a
big, broad-shouldered First Class fellow who took his captaincy of the
Second very seriously and worked like a Trojan with his fellows under
him. He greeted Kendall very briefly and sent him to the bench, but Ned
noticed with amusement that the captainâs gaze followed Kendall with
perplexity.
âHeâs laying it to politics,â said Ned to himself with a chuckle, âand
heâs wondering what Curt is going to do for Vinton in return. Alas,
human nature is terribly suspicious!â
After a while Kendall was sent onto the field with a squad of Second
Team substitutes to run through signals. It was his first experience
with signals, and from his place at left half-back he made so many
mistakes at first that the entire squad viewed him with disgust and
resentment. But he began to understand what was required, and for the
last five minutes of the drill acquitted himself fairly well. But there
were many who asked that afternoon:
âWhoâs the jay Stany put in here to-day? Whereâd he come from? Whatâs
he think this is, a kindergarten?â
From which you may gather the impression that Kendallâs first day as
a member of the Second Team was not highly successful. The First was
walked and then trotted through two of the new plays that afternoon,
and later, when it faced the Second, it tried them out. You can never
tell on paper what a play will be on the field, and to-day one of
the two plays proved utterly impractical and was immediately dropped.
Altogether, that afternoonâs practice was not a success, a fact
recognized by coaches, captain and players, and there was a general
air of discouragement apparent afterwards. Two graduates, old football
players, had put in an appearance that day and had bothered Payson to
death with their advice and interference. They had the best intentions
in the world and had as likely as not sacrificed time and trouble to
be there, but the amount of actual assistance they rendered was nil.
Payson growled to Cowles, the manager, on the way up the hill, that if
he had his way thereâd be a notice at the school entrance reading, âNo
graduates allowed.â
Kendall had watched the scrimmage from the bench, one of two dozen or
so blanket-wrapped substitutes, none of whom he knew save by sight and
none of whom was apparently aware of his existence. When, panting and
perspiring, the members of the opposing teams rescued their sweaters
and trotted or limped back to the gymnasium Kendall followed, secretly
proud to be even an humble unit in that army of warriors. He had his
shower like the rest of themââNed having procured him a locker all
his ownââand dressed slowly, listening to the talk about him and
watching the scene. Discouragement, as I have said, was the aftermath
to-day. Even the Second Team fellows felt that the afternoon had been
practically wasted. Kendall saw Dan, at first half undressed and then,
later, swathed in a big towel, standing for minutes at a time talking
earnestly, scowling the while, with Tom Roeder or Al Simms or Wallace
Hammel. Everyone seemed cross and disgruntled. Mr. Payson, crossing
the room once, looked out of sorts, something very unusual for him.
Even the door when it closed behind him seemed to slam vindictively.
A tussle over the possession of a towel which started good-naturedly
between two boys at the farther end of the locker-room ended in a
âscrap,â with friends of the contestants thrusting them angrily apart
and showing a disposition to âstart somethingâ themselves on the
slightest provocation. Kendall, who had climbed onto a bench to watch
events, felt a bit disappointed when the two boys went off growling in
different directions, leaving the towel, the bone of contention, quite
forgotten on the floor. The steam from the baths eddied out and filled
the room with a humid warmth, and from beyond the partition came the
hiss of water and the sudden shriek of a bather as the cold stinging
jets struck his glowing body. Little by little the babel of sound
lessened. One by one, or in groups, the fellows slammed their locker
doors and went out. Kendall, who had been ten minutes tying a shoelace,
found himself almost alone. The lights were on now and outside the high
windows was deep twilight. He finished his toilet, arranged his clothes
in the locker, shut the door and dropped the key in his pocket. At
the door of the stairway he turned for a final look over the big room
with its disarranged benches, its water-stained floor, its litter of
discarded or forgotten towels and its heavy, steamy odor. Somehow he
felt that here at last was _life_!
That last week but one seemed to rush by. There was Tuesday, when the
Second scored on the First by a blocked kick, and Wednesday when the
First came back and literally tore the Second to shreds, and Thursday,
when Kendall got into the scrimmage for a brief five minutes and
emerged from what seemed afterwards to have been a wild chaos with
a black eye and bleeding knuckles and a positive hatred of Cowles,
whose whistle had ended the fray. That was Kendallâs baptism by fire,
and it left him trembling with excitement and eager for the morrow.
By Friday the First Team had learned its new signals; hard nightly
periods in the gymnasium had accomplished that; and had mastered the
new plays so that the Second Team went into the scrimmage with no hope
of scoring, but only wondering how long they could stand off their
opponents. The First was a fighting machine at last, eleven eager,
powerful parts working together with a minimum of friction. The Second
dug their toes and strained and panted and sweated, but always the
First came through, overwhelming them, thrusting them aside, trampling
over them to victory. Time and again the Second was given the ball on
the Firstâs ten yards or five yards and told to take it over. But the
First was a human stone wall, and Staniford almost cried as his attack
curled up like spent bullets against steel. The First was coming fast
now and discouragement was forgotten. The school was in the throes
of the excitement that always presages the Big Game. The first mass
meeting had been held on Wednesday; there was another called for
Saturday night. Football songs were heard everywhere. Lessons suffered
those days, and the instructors mentally shrugged their shoulders
and patiently waited for the madness to end. And then, on Saturday
forenoon, the First Team and almost the whole student body went off,
cheered and cheering, to Nordham for the last contest before the final
game. Kendall went, and Ned, and Gerald, and about everyone we know
except Arthur Thompson, and all the way to Nordham the Yardley songs
and cheers floated out the car windows:
âYardley! Yardley!! Yardley!!!â
CHAPTER XVIII
YARDLEY VISITS NORDHAM
The Nordham game had been carefully planned by Mr. Payson and Dan.
Nordham had this year a light-weight team with a rather weak line and
an exceptionally fast and clever back-field. On the offensive Yardley
was to stick largely to plays between tackles, relying on Tom Roeder
and Wallace Hammel for plunges, while Stearns, lighter but quicker, was
expected to âknifeâ himself through with good effect. Ridge and Simms
were to do the punting. Field goals were outside the calculations,
since no one could be depended on to perform them with any certainty.
On defense it was planned to use the âbasketâ formation, the end
dropping well back and outside the opposing flankers, the full-back
playing behind center and the quarter and the two half-backs playing a
deep field. This, which was practically Yardleyâs defense against kick
formation, was to be used regularly, since the enemy had a reputation
for being wonderfully tricky in her back-field. The arrangement
weakened the Yardley line, but Nordham was not thought to be heavy
enough to gain by ordinary plunging tactics.
The Blue started the game with the following line-up: Vinton,
left end; Mitchell, left tackle; Ridge, left guard; Fogg, center;
Merriwell, right guard; Jensen, right tackle; Norton, right end; Simms,
quarter-back; Roeder, left half-back; Stearns, right half-back; Hammel,
full-back. It was planned to use a number of substitutes just as soon
as the game had been âplaced on ice.â Holmes, quarter; Sayer, end;
Greene and Fayette, half-backs; Marion, full-back, and Fales, guard,
were all likely to play one or two periods.
Yardley won the toss and Hammel kicked off. Nordham tried the center
of the Yardley line in a tentative way and then punted. The kick was a
beautiful one against a slight wind and almost went over Simmsâs head.
The Nordham ends came down the field like two streaks of lightning and
had little trouble getting by the interference. Simms made four or five
yards and then went down with two Nordham players on top of him. Simms
started right in trying out the Nordham line and Roeder and Hammel went
through for good gains. But it was necessary to punt on the third down.
Nordham opened up a bewildering series of attacks then. She had a quick
line-shift that was difficult to meet successfully and it soon became
evident that the formation being used by Yardley would not meet the
requirements of the occasion. Nordham set her whole team in motion to
the right or left, as the case might be, with the runner effectually
concealed until the moment came for him to âgo in.â This had the effect
of upsetting Yardleyâs formation, and twice Norton was badly fooled.
After Nordham had barely made her distance twice, Dan and Simms held a
consultation and the âbasketâ formation was abandoned, the ends playing
up into the line and the halves moving closer. That worked better, but
Nordham had a dozen tricks up her sleeve and rattled them off so fast
that Yardley began to be dazed. Plays that started without signals,
plays in which the whole back-field moved one way and the quarter,
carrying the ball, sprang around the opposite end; forward passes from
kick formation, forward passes from close formation, on-side kicks and
a half-dozen other plays tested the Yardley secondary defense as it had
not been tested all the fall. Nordhamâs plays were, however, all built
around two players, her quarter, Buckman, a human eel, and her left
half-back, Lishing. Both were exceptionally fast starters, ran like the
wind, dodged miraculously and fought like wolves when tackled. Lishing
was tall and slim and the quarter-back was a small, wiry youngster of
seventeen, red of hair and freckled of face. He wore no head guard and
before the game was ten minutes old the slogan on the Blueâs side was,
â_Look for the red head!_â
Nordham worked the ball to the middle of the field and there a play
went wrong, the runner was thrown by Dan yards behind his line and
Nordham kicked. It was Stearnsâs ball over near the side-line and he
had plenty of time to make the catch and get started. But there was
a fumble, the Nordham left end tore down, evaded Norton and tackled
Stearns just as that youth recovered the ball. It was Yardleyâs ball
on her fifteen yards. A plunge at the Nordham left tackle netted two
yards and put the ball outside. It was taken in fifteen yards and
Roeder struck the center of the enemyâs line for four yards. There was
no great trouble getting through the first defense, but the secondary
played good ball that day and time and again Roeder, Hammel or Stearns
was stopped hard just when it seemed that he was safely through. With
four to go, Norton dropped back to punt. A poor pass slowed him up
and the kick when it got off was too low. Someone, a Nordham guard
perhaps, leaped into the path of the ball and it thudded against his
body, rebounded over the heads of the attack and trickled towards the
Yardley goal. Half a dozen players dived for it, but it was Lishing
who, getting through in some marvelous manner, picked it up and romped
straight over the goal-line and scored a touchdown between the posts.
Buckman kicked an easy goal.
There was no more scoring in that period, although Yardley took the
ball on steady plunges to the Nordham forty yards before the whistle
blew. In the second period a thirty-yard run by Lishing along the
side-line brought the spectators to their feet. A moment or two later
Buckman got away around the other end and covered fifteen before he
was finally stopped. With the ball on Yardleyâs thirty yards, Nordham
tried a fake kick that netted little. Then Buckman fell back for a try
at goal from placement, although the opponents refused to believe that
it would not turn out a fake. It was a bona fide attempt, however, and
with a few feet more elevation it would have succeeded. As it was, the
ball passed under the crossbar, and a great sigh of relief went up from
the Yardley supporters on the stands.
Yardley chose to put the ball in scrimmage and then began an advance
down the field that would not be denied. Roeder and Hammel went through
the line time and again, and once or twice Stearns got past left
tackle for good gains. Simms worked a quarter-back run for twelve
yards and placed the pigskin on Nordhamâs twenty-five. Then Roeder was
called on and made eight straight through center. Hammel slammed out
four more. Stearns was âknifedâ past right guard for three. Nordham
rallied desperately and Roeder was thrown back for a loss. It was a
situation calling for a good drop-kicker and Dan gritted his teeth in
helplessness. Simms was for giving Norton a try, but Dan was afraid to
risk it. Instead a forward pass from kick formation was tried, Simms
passing to Dan at the side of the field. But Nordham was alert and
although Dan made the catch nicely and started for the goal-line he
was tackled for small gain and the ball went to Nordham on the twelve
yards. Nordham kicked on first down, Stearns caught in midfield and
came back seven before he was stopped. From there Yardley again took up
her advance. Nordham replaced her left guard, but Yardley still went
through and at last, after fourteen plays placed the ball over the line
for her first score. A punt-out gave Hammel a try for goal from the
twenty yards, but he missed badly. Nordham was still a point ahead.
But now it seemed only a question of how many more touchdowns Yardley
could smash out in the remaining time, for the Nordham line, it was
evident, could not stop Roeder or Hammel. There was no more scoring in
that period, however, and the two teams trotted off the field.
Payson had his chance to talk then, and he made good use of it.
Nordham, he predicted, would play a kicking game for the remainder
of the contest and would try field goals whenever she could. It was
up to the Yardley ends and half-backs, he said, to see that Nordham
didnât gain on punting. âYouâve got to get that interference for the
catcher working, fellows. You let their ends get by every time. You let
them fool you. Run them out and donât try to spill them until you can
accomplish something. Norton, and you too, Roeder, you go for them too
near the line. Several times youâve upset those ends and theyâve picked
themselves up again and gone on down the field in time to stop the
runner. Iâve taught you a good interference for the man whoâs running
the ball back. Now make it go! And one thing more, and this is for all
of you fellows; keep your eye on the ball. Donât think you know what
the play is going to be; donât try to guess it; _watch the ball every
minute_! Iâve been hammering that into you all the fall. If you donât
learn to do it now youâll have mighty slim chances of winning from
Broadwood next week.â
âCould we use a couple of the new plays, sir?â asked Simms. âThat
delayed pass might work well near goal.â
âNo, Simms, not with four Broadwood scouts in the stands,â replied the
coach dryly. âYouâve got plenty of plays if you make them go. Stick
to those. And donât try forward passes inside the twenty-five yards,
Simms; these fellows are too knowing for that. Plug the line and wear
it out.â
The third period was the hardest fought of any. Yardley made good gains
through the Nordham line until the twenty-five yards was reached.
Then Nordham, playing close formation, twice held her for downs. Had
Yardley had a player who could have kicked an easy field goal the game
would have been decided then and there. Nordham invariably punted out
of danger on first down, and, with what wind there was still favoring
her, got off kicks of forty-five and fifty yards. It was discouraging
to peg half the length of the field and then be turned back on the very
threshold. But that is just what happened to the visitors twice. But
finally the tide of fortune turned.
Nordham, gaining the ball on a fumble by Hammel near the middle of the
field, kicked for forty yards. Simms gathered the pigskin in, recovered
seven yards before he was thrown and then worked an on-side kick that,
quite unexpected by Nordham, was recovered by Dan for a gain of thirty
yards.
Roeder tore off ten yards on one try and Hammel got six. Roeder made
four and Stearns got through for first down. Roeder, who had been
worked pretty hard, showed signs of wear and Fayette took his place.
Stearns got by left tackle for six yards and Simms went five on a wide
end run. Fayette gained two through center and Stearns was stopped on
an attempt at the left end. Hammel, on a double pass, made first down
through right guard. The ball was now down near the enemyâs twenty
yard line and near the side of the field. Hammel got around on the
short side of the field for twelve but was called back seven as he had
stepped over the line. Simms tried a wide run around the other end
and made less than a yard. The ball was opposite the goal and Hammel
crashed through for five and made it first down. Fayette got three on a
âskin-tackleâ play and Stearns made four in the same place. Hammel was
given the ball then for a straight plunge at left guard and got through
and staggered over the goal line for the second touchdown. Dan took the
ball out and tried goal, but missed it by inches. The score stood 10 to
6 in Yardleyâs favor. Nordham kicked off from midfield and Simms came
back twelve before the opposing ends reached him. Then the whistle
blew.
It was not advisable to make all the substitutions originally planned,
but Mr. Payson sent Holmes in for Simms at quarter, Sayer for Dan
and Marion for Hammel. Two minutes after the final period commenced
Nordham, from a kick formation, sent her full-back around Sayer for
twenty yards and the stands shrieked and howled. A plunge at Merriwell
was repulsed and Buckman, Nordhamâs diminutive quarter-back, squirmed
through between Ridge and Mitchell and made seven before he was
rudely sat on. It took the youngster two minutes to recover from that
experience.
The ball was on Yardleyâs thirty-eight yards and near the side of the
field. With one of her running plays in which Buckman, carrying the
pigskin, was hidden behind the line, Nordham placed the ball five
yards nearer the goal-line and directly in front of the crossbar. A
half-back knelt on the turf and Buckman retreated for a place-kick.
The pass was good and although the entire Yardley line came crashing
through desperately, Buckman lifted the ball neatly over the bar for
three more points. With the score 10 to 9, Yardley settled down to
add another touchdown. Stearns was injured slightly on the first
play and was taken out. Greene took his place. The back-field was now
much weaker, for neither Greene nor Fayette could make the holes that
Roeder and Stearns had made. Marion, at full-back, was a dependable
line-bucker and it was he who made most of the gains for the next five
minutes, gains which finally took the ball past the middle of the field
and into Nordham territory again. But unfortunately it was also Marion
whose fumble on the Nordham forty-five yard line gave the ball to the
enemy. On the first play Sayer was again drawn in and Lishing romped
around the Blueâs left end for eighteen yards amidst the wild applause
of Nordham partisans. Buckman tried the left of the opposing line for
a yard, the full-back squirmed through for three and then came one of
Nordhamâs quick shifts and a forward pass across the field to the right
end who had managed to run over undetected. That was a hair-raising
moment. The end had a clear field ahead of him save for Simms who was
down near the twenty yards. But Ridge showed a burst of speed and
reached the runner near the thirty yard line and threw him hard out of
bounds. The ball was brought in and it was Nordhamâs first down on the
thirty. It was naturally to be expected that Nordham would try an end
run, either to place the ball in front of goal or to advance it down
the short side of the field. But she didnât. The interference swept to
the right, toward middle of the field, and Buckman plunged straight
ahead for six yards. The Nordham cheers were deafening now. Along
the side-line Mr. Payson and Dan paced, Dan scowling and the coach
imperturbable. With four to go, Nordham seemingly elected to try a
field goal on second down. The angle was extreme, although the distance
was only about twenty-five yards. But it was a fake. The half-back who
caught the ball started for a run toward the middle of the field. The
opponent, however, was on guard and he was dropped by Sayer for a loss
of three yards. But the ball was fairly opposite the posts and again
Buckman stepped back and again the half knelt on the turf.
âBlock it!â shrieked Ridge, who was field captain. âGet through and
block this kick!â
It was Ridge himself who barely tipped the ball as it sailed away from
Buckmanâs toe and went straight over the center of the bar. Pandemonium
broke loose in the Nordham camp and the Nordham players jumped and
cavorted gleefully. There was less than four minutes of time left.
In that four minutes Yardley worked the ball for fifty yards without
losing it once, her backs slamming at the Nordham line with the
desperation born of despair. And almost under the shadow of the goal
posts, when another four or five downs might have saved the day, the
whistle blew!
âNordham 12, Opponents 10,â said the score board. Yardley had met her
second defeat.
CHAPTER XIX
CHEERS AND SONGS
âBut this paper,â said Gerald, kicking the offending sheet from the
window seat to the floor, âsays Nordham outplayed us. I donât think
thatâs fair. Do you, sir?â
âWell, didnât they outplay us, Pennimore?â asked Mr. Payson who had
dropped into Number 28 for a visit after church. âThey won, and there
were no flukes that I saw.â
âBut if weâd kicked the goals after our touchdownsâââ
âBut we didnât, and they outplayed us right there. Thereâs no use being
disgruntled and trying to deceive yourselves into thinking that it was
a case of hard luck, for it wasnât. What do you say, Vinton?â
âOh, I suppose they outplayed us,â answered Dan wearily. âWe were away
ahead of them at straight football, butâââ
ââStraight football,ââ repeated the coach with a smile. âBy that you
mean bucking the line, I suppose. But that isnât any âstraighterâ than
any other sort of football nowadays, Vinton. No, sir, Nordham has a
remarkable team, a team built around two fast backs and weak in the
line, to be sure, but I take my hat off to that coach over there. And
to that quarter of theirs, too. Heâs a little marvel, Vinton.â
âWish we had him,â muttered Dan.
âUm; if we had weâd have to make our team over. Of course Nordham had
this advantage over us yesterday; they could play to their limit, since
their big game is two weeks off, while we were obliged to hold back our
best plays on account of Broadwood. She had at least four assistant
coaches and players there yesterday, but I donât think they learned
much.â
âTheyâll eat us up next Saturday,â sighed Dan moodily.
âPerhaps, but I donât think so. If they played the sort of game Nordham
plays they might beat us, for we havenât learned a defense against a
running game. But Broadwood must play about the sort of game we played
yesterday. Her backs are heavy, line-smashing fellows and Saturdayâs
game will be pretty much all what you just called âstraight football.â
On the whole, Vinton, we didnât do so badly to hold Nordham to three
scores yesterday. She might have run us off our feet with that tricky
game of hers.â
âHas Broadwood some good kickers this year?â asked Gerald.
âSheâs still got Rhodes,â said Dan. âYou remember him last year, donât
you?â
âI donât believe,â said the coach, âthat we need fear goals from field.
Theyâve only scored two all season.â
âOne of those was a fluke,â added Dan.
âWhat weâve got to watch out for are forward passes. Theyâve been
getting off some fine ones lately. They gained eighty yards in the
Forest Hill game by forward passes. How is Stearns this morning?â
âA bit lame,â replied Dan. âHe will be all right to-morrow, I guess.â
âWeâll let him lay off to-morrow. It will be light work for all unless
this weather changes. Itâs almost like summer to-day. Well, I must be
getting back. How are you feeling, Vinton?â
âAll right,â was the reply.
âHowâs the ankle?â
âOh, it was just a twist. It feels pretty good to-day.â
âWell, go easy on it and give it a good rubbing to-night. We got
through yesterday very well as far as injuries go. Going to lick
Broadwood cross-country Saturday, Pennimore?â
âYes, sir, hard,â answered Gerald with conviction. âWeâve got a dandy
team this year. Ryan picked the fellows last week.â
âGlad to hear it. That will mean two defeats for the Green on Saturday.
Well, Iâll see you to-morrow, Vinton. Good morning.â
The next afternoon, as the weather still held warm, all those who had
played for more than a period in the Nordham game were sent around
the track a few times and then discharged for the day. But there was
a hard battle between the First Team substitutes and the Second Team,
and Kendall got into it for a whole ten-minute period. I canât say that
he especially distinguished himself, although he worked as hard as he
knew how. But there were a great many fine points about the duties of
a half-back that Kendall had never heard of, and it seemed to him that
he came in for more than his share of criticism. The two teams battled
through three ten-minute periods without a score on either side.
On Tuesday hard work began again and Mr. Payson sought to correct
some of the faults shown in the Nordham contest. The two-day rest had
brought the players around in fine shape and the spirit shown argued
well for the teamâs success. Only Dan was disappointing that day.
He was badly off his game and seemed in a very low frame of mind.
Mr. Payson watched him closely, and so did Andy Ryan, the trainer.
The coach trusted that he would pull around by the morrow, but on
Wednesday, the final day of real work, Dan was still listless and
dumpy. After supper that evening Mr. Payson dropped into Number 28
Clarke again.
âHello!â said Dan, who was half-heartedly going over his Greek, âI was
just going down to see you.â
âI thought Iâd save you the trouble. Good evening, Pennimore. How are
you?â
âVery well, thank you, sir. I wish Dan felt as well.â
Dan frowned. âThereâs nothing wrong with me, Gerald, so please cut it
out.â
âYou donât look terribly bright and cheerful,â said Mr. Payson
smilingly. âSleeping all right?â
âPretty fair,â answered Dan.
âHeâs fibbing, sir,â said Gerald. âHe was awake about half of last
night. Twice I woke up and found him reading.â
âFor goodnessâ sake, Gerald, mind your own business,â said Dan crossly.
âIâm no baby. What if I did read a while? I wasnât sleepy.â
âWell, but that wonât do, Vinton, and you know it as well as I do,â
said Mr. Payson quietly. âWe canât have you getting nervous now. Too
much depends on your being in good shape Saturday.â
âOh, Iâll be all right, sir,â answered Dan impatiently.
âOf course. Well, letâs talk about to-morrow if you have time. I
suppose weâll have to go through the motions of practice for the sake
of the school, eh?â
âOh, yes, sir,â said Dan. âTheyâre going to march down to the field as
usual and shout themselves hoarse. There was some talk of having the
band up.â
âWell, weâll call practice for four oâclock then. Thatâll give us
fifteen or twenty minutes of it. And that reminds me.â He took out a
memorandum book and made a note in it. âIâm going to have Fogg and
Girard go down early and practice passing to Simms and Holmes. Fogg was
a bit ragged Saturday.â
âThatâs a good idea,â said Dan. âAnd Norton ought to have a good half
hour at goal practice.â
âWeâll have him try a few kicks, Vinton, but I donât want to shove
him too hard. Weâve got the fellows just about on edge and some of
them, fellows like Norton, are likely to go over if we push them too
much. But I guess a couple of dozen drop-kicks wonât hurt him. I hope,
though, that we wonât have to rely on Norton to score. I think that by
next fall he will be a pretty good drop-kicker, if heâs willing to
keep at it and practice.â
âI wish he could do it now,â said Dan bitterly. âWith all the fellows
in this school it certainly seems as if there might be one able to lift
the ball over the goal once out of ten times!â
âIt does seem so, and thatâs a fact,â Mr. Payson agreed. âI donât
believe I ever knew of a team so weak in the kicking department of the
game. Itâs largely my fault, of course, but I had no idea that Hammel
was going to peter out as he has. Last year he was full of promise.
However, weâre no worse off than Broadwood. And I daresay that if
we get the ball within field goal distance we can shove it over by
rushing.â
âWeâll have to,â said Dan dryly.
âIâm afraid so. Well, Cowles is coming down to see me this evening and
Iâll have to go on. By the way, Vinton, how would you like to take a
vacation to-morrow?â
âA vacation?â asked Dan in surprise.
âYes. I mean pack your bag and run off somewhere to-morrow after
practice and stay until Saturday morning. You arenât needed here and
it will do you a lot of good to get away from things for a couple of
nights. Youâll sleep better, for one thing, and eat better, too.â
âOh, pshaw, I donât want to do that! Iâm all right, sir. Iâll sleep
like a top to-night. Besides, Iâd worry more away than if I was here
where I could watch things.â
âThere wonât be anything to watch,â said Mr. Payson with a smile.
âThink it over, Vinton. It would be the best thing for you and for the
team. Weâll talk about it to-morrow. Good night.â
âAnybody would think I was dying from the way he talks,â said Dan
irritably when the coach had gone. âThat would be a fine idea, wouldnât
it?â
âWhat?â asked Gerald.
âWhy, to go off and leave things just before the game!â
âI think it would be a mighty good idea,â replied Gerald firmly. âAnd I
wish youâd do it, Dan.â
âWell, Iâm not going to! Payson wonât get me away from here unless he
steals me, I can tell you that!â
And that was Danâs answer the next day when the coach brought the
subject up again, although Dan put it more politely. Mr. Payson said,
âJust as you say, Vinton,â and changed the subject, and Dan, who had
slept about four hours out of nine, told himself aggrievedly that
Payson didnât care whether he was all right or not!
But Payson did care, and he had been doing a good deal of thinking and
some acting, as Dan was to discover.
The entire school marched to the field that afternoon and cheered
and sang for the better part of two hours. The band didnât come, but
it wasnât missed. The First Team went through ten minutes of signal
work, did some punting and catching and then retired. After that the
substitutes played a ten-minute game with the Second. It wasnât much
of a contest, but nobody cared. Enthusiasm reigned and from the stands
came football songs and cheers. When the whistle blew the Second Team
gathered together and cheered the First, and the First Team substitutes
cheered the Second, and the last day of practice was over. The
spectators formed in line of march again and tramped back up the hill
to the gymnasium, still singing, in the wake of the players:
âAll together! Cheer on cheer!
Now weâre charging down the field!
See how Broadwood pales with fear,
Knowing we will never yield!
Wave on high your banners blue,
Cheer for comrades staunch and true;
We are here to die or do,
Fighting for Old Yardley!
âAll together! Cheer on cheer!
Victory is ours to-day!
Raise your voices loud and clear!
Yardley pluck has won the fray!
See, the vanquished foeman quails;
All his vaunted courage fails!
Flaunt the Blue that never pales,
Fighting for Old Yardley!â
In front of the gymnasium the crowd gathered and began the cheers
for the players. âRah, rah, rah! Rah, rah, rah! Rah, rah, rah!
Vinton!â Then Ridge, and Hammel, and Simms and so on down to the last
substitute. And then, âThree cheers for Coach Payson, fellows, and
make it good!â And after that three cheers for Andy Ryan, and finally,
âNow, fellows, nine times three for the Team!â And after that, with
hoarse but undiscouraged voices, a long cheer for âYardley! _Yardley!!_
YARDLEY!!!â And then, still singing, the procession wound around the
front of the buildings and stopped in front of Oxford and gave a cheer
for the Principal. (The mere fact that Doctor Hewitt was away for the
winter made no difference. They were following the custom.) And then
more cheers, and much laughter, and some horseplay, and the throng
broke up to descend presently on the supper tables and sweep them
clear.
At nine there was a mass meeting in the Assembly Hall and the
enthusiasm began again. Mr. Payson spoke and was cheered to the echo,
and Mr. Collins spoke and was cheered just as liberally, and then there
came a loud, insistent demand for âVinton! We want Vinton!â And after a
moment Mr. Payson arose and announced that the captain was not present
this evening and that he thought it would be a good idea to hear from
the quarter-back. Simms tried to escape, but was captured after a
struggle and lifted none too gently onto the stage, where he stood and
viewed the audience helplessly for a full minute, very much embarrassed
indeed. And the more embarrassed he got the more they laughed and the
louder they cheered. Desperation brought ingenuity. One moment Simms
was there and the next he was gone! A sudden dash across the stage to
the door of the dressing-room and he was free! Howls of glee filled the
hall, and some of the fellows near the entrance started up in pursuit,
but were discouraged by older heads.
Ridge, who was a good talker, and whom the fellows all liked,
took Simmsâs place and spoke for a few minutes. After that the
football songs were practiced, the Banjo and Mandolin Club supplying
accompaniment. Finally, with a last resounding cheer, the meeting broke
up, the members clattering down the stairs and out of the building
still singing. Then the cry for Vinton was renewed and was taken up by
two hundred throats: âWe want Vinton. We want Vinton! We want Vinton!â
Presently the throng swirled over to the front of Clarke and the cry
was hurled up at the lighted window of Number 28. But the football
captain didnât appear and a half-dozen fellows rushed up the stairs
in search of him. But they were soon back, for the room was empty. So
they cheered him instead, and finally the throng dissolved, the fellows
seeking their rooms. Snatches of song, bursts of laughter, faint cheers
floated from open windows for a while, and then one by one the lights
went out and Yardley became silent.
It is a good plan to celebrate in advance. One never knows what may
happen.
CHAPTER XX
DAN IS KIDNAPPED
They were still cheering in front of Oxford that afternoon when Dan
left the gymnasium with Mr. Payson and set off up the hill. It was
already twilight and the windows of the dormitories were becoming
quadrangles of pale yellow. Both Mr. Payson and Dan were very silent on
the way up the path, and it was not until the former paused in front
of Merle Hall, where a footpath began that led him across the fields
toward the village, that the silence was broken.
âStill think youâd rather not take that vacation I spoke of?â Mr.
Payson asked then.
âIâd much rather not,â Dan answered.
âAll right. Good night.â
âGood night, sir. I guess I wonât be down this evening.â
âNo, Iâll see you to-morrow.â
Mr. Payson ran down the footpath and Dan continued around by The
Prospect. He felt a little bit uncomfortable. Perhaps Payson was right
and he ought to get away from the school for a day. Although he
insisted to the coach that he was feeling all right, he fully realized
that he was in a rather disordered condition. He hadnât had a full
nightâs sleep for nearly a week, he had almost forgotten what it was
like to be hungry and if someone had come up behind him and said âBoo!â
he would have jumped a foot in the air. He dreaded Saturday more than
he had ever dreaded anything in his life, and yet he would have given
anything he possessed or hoped to possess if he could have had Saturday
come to-morrow. The Broadwood game had taken on the aspect of a dozen
visits to the dentist all rolled into one nightmarish lump! For the
life of him he couldnât see how it was possible for his team to win
that game. Not one fellow played as he should, the plays Payson had
given them were weak, and certain defeat stared them in the face. Dan
wished he had never accepted the captaincy!
When he reached the head of the stairs he saw that the door of Number
28 was wide open. A flood of yellow light filled the end of the hall.
Probably Gerald had callers, he thought irritably, and he didnât want
to have to talk with anyone this evening. Luckily, however, it would
soon be supper time. But when he entered the room he found Gerald, a
thick ulster on and a cap in his hand, quite alone. Danâs coonskin
coat lay over the back of a chair.
âI thought youâd never come,â said Gerald gayly. âPut your kitty-coat
on and donât stand there staring. Youâre going to dinner with me
to-night.â
âNo, thanks, Gerald,â said Dan. âIââI donât feel up to it.â
âYou will when you get there,â replied Gerald, seizing the fur coat and
holding it invitingly open.
âIâm tired,â demurred the other. But nevertheless he worked his arms
into the sleeves and Gerald clapped a cap onto his head:
âCome on. The car will be here in a minute. Weâll take a spin first and
get up an appetite.â
Danâs face lighted. An automobile ride sounded good. âBut Iâll have to
see Collins and get leave,â he said undecidedly.
âNo, you wonât. Thatâs all fixed. Thereâs the car now. Come on!â On the
way downstairs Gerald said: âBy the way, I asked Tooker to come along
and bring another fellow. You donât mind, do you? I thought we might as
well fill the car while we were about it.â
Dan did mind, but didnât say so. In front of Clarke stood a big black
touring car, its searchlights already casting white floods of light
along the gravel drive. The chauffeur left the seat as the boys came
down the steps and stood at attention, touching his cap to them.
âHello, Higgins!â said Dan. âHow are you?â
âNicely, Mr. Dan. Youâre well, sir, I hope?â
âFine and dandy, Higgins,â replied Dan, feeling at the moment that this
was really so. Gerald spoke for a moment in low tones with Higgins and
then took the driverâs seat, remarking in what seemed an unnecessarily
loud tone: âWeâre going to take a ride first, Higgins. Get on the
running board and Iâll take you as far as the station.â
âVery well, sir.â
Gerald honked the horn and in a moment two boys appeared from around
the corner of Clarke. Each carried a bag in his hand. One proved to be
Ned Tooker and the other was Kendall Burtis.
âI asked them to spend the night with me,â explained Gerald carelessly
to Dan. âYou fellows dressed warm enough?â he asked them.
âIâve got on everything I own,â replied Ned as they dropped their bags
on the floor of the tonneau and climbed in. Dan took the front seat
with Gerald, Higgins slammed the door and mounted the running board and
the big car slid noiselessly down the circling drive. At the station it
slowed down and Higgins jumped off, touched his cap and said, âThereâs
about eighteen gallons in her, Mr. Gerald.â
âAll right, Higgins. Good night.â
âGood night, sir.â
Away shot the car again, across the bridge and into the main street of
Greenburg. âOne wayâs as good as another, I guess,â said Gerald. âAny
special place you want to go to, Dan?â
âNo, I donât care where you go.â He snuggled down into his coat,
crossed his feet and sighed contentedly. âJust keep her going, Gerald.â
The car slowed down and passed through the town cautiously, jouncing
gently over the cobbles, past the lighted stores and around the
clanging trolley cars. Then a turn to the left and the town was behind
them and the salty breeze of the Sound met their faces. The big lights
bathed the road ahead and Geraldâs fingers pulled at the throttle
lever. The engine began a steady hum and the air swept past them, damp
and cold.
âWarm enough back there?â asked Gerald over his shoulder.
âWarm as toast,â answered Ned. âLet her go.â
The road was almost straight and nearly deserted at this time of night
and the big car ate it up at forty miles an hour. Dan forgot his
troubles and his nerves. The moist air smoothed away the furrows from
his forehead and he half closed his eyes and leaned back against the
soft cushions contentedly.
On and on they went. Now and then the Sound became visible across the
flats. Then there was a rumble as a bridge swept underneath them and
they slowed down and hummed quietly through a small village. A turn
to the right and the air was warmer and the smell of salt water and
seaweed gave place to the odor of autumn woods. It was quite dark save
for the light from the car. A long hill sprang up before them and the
car took it with a fine rush, and then purred gently down the other
side. Dan thought that Gerald was getting pretty far from home and that
they would all be late for dinner at Sound View, but he didnât care and
he said nothing. Occasionally Gerald spoke of the engine or the speed,
but for the most part it was a very silent quartette. The clock on the
dash pointed its hands to twenty minutes past six as Gerald slowed down
at the junction of four roads.
âI wonder which way we go,â he muttered. âIs there a sign post there,
Dan?â
âI donât see any,â replied Dan sleepily.
âNeither do I. I think this road to the right is the one we want.
Tooker, put your hand in the flap on the door next to you and see if
the blue book is there, will you?â
Ned found it and passed it over and Gerald held it under the dash light
and found the map he wanted. âThatâs right,â he said at last. âJust as
I thought. Here you are, Tooker.â
Ned took the book back and the car slid around the corner and began
its busy song again. Ten minutes more went by and they came to another
four-corners. Gerald stopped and looked about him in the darkness.
âThis doesnât seem right,â he said perplexedly. âWhere the dickens are
we? Ever seen this place, Tooker?â
âNever. Very beautiful, isnât it?â
Gerald and Kendall laughed and the former said: âPerfectly lovely,
but Iâd like to know where it is. I must have got the wrong road back
there, after all. Looks very much as though we were lost.â
âLost in the night,â murmured Ned. âHow romantic!â
âWell, I guess the best thing to do is to keep on,â said Gerald. âI
suppose you fellows are starving to death, too.â
âI could eat if forced to,â replied Ned philosophically, âbut I feel
quite happy. How about you, Curt?â
âI donât care if I never eat,â said Kendall. âIâd rather keep on
riding.â
âBully boy! This is our friend Burtisâs first automobile experience,
gentlemen, and he quite approves of it.â
âIs it really?â asked Gerald. âIâm glad you like it, Burtis. What do
you say, Dan? Shall we keep ahead or try to get back the way we came?â
There was no reply and Gerald leaned over his roommate. Then,
âI believe heâs asleep!â he said cautiously.
âAll the better,â chuckled Ned. âOn with the dance!â
Very quietly Gerald got under way again and very easily he ran the car
for a matter of four miles, avoiding ruts and bumps and doing his best
not to disturb Dan. At last lights showed ahead and the car began to
run over a smooth road under arching elm trees. Ned leaned across and
said softly:
âOn your left, Pennimore; the big white house. Get it?â
âI see.â The car rolled up to the edge of the sidewalk. âGet those bags
inside, fellows, find the proprietor and tell him we want two rooms for
the night. Here we are, Dan!â But Dan had to be shaken gently before
he condescended to wake up, and when he did he looked about and asked
sleepily:
âAre we home? I must have been asleep!â
âNo, we arenât home,â replied Gerald, âbut weâre where we can get
something to eat. We sort of got lost and we thought weâd better stop
and get our dinner here. Itâs almost seven oâclock. Thereâs a telephone
here and Iâll call up the house and tell them not to wait dinner for
us.â
âAll right.â Dan sat up and stared at the house. âHello!â he said,
âIâve been here before. This is Lloyd, isnât it?â
âI think so,â Gerald laughed. âTooker and Burtis have gone in to find
out. Come on. I guess the car will be all right here.â
âDinner in fifteen minutes,â announced Ned as they entered the
Washingtonâs Head. âCome on and get washed up. Iâm as hungry as a bear.
This is lots more fun than having dinner at your place, Pennimore,â he
continued as they clattered down the stairs. âNo aspersions on Sound
View, you understand, but the unexpected is always jollier than the
expected. You had a nice little sleep, Vinton, didnât you?â
âFine! And Iâm hungry. Hope they have some more of that good chicken we
had here the other day.â
âThey have; I ordered it. Thatâs why we have to wait. This is a special
repast weâre getting. Broiled chicken, French fries and all the
selicacies of the deason. What ho for the banquet hall!â
Well, Ned was right. This _was_ more fun than dining in state at Sound
View with a butler and an under butler mousing around behind your chair
all the time. Even Dan agreed to that. And how he did eat! And how they
all ate! Each one of them sent back for âthat other half chicken, Mary,
and a few more of the excellentissimo potatoes.â
âHow do you know her name is Mary?â asked Gerald.
âAll waitresses are named Mary,â answered Ned gravely. âSometimes they
try to make you believe that their names are Gwendolyn or Hortense, but
thatâs just a fake.â
âBet you this one isnât named Mary,â said Dan.
âBet you she is! Wait until she comes back.â
And when fresh supplies had been served, and a new plate of steaming
hot biscuits had been passed, Ned said: âThese gentlemen donât believe
that your name is Mary. It is, isnât it?â
âYes,â answered the waitress with a smile.
âYou see?â asked Ned in triumph.
âBet you you asked her,â challenged Gerald.
âNonsense! Piffle! I donât have to ask. I can tell instantly. Have I
asked you your name to-night, Mary?â
âNo, not to-night. You asked me the last time you were here,â replied
the maid with a twinkle in her eyes. At which there was a howl of
laughter, and an automobile party eating at a distant table stared
disapprovingly across at them. That was a very merry supper, or dinner.
Dan insisted that it was supper because they had broiled chicken and
hot biscuits. Kendall sided with him. Ned and Gerald said it was
dinner because they had bread pudding. âNo one,â declared Ned, âever
heard of bread pudding with hard sauce for supper. The idea is utterly
preposterous.â
After they had eaten all they possibly could they found a room at the
back of the hotel where an ancient pool table offered them diversion.
It was when they were on the fifth game, Gerald and Ned playing against
Dan and Kendall, that Gerald said: âI say, fellows, wouldnât it be fun
to spend the night here? We might as well, you know. Weâd just have to
telephone back.â
âWeâd get the very dickens,â said Dan.
âWe might try, though. Collins couldnât any more than say no.â This
from Ned. âIâll stay if the rest will.â
âI couldnât,â said Dan. âI ought to be on hand in the morning, you
see. Your shot, Tooker.â
âPshaw, no one needs you at school, Vinton! Be a sport! I tell you what
Iâll do. After this game is over Iâll play you a string of fifty. If I
win we stay; if you win we go back.â
âDonât be an idiot, Tooker. I tell you I ought to be there in the
morning. If you fellows want to stay, all right. Iâll see if I can get
a carriage to take me back. I might walk, but itâs so dark Iâd probably
lose my way.â
âOh, if you wonât stay weâll all go back,â said Gerald disappointedly.
âI only thought it would be a peach of a lark, Dan.â
âIâd like it as well as anyone,â responded Dan, âbutâââ
âHeâs afraid Iâll beat him,â interrupted Ned sweetly, making a woefully
bad shot for the corner pocket.
âOh, Iâll play you for fifty points, if thatâs what you want,â said
Dan, âbut I wonât wager staying.â
âThen I wonât play. Youâd probably beat me easily. Thatâs game. Set âem
up, Curt.â
âWell, if weâre going back, weâd better start,â said Gerald. âItâs
almost nine oâclock. You fellows play a game and Iâll go out and look
at the car.â
He left the room and the others went on with their game. And after that
was over they played another and then another, and it wasnât until they
were starting a fourth that Gerald returned looking very grave:
âSay, you fellows, come on out and help me shove the car into the shed,
will you? Somethingâs wrong with her and she wonât start.â
CHAPTER XXI
AT THE âWASHINGTONâS HEADâ
âWonât start!â exclaimed Ned.
âWonât start!â cried Dan. âSheâs got to start!â
Kendall looked supremely grave. Gerald shrugged his shoulders:
âWell, come and help me put her in the shed and Iâll see if I can find
the trouble.â
Then began a half hour of investigation by Gerald. The others held
lanterns and offered suggestions. Ned was especially helpful.
âThe trouble,â he explained airily, âis with your battery. It canât
bat.â
âI get a perfectly good spark,â replied Gerald with apparent
irritation. âAs far as I can see the troubleâs in the engine.â
âLet us take it to pieces,â said Ned.
âDonât be a silly goat,â growled Dan. âThereâs no use spending the
night out here, anyway. Kick the old wagon in the shins, Gerald, and
weâll see if we can get a carriage to take us back.â
âWe wonât get any carriage at this time of night,â said Ned. âWhy, itâs
long after nine! Fancy being out so late. Itâs me for bed!â
âThatâs sensible,â replied Gerald, closing the hood. âWe might just as
well stay here and go back early in the morning. We can get to school
by half-past eight. Iâll get Mr. Collins on the telephone and tell him
weâre broken down.â
Dan was silent a moment. Then, âAll right,â he agreed, with a shrug of
his shoulders. âBut youâd better let me talk to Collins.â
âOn the contrary, or, as I say so gracefully in French, _au contraire_,
Gerald had better do it. You see itâs his car and his breakdown. Let
him face the music.â
âAll right,â said Dan again. He was much too sleepy to offer further
objections. Even the prospect of having to retire without pajamas
seemed of little moment. If only he could reach a bed! Gerald hid
himself in the telephone booth for five minutes, and, judging from
the mutterings that leaked out, talked to someone. Then he announced
that everything was all right and they climbed the stairs to two big,
low-ceilinged rooms on the front of the house. In one of them Dan
went through the motions of undressingââit was the others who really
performed the task for himââdabbed his face and hands in water, knelt
by the bed to say his prayers and promptly fell asleep there and was
finally lifted between the sheets.
âNight,â he murmured. Then, waking for an instant, âWhereâd I get these
pajamas?â he asked.
âThey go with the room,â said Ned soothingly.
âThatâsââa lie,â sighed Dan. Then he slept.
The others gathered on the bed in the adjoining room and grinned.
âEasy!â said Ned. âWeâre a very clever little band of conspirators, we
are.â
âPoor old Dan,â said Gerald softly. âHe was certainly sleepy! He hasnât
slept like that for nights and nights.â
âWhat about to-morrow?â asked Kendall. âAre you going to let him go
back?â
Ned shrugged his shoulders. âItâs up to him, I guess. We canât tie him.
Maybe he will be reasonable. Think you can get your car started in time
to take us back, Pennimore?â
Gerald smiled. âI think she will go all right when I put the
connections back.â
âIt was a lucky thing that Vinton didnât know much about autos,â
laughed Ned.
âIt wouldnât have mattered if he had. He was too sleepy to see
anything. Well, letâs get to bed. Iâm dog tired.â
âYouâre no tog direder than I am,â responded Ned.
Dan slept without moving for nine hours. Then he awoke in a strange
room that was flooded with sunlight. He stared at the white walls and
the cracked ceiling and wondered where he was. Beside him Gerald was
soundly slumbering. While he was still trying to make it out the floor
creaked and Ned appeared. Then Dan remembered.
âHello!â he said, still somewhat dazed with sleep. âWhat time is it?â
âSeven-thirty, sir. Will you have your tub now, sir?â
Dan was looking perplexedly at the pajamas he wore.
âWhereâd I get these things? They look a whole lot like my own.â
âWhy not? Donât you usually wear your own pajamas?â asked Ned gravely.
Gerald stirred and opened his eyes, sighed and closed them again.
âBut how did they get here?â Dan persisted.
âOh, thatâs it? Well, you see, you never can tell when you start out in
your friendâs car where youâll end up. So we thought weâd better be on
the safe side. Youâll find your toothbrush, hairbrush, comb, a change
of linen and some other trifles on the bureau.â
Dan stared a moment, frowningly. Then,
âI see,â he grunted. âIt was a put-up job.â
âA gentle and kindly conspiracy,â replied Ned. âPayson said you must
get away and sleep. He came to me. Pennimore here was with him. We
fixed up the scheme, he got leave of absence for you to visit Pennimore
until Saturday, the rest of us got excused overnight and the rest you
know.â
âHm; andââand that crazy car wasnât busted after all?â
âNot a bit. Pennimoreââthe deceitful youth!ââpulled the wires off the
plugs. Now you know all. We throw ourselves on your mercy!â
âYouâre a precious lot ofââofâââ
âDonât spare us,â said Ned humbly.
âOf kidnappers,â ended Dan. But he didnât sound very angry, and Gerald,
who had been simulating slumber until the worst was over, awoke
suddenly with a prodigious yawn.
âHello, you chaps!â he said. âGood morning.â
âGood morning!â grunted Dan. âIâve a good mind to choke you, you
deceitful pup!â To prove his inclination he reached for Gerald, but
that youth was too quick for him and was in the middle of the floor
in an instant. Then Kendall came in and they settled themselves on
the bed and talked it all over. Dan felt too rested to be angry,
and when Ned broached the programme for the day he was surprisingly
complaisant. The rest of them, Ned explained, had to go back in time
for recitations. But Payson wanted Dan to stay in Lloyd and take things
easy. The others would be back again by five oâclock. They would all
spend the night here and return to Yardley in the morning in plenty of
time for luncheon. What did Dan say?
Dan said: âAll right. Tell Payson I slept like a top and am feeling
fine. Iâll call him up after a while and talk with him myself, though.
I guess there isnât really anything for me to do at school. Now how
about breakfast?â
They all ate hungrily, Gerald brought the car around at half-past eight
and he and Ned and Kendall set off for school. As the car sped out of
sight they turned and waved at Dan on the porch. And Dan waved back
gayly, and then, thrusting his hands into his pockets and whistling
a tune, set off along the quiet street with a delicious feeling of
playing âhookey.â He had the whole day ahead of him and nothing to do
but eat and loaf! No lessons, no practice, no problems to settle with
Payson or Cowles, no nothing! It was simply fine!
Presently he came to a little bridge with stone parapets that seemed
just fashioned for idlers like he. He seated himself on one of them,
his feet dangling above the little stream that went gurgling by to
turn and twist its way through a meadow. Once he saw a fish and he
wished he had a hook and line. Then he gathered chips of mortar from
the wall, dropped them into the water and watched them go sidling down
to the bottom. The sun was warm, although a light breeze rustled the
dead leaves in the roadway. The sky was blue overhead, and Dan thought
thankfully, âA fine day to-morrow for the game.â Then with a start he
realized that he had quite forgotten all about the game for hours!
Hadnât once thought of it since getting out of bed! And even now it
didnât trouble him. They might win it. If they didnâtââwhy, there you
were! After all, it was no matter of life or death. Games had been lost
before. To be sure, he was captain and he meant to do all he could to
win, but if he failed, why, he still would have done the best he knew
how; and that, he told himself philosophically, was all anyone could
do. And then a pair of crows came sailing overhead, cawing loudly, and
he forgot again about the game.
Almost before he knew it, it was noon. A bell somewhere in the little
village struck twelve. He pulled himself lazily off the wall and ambled
back to the inn. There was time before dinner to call up Mr. Payson,
and he did it.
âIâm having a bully time,â he told the coach. âBeen sitting on the
bridge all the morning throwing pebbles into the water.â
âGood stuff,â replied the voice at the other end. âGo back this
afternoon and throw the rest in.â
âNo, I think Iâll go to sleep!â laughed Dan. âEverything all right? If
you want me, say so and Iâll come over.â
âDonât want you at all. Donât want to see you until eleven to-morrow
forenoon. Everything is all right here. And I think weâre going to have
a fine day to-morrow. Howâs your appetite?â
âItâs awful! I canât get enough.â
âWell, donât overdo it. Better eat light this evening, Vinton. Eat what
you want, though. Feeling pretty well, are you?â
âLike a fighting cock, sir!â
âThatâs fine. Keep it up. Go to bed early to-night and get some more
sleep. Good-by.â
Dan had the dining-room pretty much to himself that noon and was rather
glad of it, since he was a little bit ashamed of the way he ate. He
felt like apologizing to Mary, the waitress, and to the proprietor.
After dinner he lounged upstairs to the room, feeling delightfully
sleepy, found a magazine that Gerald had thoughtfully added to the
contents of one of the bags and tried to read. But ten minutes later he
was stretched out on top of the bed fast asleep.
CHAPTER XXII
KENDALL EXPLAINS
Dan slept for two hours and might have slept longer had it not been
that a little cool breeze began to find its way through the wide-open
windows. It was after half-past three then, and he went downstairs and
wrote a letter home. And finally, at a little before five, there was a
terrific honking in the distance, followed presently by the appearance
of a cloud of dust down the road and eventually by the arrival of the
Pennimore car and the three conspirators.
âGet in,â Gerald commanded. âWeâre going for a ride before supper.â
So Dan went up and got into his coat and soon they were off along the
twilight road. That was a ride to remember. They were gone one hour
and covered forty-three miles by the speedometer. And if there were
four hungrier lads in the length and breadth of the land than those
four when they sat down to supper, I envy them! After supper they went
upstairs to what a white-enameled plate on the door informed them was
the Ladiesâ Parlor and Ned strummed tunes on the old yellow-keyed
piano and they all sang and made as much noise as they pleased. Still
later they donned sweaters or coats and went down to the porch and put
chairs along the railing and sat there with their feet as high as their
heads and talked. The breeze had subsided and the night was still and
quite warm for the sixteenth of November. A big lob-sided moon climbed
up over the tops of the naked elms and flooded the porch with light.
They talked of many, many things; almost everything, in fact, except
football. To have listened to them one might have thought that there
was never such a thing as football. Finally Gerald said:
âIt was a night a good deal like this, Dan, that we paid our call on
Broadwood last spring.â
And then, Ned urging, Dan, with Gerald interpolating at intervals, told
the story of the famous joke on Broadwood perpetrated by the S. P. M.
(âSociety of Predatory Marauders,â explained Gerald.) And Kendall, who
had never heard of the affair before, listened with open ears. And when
Dan had finished Kendall burst out with:
âThen thatâs why they tried to paint the flagpole!â
âWho? What do you mean?â exclaimed the others.
âOh! Nothing! That isââ!â
âWho tried to paint the flagpole?â Dan demanded. âWhat do you know
about that, Burtis?â
âIââI thought maybe they did,â stammered Kendall.
âBroadwood? I never thought of that.â This from Dan.
âNobody ever found out who did do that stunt,â said Ned thoughtfully.
There was a momentâs silence. Then Ned asked suddenly:
âWasnât it about that time you went on pro, Curt?â
âItââit was a day or so afterwards,â replied Kendall.
âHm. Nice weather weâre having.â
âWhatâs the point, Tooker?â asked Dan.
âAsk our friend, Mr. Bendall Kurtis.â
âAll right, Burtis, youâve got the floor. If thereâs a story, letâs
have it.â
âThere isnât; at least, thereâs nothing I can tell,â replied Kendall.
âOh, I thought you knew something.â
âWhat did you mean, Tooker?â asked Gerald. âOut with it.â
Nedâs chair came down with a crash on the porch and he pointed an
accusing finger at Kendall. âThere,â he declared dramatically, âis the
one man who can explain the Mystery of the Paint on the Flagpole!â
âBurtis? Nonsense!â Dan laughed. âKick him, Burtis.â
âThen,â said Ned, folding his arms with dignity, âthen ask him to
explain why he was put on probation the next day.â
âConsider yourself asked, Burtis,â Gerald laughed.
âAnswer!â commanded Ned. âWe are all friends together and our motto is
âDiscretion.ââ
âWhyââwhyâââ Kendall stammered. âIt isnât my secret. You seeââ Well,
I do know about it, but I oughtnât to tell. I refused to tell Mr.
Collins, and thatâs why he put me on probation. I didnât want them to
get into trouble.â
âDidnât want who to get into trouble?â asked Ned with the manner of a
Grand Inquisitor.
âThose fellows.â
âWhat fellows?â
âThe fellows whoââwho did it.â
âYou mean the Broadwood fellows?â asked Dan quietly.
âYesâânoâââ
âThen Broadwood _did_ do it!â exclaimed Ned triumphantly. âI knew it!
Now tell us all about it. We all swear secrecy, Curt. By yon gleaming
orb we pledge ourselves to never divulge what we are about to hear!
Proceed!â
And finally Kendall proceeded and told the whole story from the time he
had overheard the conversation between the Broadwood boys in the drug
store until he had gone out of the Office in disgrace. And he talked to
three deeply interested hearers.
âWell, Iâll be jiggered!â exclaimed Dan when Kendall had finished.
âIâll be double jiggered,â Ned declared. âDo you mean to tell me, Curt,
that you were chump enough to let Collins put you on pro just to save
those idiots?â
âI was afraid he would make trouble for them,â said Kendall.
âWhat of it? Donât you know that Broadwood is our hereditary foe?â
âShut up, Tooker,â said Dan. âHe was quite right. Only I guess
hisââwhat-do-you-call-it?ââmartyrdom was unnecessary. I donât believe
Collins would have taken it up with Broadwoodâs faculty. Old Toby might
have, but not Collins.â
âAnd thatâs why you gave up football!â marveled Gerald.
âYes; he said I couldnât play any longer,â replied Kendall regretfully.
Ned arose and brushed an imaginary tear from his eye. âCurt,â he
said in a voice that trembled with emotion, âyouâre a hero!â He shook
Kendallâs hand. âYouâre aââa martyr to a principal! Get that, fellows?
Principal with an âal.â Good, what?â
âPunk,â laughed Dan. âWell, Burtis, Iâm glad I got you back on the
Second Team. I didnât know why the dickens I was doing it at the time,
but I see now that my instincts prompted.â
âI think Collins ought to know the truth of it,â exclaimed Gerald.
âSomeone ought to tell him. I will if no one else does.â
âI wouldnât do that,â said Dan. âNo use opening old sores. Collins did
what he thought was fair; the evidence was all against Burtis. Itâs
over with now and nobodyâs any the worse for it.â
âThatâs right,â Ned agreed. âLet deeping slogs lie. I do wish Iâd known
you then, Curt; I surely would have liked to have been there when you
flashed the torch on them! We neednât say anything to Collins about it,
fellows, but itâs too good a joke on Broadwood to keep to ourselves,
that is, if Curt doesnât mind having it known.â
Kendall said he didnât care about that, and he was quite sure he didnât
want to bother Mr. Collins with the affair. âHeââhe was awfully nice
about it. And heâs been very kind ever since.â
âCollins,â said Ned with conviction, âis one fine man.â
And the others gravely agreed.
At nine oâclock they went yawning up to their rooms, and at ten nothing
was to be heard therein but evidences of healthy slumber.
Mr. Payson had forbidden Dan to return before eleven, but Gerald was
forced to be on hand fairly early, since the cross-country race with
BroadwoodââNordham had declined Goodyearâs invitation to enter the
contestââwas due to start at ten-thirty, and so it was agreed that
they should all return at half-past nine. They were up early and had
breakfast at a quarter to eight. The morning had fulfilled the promise
of the preceding day. It was an Indian Summer day if ever there was
one. Dan had slept like a log, he asserted, and never felt better in
his life.
âIâll bet, though,â he said ruefully, âthat Iâve taken on six or seven
pounds. I can feel it just as plain!â
âDonât worry,â said Gerald. âYou can stand it. Besides,â he added with
a grin, âit will be all gone by four this afternoon.â
There seemed no good reason for continuing the taboo on the subject of
the game, and during the rest of breakfast they discussed it without
ceasing. Afterwards Gerald scouted out for a morning paper and finally
found one and Dan read the football news it contained aloud to the
others as they sat on the steps and waited for the time to start.
ââBroadwood,ââ read Dan, ââis a slight favorite in to-dayâs battle with
Yardley Hall at Wissining. Her victories have been woefully few of
late and there is a prevalent feeling that her turn has come. Although
handicapped at the beginning of the season by injuries to three of her
best men, Broadwood hit her stride in the game with Stamford College
two weeks ago and has been coming ever since. She has in Reid, Raynor
and Rhodesââthe Three Râs, as Broadwood calls themââan exceptionally
good back-field trio. They have plenty of weight, are exceptionally
quick and have so far proved extremely hard to stop. The only occurring
criticism of the Broadwood back-field that will start the Yardley Hall
game is that, composed, as it is, of players whose strong point is
plunging, it can afford but little variety of offense. Broadwood has
not developed the running game this year to any great extent, and, with
the exception of Saunders, who is as yet an almost unknown quantity at
quarter, and who may possess possibilities in this line that he has not
yet shown, what end-running talent she has lies with her second-string
backs.â
âThat,â observed Dan, interrupting himself, âis rot. Raynor never made
a yard at straight line-bucking in his life. Heâs a typical dodging
back, and he cut off about seventy yards in the Nordham game on runs
outside tackle. Thatâs just a sample of the sort of stuff they send
out in the hope of misleading the opponent. Just as though we hadnât
watched their team all the fall!â
âWhat other untruths does the Broadwood correspondent indulge in?â
asked Ned, who was boring an extra hole in his leather belt with the
file-blade of his knife. âGo on, Vinton.â
ââIn the line,ââ Dan continued, ââBroadwood is more than averagely
strong. OâBrien, at center, although light, is undoubtedly one of the
cleverest players in his position on any preparatory school team.â
(âThatâs a fact,â interpolated Dan.) âOâBrien was a substitute last
year, but played part of the Yardley Hall game. The guards are new
men this year, but have proved excellent on the defense. The same may
be said of the tackles, one of whom, Weldon, played his position last
season. At the ends Broadwood has Captain Bishop and Furniss, with
Thurston and Donnelly as substitutes. Captain Bishop is an ideal end
player, while Furniss has shown so far more promise than fulfillment.
By an odd coincidence Captain Bishop will play opposite Yardley Hallâs
captain, Vinton, and a battle royal is looked for between the rival
leaders.
ââThere is a feeling here at Broadwood that if any fault can be found
with the development of this yearâs team it must be on the score that
in perfecting what appears to be a remarkably strong defense the
coaches have failed to produce an offense of more than ordinary value.
Granting then what seems to be the case, that Broadwoodâs defense is
fully equal if not superior to Yardley Hallâs, the outcome of the
struggle will depend on which team can show the strongest attack. A
tie score is by no means beyond the realm of possibility, but here at
Broadwood coaches and players alike agree that if the Green doesnât
come out of the fray victor by the margin of at least one touchdown
they will be greatly surprised.ââ
âBusiness of looking surprised by Broadwood coaches,â murmured Ned,
snapping his knife shut and worming his belt back into place. âThatâs
all right for their side of the thing, Vinton. Now, prithee, sweet
youth, what says Yardley?â
âYardley doesnât say anything,â replied Dan, searching the page with a
frown. âWhoâs our correspondent? Anyone know?â
âChambers used to be,â said Gerald. âI donât know who is now.â
âHold on! Hereâs something,â announced Dan. ââWissining, Conn.,
November 16. Yardley Hall School and Broadwood Academy will meet
to-morrow on the Yardley gridiron for their annual championship battle.
Yardley is expected to repeat her victories of the last two years,
although a piece of eleventh-hour ill-luck may spoil her chances.
Yardleyâs captain and left end, Dan Vinton, may not be able to enter
the game. Captain Vinton has been ill for about a week and on Thursday,
obeying doctorâs orders, left school and has not been heard of since.
Whether he will return in time for the game to-morrow, or whether,
if he does return, he will be able to take part in it, is not known.
Vintonâs leadership and his work at the left end of the Yardley line
will be greatly missed.ââ
âWhat do you think of that?â ejaculated Gerald.
Dan laughed. âI guess Iâd better go back and show myself,â he said. âI
wonder who started that story.â
âThe fellow who wrote it for the paper,â replied Ned. âPlenty of
fellows knew that you had just gone off to rest up until this morning,
although I guess none of them knew where youâd gone. What time is it?
Letâs get a move on!â
CHAPTER XXIII
THE MORNING OF THE GAME
They spun back to Wissining in something close to ten minutes,
stopping, with a triumphant toot of the horn, in front of Clarke at
twenty minutes to ten. Half a dozen fellows who had seen the arrival of
the automobile rushed up to shake Danâs hand and inquire anxiously if
he were going to play.
âYes,â replied Dan, âand weâre going to win.â
Then he made his escape to his room, while Gerald and the others sped
around to the gymnasium in the car. At a few minutes after the hour
Gerald took the wheel again and, with ten boys packed into or onto it,
swung the automobileâs nose toward Broadwood. They didnât go that far,
however, as the start of the cross-country race was at the Old Cider
Mill, a mile beyond the bridge. Here the road was already lined with
spectators, while numerous bare-legged youths, wrapped in many-hued
bath-gowns, awaited the signal. Gerald steered the car into the bushes
at one side of the road and left it in charge of Ned. He and Kendall
made themselves comfortable in the rear seat, where they were presently
joined by Arthur Thompson. Arthur had discarded his crutch several days
before, but was glad of a place where he might watch events and favor
his knee.
âGerald says that Danâs back,â said Arthur as he climbed into the front
seat. âHave you seen him, Tooker?â
âYes, Iâve seen him. In fact, Thompson, we spent last night and the
night before with him at Lloyd. He was at the hotel over there. He was
sort of done up when Payson sent him off, but heâs as fit as a fiddle
now. Howâs your knee, by the way?â
âAll right, thanks. It gets sort of tired, though, if I use it much. So
Danâs really going to play? The paper saidâââ
âYes, we saw that. Heâs going to play all right, Thompson. By the way,
do you know Burtis?â
âWe used to see each other on the field a while back,â responded
Arthur, shaking hands. âThere, theyâre going to start. I hope Gerald
gets first place to-day. If he does they canât very well help making
him captain for next year; they probably will anyway. Theyâre off!â
The sharp report of the pistol rent the air, two lines of runners
sprang away and the crowd closed in behind them.
âWhat I object to,â said Ned, when the spectators had begun to stream
off up the road toward the finish, a mile distant, âis that Iâve got to
leave this comfortable seat and hit the dusty highway if I want to see
the finish.â
âYou wouldnât mind it a bit,â Kendall laughed, âif you had a golf ball
in front of you.â
âI expected to stay here,â said Arthur. âYou can get a pretty good idea
of things at this point, you know, but if I thought Gerald wouldnât
mind my running the car Iâd go on up to the finish.â
âCan you run it?â asked Ned eagerly.
âYes, I can run it all right, but he might not like it.â
âNot like it! Heâd be tickled to death, Thompson. He said coming down
that he wished I could take the car to the finish and get him there. He
was going to telephone home and have the chauffeur come and do it, but
he didnât have time. If you can run her, Thompson, do your worst.â
âAll right. Can you crank her for me? My kneeâs still sort of wobbly.â
âIâm the original cranker,â responded Ned, leaping out. âAll right? Let
her go!â
_Chug, chug, chug, chug, chug_, said the big car. And a minute later it
was running softly along the road, Arthur at the wheel. It required
some manipulation to get the car berthed near the finish line, for
Broadwood and Yardley were there in force and resented yielding a foot
of ground. Ned finally solved the problem by taking down the bars of a
fence and Arthur âparkedâ the car in somebodyâs meadow.
There was still some time to wait, for the four-mile course was a
fairly difficult one, one part of it, about three-quarters of a mile
long, being over the fields. While they waited Arthur, in response to a
question from Kendall, explained the conditions of the contest. There
were, he said, ten runners on each team, of which the first eight to
finish counted in the result. The first man over the line counted one
point for his team, the second man two points, the third man three
points, and so on, the team scoring the lowest total winning the race.
âThere isnât much doubt but that weâll win,â he said. âThe main
interest in the race lies in the struggle for first honors. Crossett
of Broadwood, Gerald and Sherwood of our team, are out for those. I
think Gerald ought to beat Crossett, but whether he can get away from
Sherwood is another matter. Goodyear may show up better than heâs been
doing, too. He got first place last year. Hiltz may get into the front,
too.â
âThat roommate of yours is running, isnât he?â asked Ned.
âHarry? Yes, heâs in it, but I guess he isnât very fast yet. I ran
myself last year, but I didnât finish; had a cramp. This year I
went in for football instead. Guess Iâd better have stayed with the
Cross-Country Team; a cramp is better than a sprained knee.â
âIf Pennimore doesnât get the captaincy, who will?â asked Kendall.
âHolder, probably. He and Gerald are about the only Second Class
fellows who have had any experience. Someoneâs coming now, I guess.
Climb up, Tooker, and take a squint.â
âTwo of them,â announced Ned, âabout a quarter of a mile up the road.â
Kendall sprang onto the seat beside him, and eventually Arthur too,
forgetting his knee, got to his feet. Far up the road two figures in
white shirts and trunks were trotting doggedly toward the finish.
They appeared to be quite close together, but who they were was still
uncertain. Finally the sunlight gleamed on a blue ribbon across the
breast of the leader and the Yardley contingent sent up a shout of
delight. Nearer and nearer they came, while three other runners
appeared in sight in the distance. Finally,
âThatâs Gerald!â exclaimed Arthur with relief. âAnd thatâs Goodyear
just behind him. First two for us! _Whoopee!_â
It was a gallant race to the line, but the younger boy had enough left
in him to spurt just before the finish and win from his captain by a
good ten or twelve yards. The two runners were surrounded by their
shouting friends, and in a minute Gerald, weary but happy, was climbing
into the car.
Crossett, of Broadwood, won third place from Hiltz and Sherwood, of
Yardley, and then no more runners finished for several minutes. Finally
two tired Broadwood youths trailed in, and Holder and Merrow fought for
eighth place. Holder won, but young Merrow had run a plucky race and
received such a hearty salvo of applause that he got embarrassed and
quickly dodged into the crowd. A few minutes later Yardleyâs eighth
man had finished and the score was known. It was a decisive victory
for the Blue, 51 to 85, and Yardley set off for home, passing the
last stragglers on the way, two Yardley and six Broadwood fellows.
Gerald and Arthur sat on the front seat of the car going back, with
Ned, Kendall, Harry Merrow and Goodyear behind. On the way up the hill
Arthur leaned over and whispered in Geraldâs ear:
âHow does it sound, Gerald?â
âWhat?â asked the other.
âWhy, âCaptain Pennimoreâ!â
âShut up,â growled Gerald sheepishly. âBesides, maybe I wonât get it,â
he added.
âDonât you worry; you will!â
And a week afterwards he did.
As the car rolled past Oxford on the way around to the gymnasium Ned
asked:
âWhat are you rubbering at, Curt?â
âI was looking at that man on the steps,â responded Kendall. âDid you
notice him, Ned? Do you know who he is?â
âThat was Payson, you chump!â
âNo, I mean the man with him. He looked like someone Iââusedââto know.â
âI didnât notice him,â replied Ned. âSome Old Grad back for the game, I
suppose.â
âAll out!â shouted Gerald. âFar as the car goes!â
_Honk! Honk! Honk!_ said the horn.
CHAPTER XXIV
KENDALL MEETS AN OLD FRIEND
Yardley Broadwood
Vinton, l. e. r. e., Bishop
Mitchell, l. t. r. t., Scott
Ridge, l. g. r. g., Stafford
Fogg, c. c., OâBrien
Merriwell, r. g. l. g., Smith
Stark, r. t. l. t., Weldon
Norton, r. e. l. e., Furniss
Simms, q. b. q. b., Saunders
Roeder, l. h. b. r. h. b., Reid
Stearns, r. h. b. l. h. b., Raynor
Hammel, f. b. f. b., Rhodes
Such a day as it was for the game! Quite perfect from the spectatorâs
point of view; a little bit too warm, perhaps, judged by the playerâs
standard; a day of days however you looked at it. The sky was blue
overhead and faded to gray toward the horizon where an autumn haze
brooded above the earth. The sun was gently warm, and the turf, which
had retained much of its summer green in spite of frosts, was dry and
springy underfoot. From the flagstaff over the grand stand the big
blue flag with the vivid white Y hung lazily, for never a sign of a
breeze stirred it. The stands were filled by the time the two teams
trotted out to warm up for the fray, and the Greenburg Band, a cheerful
blotch of scarlet in the midst of the somber-hued bank of spectators,
was brazenly crashing out a two-step. Inside the ropes was a line
of settees on which sat the substitutes, the members of the Second
Teamââlittle badges of blue ribbon adorning their coatsââand other
privileged persons. Andy Ryan, the little red-haired trainer, was
there, and Paddy, the rubber, with a fine assortment of head guards
and extra shoes and extra laces and electric tape and two big carboys
of spring water and other necessary articles. In a big pile lay the
blankets, with an extra football or two reposing beside them. Cowles,
looking nervous and excitedââit had been a hard and busy week for the
managerââstrode by with his big pad of paper in hand. Mr. Payson,
talking to the stranger who had aroused Kendallâs curiosity, came on
and seated himself at the end of the row of benches. Then around the
corner of the stand trotted the Broadwood team. Under or over the ropes
they went, bunched themselves into two squads and set diligently to
work. They looked a pretty good lot of fellows; big, happy, trained to
the moment. From across the field came a mighty Broadwood cheer.
An instant later it was Yardleyâs turn to applaud, for some thirty
blue-stockinged youths dribbled onto the turf, Dan leading, peeled
off their sweaters and set to work. Only one boy was left out of the
preliminary practice, and he pulled a blanket from the pile and seated
himself on the bench. It was Arthur Thompson. Five minutes or so of
signal work and punting, and then the officials sauntered on, one,
a chubby little man in a faded purple-and-white sweater and a pair
of stained flannel trousers, called the captains to him, a coin went
spinning up into the sunlight, three heads bent over it and all save
the players who were to begin the game left the field. Payson and Dan
conferred a moment and then the opposing armies fell into position.
Broadwood had won the toss and Yardley had the ball.
âReady, Broadwood? Ready, Yardley?â
The whistle piped merrily. Ridge stepped forward with two long strides,
the ball sped away down the field, turning over and over in its flight,
and the Yardley players leaped forward. The game was on.
Broadwood caught on her thirty-yard line and, with good protection
for the runner, swept back to the forty. Her first play sought
information. âHowâs your center?â asked Broadwood, hurling her
full-back at Merriwell. âQuite well, thank you,â replied Yardley,
crumpling Rhodes up for a half-yard gain. Broadwood seemed to doubt it,
however, for she tried Reid at the other side of center and gained two
yards. Then she chose to kick and Rhodes sent the ball to the Blueâs
forty-four yard line on a poor punt. Stearns, however, was unable to
gain after the catch and it was Yardleyâs ball on her forty-five yards.
Simms opened up brilliantly with the Yardley tackle shift and Roeder
went clean through the Broadwood line for eight yards. Stearns slid by
left tackle for three more and it was first down. Simmsâs try around
the left end on the next play was killed and Ridge was called back to
punt. The attempt was short and went out near the enemyâs forty-five
yards. Broadwood worked a double pass for four and a straight plunge on
center for three. Then Rhodes punted again and Yardley was penalized
for off-side. For the succeeding five minutes of the period the ball
hovered between the forty-yard lines. The two teams appeared very
evenly matched and seemed to entertain deep respect for each other.
Finally, with the ball on her forty-seven yards, Yardley sent Stearns
around right end on a fake kick play and that worthy young gentleman
reeled off twelve yards before he was brought down. Encouraged by this
and the wild cheers from the Yardley stand, the Blue set out to reach
the goal.
Roeder cut loose for six yards and Hammel made it first down. A
penalty for holding on the part of Broadwood still further cut down
the distance. On Broadwoodâs thirty Simms brought his tackles together
again on the shift and Roeder gained four through the Greenâs left
wing. Stearns ran wide and dodged past the enemy for three. Hammel
crashed out enough to make first down. But now, near her goal,
Broadwood tightened. Roeder failed to gain, Hammel made three and Simms
tried a forward pass to Dan. But Broadwood was watching and the pass
was intercepted.
Broadwood kicked on first down and the ball went to Simms, who ran back
over three white lines to Broadwoodâs thirty-five. Once more Roeder
was brought into play. Five yards resulted, but on the next play he
was hurled back for a loss. Simms tried an on-side kick which Norton
recovered, but Broadwood stopped him on her eighteen-yard line. There
Broadwood stood like a stone wall. Two attempts at the line netted
four yards. Dan and Simms put their heads together, and then Norton
fell back as though to try at goal with a drop-kick. But when the
ball came back it went to Stearns, and he swept wide into the field,
looking for an opening. Broadwood, however, was not fooled and after
speeding almost the width of the field Stearns was tackled for no gain
and Yardley had lost the ball. A groan went up from the Yardley stand
as Simms turned and trotted back down the field. Broadwood kicked out
of danger, Stearns caught near the middle of the field and the whistle
blew.
The second period was almost a repetition of the first. Again Yardley,
after marching from her forty yards, threatened Broadwoodâs goal, only
to lose the ball on the twenty-one yard line, this time by a fumble.
Broadwood kicked at once. It seemed as though her policy was to play a
purely defensive game through the first two periods, possibly in the
hope of wearing down her opponent, and then strike hard. Fumbles and
penalties came fast in that period, but Broadwood was at fault quite
as often as Yardley. But the fumbles were not costly, although once
Raynor, Broadwoodâs left half, started with a clear field ahead of him
and the ball tucked under his arm. But both Dan and Mitchell gave chase
and pulled him down from behind before he had covered ten yards. It was
in the second that Broadwood tried her one forlorn attempt at a field
goal. On Yardleyâs thirty yards, with two downs against her, Broadwood
decided to score from placement. Captain Bishop dropped back, and,
with the quarter holding the ball, kicked, while the stands held their
breath. Bishopâs direction was good but the ball fell far short of
the goal and the danger was over. After that it was a see-saw between
the two thirty yards, Yardley fighting savagely to score, Broadwood
doggedly holding her back and punting whenever the ball was within her
territory. Now and then one side or the other tried an end run, but
never successfully in that period. Dan and the opposing captain fought
a great battle at the ends of their respective lines, with honors
about even. The period and the half ended with the ball in Broadwoodâs
possession on Yardleyâs forty-six yards.
Yardley was a little disappointed and many expressions of the
disappointment were heard on the seats as the two teams bundled
themselves in their blankets and trotted off to the gymnasium. Yardley,
it seemed, had done all the work and to no purpose, while Broadwood had
played on the defensive and saved her strength. But Yardley answered
defiantly to every Broadwood cheer that was hurled across the field,
the band played heroically, the songs were sung and the minutes dragged
along.
Huddled in amongst the Second Team members, Kendall had watched the
contest with rapt enjoyment. Of course, being only human, he saw where
Simms and Dan Vinton were making awful mistakes, and he wondered
how Mr. Payson could idle along the side-line and look so calm and
imperturbable. As he didnât know his neighbors on either side of him
well enough to discuss the game with them, he was forced to keep his
opinions and emotions bottled up inside. When the teams trotted off
after the second period Mr. Payson went too, and the man whom Kendall
had seen with him left the bench to stretch his legs and came walking
up the line. He was about twenty-five, a big, good-looking, smiling man
in a brown Norfolk suit, with a small bunch of bachelorâs buttons on
the lapel of his jacket. Kendall watched him approach with a sort of
fascination. He was quite, quite certain that he had met the man and
known him. Why, he even knew the tones of the manâs voice! But who he
was he couldnât for the very life of him remember! As he came near the
manâs eyes wandered along the benches, fell on Kendall, paused a moment
and went on. But in the next instant they were back again, questioning,
puzzling. Then Kendall did what was for him a very courageous thing.
He bowed! As he did he felt the blood rushing into his cheeks and
wished he hadnât. Suppose, after all, the man was a total stranger!
But Kendall neednât have feared. The manâs face broke into a smile of
recognition and he strode straight over to the bench, tucking a cane
under his arm and stretching out a gloved hand.
âWell, if it isnât Kendall!â exclaimed a deep, pleasant voice. âI
didnât know you were here, my boy,â he continued as they shook hands.
âThis your first year?â
âYes, sir.â Kendall was still in the dark and the man noticed it and
laughed.
âYou donât remember me after all, do you?â he laughed.
âIââI know that I know you,â stammered Kendall, âbutââbutâââ
âEver kick a football?â asked the other slyly.
âMr. Dana!â cried Kendall. âGee, I knew I knew you!â
CHAPTER XXV
âCHANGE SIGNALS!â
âYouâve got it right,â said Mr. Dana. âHere, letâs sit down; I want to
talk to you.â He looked toward the bench and one of the Second Team
fellows got up politely and moved to another seat. âNow tell me all
about it. This is your first year, eh? Well, do you like it? Was I
wrong when I used to tell you to come to Yardley?â
âNo, sir, I like it very much indeed.â
âThatâs good. Getting on all right, are you?â
âYes, sir.â
âBut, look here, Kendallââ By the way, I canât recall your last name,
my boy. Was it Benson?â
âBurtis, sir.â
âBurtis, of course!â Mr. Dana slapped his knee. âAnd how are your
folks, Burtis? Father and mother well, I hope? Theyâre nice people. We
had a bully summer up there that time.â
âYes, sir, thank you, theyâre all well.â
âAnd the old spotted cow that chased me out of the barnyard one
morning? Howâs she getting on?â
âSheâs gone,â laughed Kendall. âWe made beef of her.â
âHow are the mighty fallen!â said Mr. Dana. âBurtis, that cow was
one of the few personsââor thingsââI was ever afraid of!â He noticed
the blue badge on Kendallâs coat and nodded at it. âWhat sort of a
decoration is that? What noble deed have you performed to be allowed to
wear that proud insignia?â
âItâs just a badge to get inside the ropes, sir. I was playing football
on the Second Team for a while.â
âSecond? Dear me, I thought youâd make the first and kick yourself
to glory and fame, Burtis! Havenât forgotten all we taught you about
punting and drop-kicking, have you?â
âNo, sir. IââIâve still got that ball.â
âWhat ball is that?â
âThe one you gave me when you left our place, sir.â
âIâd forgotten about it, Burtis. You still have it, you say. It must
be getting a pension now, eh? But, look here, why didnât you get taken
on to the First Team, Burtis? If there was ever a team in need of a
good punter, to say nothing of a drop-kicker, itâs this one right here.
Why, Payson told me not an hour ago that kicking was their weakest
department.â
âIââI did try, Mr. Dana, but I hadââbad luck.â And then Kendall told
about his probation and how he had to give up football and how Dan
Vinton had got him back onto the Second Team at the end of the season.
âToo bad.â Mr. Dana shook his head. âThat sort of thing doesnât pay,
Burtis. Of course, I donât object to a fellow having his fun, but itâs
a mistake to get the Office down on you. See what itâs cost in your
case. If you hadnât got on probation you might have made the First and
been out there now winning the game for us.â
âYes, sir, I know; but it wasnât really my fault. Itââit was a sort of
mistake.â
âWas it?â Mr. Dana smiled. âWell, donât have too many of them. Mistakes
are costly. Still kick pretty well, do you? We used to have great
hopes of you at the farm, Burtis. Your legs seemed made for kicking a
football and you seemed to get the hang of it remarkably well. Did you
do the punting for the Second?â
âNo, sir. IââI didnât play much, you see.â
âStill, you might have kept in practice, Burtis,â responded Mr. Dana
with a slight frown. âWhy didnât you?â
âI did practice a good deal. I used to come down here in the mornings
between recitations for a while.â
âThat sounds more like the boy I used to know,â said the other
approvingly. âYou used to have as much stick-at-it as any lad I ever
met. Did you get so you could do your forty yards all right?â
âYes, sir, and forty-five lots of times. I tried dropping goals a good
deal, though. I did seven out of ten from the thirty-five yard line one
day.â
âThat was from placement, of course. But even then itâââ
âOh, no, sir, that was drop-kicking. Iâve made placements from the
forty, and once from the forty-three.â
âWhat! Look here, Burtis, did anyone see you do it?â
âWhy, no, sir. I was alone.â
âAnd you mean to say that you can go out there and make a place-kick
from, say, the thirty-five yards without trouble?â
Kendall looked doubtful. Mr. Danaâs earnestness made him feel uneasy.
âWhyââwhy, I donât know, sir. I _could_ do it, but I havenât kicked
lately. I guess it would soon come back to me.â
âButââwhy, look here, Burtis! Arenât you eligible for the team?â
âI suppose so, sir.â
âThenââthen Iâm blest if I understand it,â muttered Mr. Dana. âPayson
must be crazy!â He looked around him. Then, he took a firm hold on
Kendallâs sleeve and pulled him to his feet. âYou come with me,â he
commanded. Kendall, wondering, followed. Mr. Dana reached down and
scooped up a football with one hand and ducked under the rope. Kendall
went after. Curious glances followed them to the corner of the stand,
but in the next moment they were forgotten, for the Yardley team came
trotting out onto the field and the Yardley cheer leaders scuttled to
their places and seized their big blue megaphones.
âNow, fellows! Regular cheer for the Team! And everyone get into it.
Ready! One! Two! Thrâââ
Then off bounced the discarded megaphones, arms waved and the stand
rocked with the burst of sound that followed. Blue flags fluttered and
tossed against the rising bank of shouting youths and down below the
big drum _boom-boomed_ an accompaniment. Oh, Yardley wasnât defeated
yet, nor disheartened! The game was still to be won! So everybody into
it! Make âem hear you! Louder! Cheer, you fellows up there! _Boom,
boom, boom, boom, boom!_
âGive âem the Can-Can, fellows!â shouted a leader.
â_Who_ can, can, can? _We_ can, can, can! _Anybody_ can, can beat old
Broadwood! _Who_ can, can, can? _We_ can, can, can! _Anybody_ can, can
beat old Broadwood!â
But Broadwoodâs supporters were not idle. The deep, booming cheers of
the Green thundered across from the opposite stand and it was not until
the whistle had blown and the ball was in the air that comparative
quiet fell.
Yardley had made one change in her line-up. Jensen had replaced Stark
at right tackle. Broadwood held Yardley for two downs; took a penalty
for off-side play and wrested the ball away almost in midfield. Then
she began her real attack. Reid and Rhodes, the heavy artillery,
crashed into and through the Blue line for short gains, and Raynor,
lighter and first cousin to a streak of lightning, broke around tackle
and past the wings for yards at a time. Broadwoodâs adherents shouted
themselves hoarse with joy. Down past the thirty yards went the enemy,
Yardley fighting stubbornly and contesting every foot of ground but
yielding nevertheless. It was a terrific onslaught and Those Who Knew
on the Yardley side looked grave. But down on the twenty-five the
defense grew firmer, the gains shorter. The secondary defense, playing
close up, stopped what leaked past the outer breastworks. A yard now;
then two; thenââ
âThird down; seven to go!â cried the umpire.
Yardley stood up to a man on the boards and shouted imploringly:
â_Hold_ âem! _Hold_ âem! _Hold_ âem!â And from across the trampled
field came the frenzied cries of the enemy; â_Touchdown! Touchdown!
Touchdown!_â
Broadwood meant to try a forward pass, but the ball went back badly,
trickled away from the quarter and was pounced on by Fogg. How Yardley
yelled when they saw the Greenâs quarter trot up the field with hanging
head! Norton dropped back as if to kick, but Dan, running behind the
line, took the ball at a toss from Simms and cut through between tackle
and end. He was clean away before the play was solved, and then it
was up to Saunders, the Greenâs quarter to prevent a score. But near
the forty-yard line Dan swung sharply past him as he dived, shook off
a detaining hand and streaked straight down the field and under the
crossbar for a touchdown, a half-dozen Broadwood pursuers trailing
behind!
What a pandemonium broke loose then on the Yardley stand! Caps flew
into the air, the big drum boomed, flags darted and snapped! Beyond the
rope two cheer leaders, clasped closely together, danced and cavorted,
and the Second Team fellows were jumping around like maniacs. Near at
hand, Mr. Payson strolling along the line, pulled his pipe from his
pocket, filled it with steady fingers and took his first smoke that
day. Even the fact that Hammel missed the goal failed to leaven the joy.
But Broadwood wasnât ready to acknowledge defeat. Back she went as
savagely as ever, but Yardley seemed to have found herself now and,
while she couldnât always stop the Green, she made the going much more
difficult. Broadwood lost the ball presently on a fumble and Yardley
started back the way she had come. Simms was holding nothing back now.
Every play he knew was called on. But the opponents were well blessed
with that football sense that enables a team to âsize upâ a play even
while it is getting under way, and few of Paysonâs pet tricks netted
real gains. It was elemental football that won the most ground for
Yardley, plays in which Roeder or Hammel banged, smashed and wormed
themselves through the opposing line. Stearns, too, found his holes
and did his best. Forty-eight yards went the Blue without a pause,
just winning their distance time and again by inches only. Then came a
mix-up of signals and Roeder was thrown heavily three yards behind his
line.
It took him a minute or two to get his breath back and the Yardley
supporters waited anxiously. But presently he was up again, shaking his
head like a bulldog who has had the worst of a battle, and a wild shout
of joy hurtled across to him. A forward pass, Simms to Norton, gained
seven yards, and the whistle blew for the end of the quarter.
The ball was carried to the other end of the field and in a minute or
two later they were at it again. It was Yardleyâs ball on Broadwoodâs
seventeen-yard line and nothing, it seemed, could prevent a second
score for the Blue. But something did. Something turned a decisive
victory into a probable defeat. With four yards to go on second down,
Roeder fumbled. Simms fell on the ball. It was third down and eight
to go. Roeder plunged straight at right tackle, the line wavered and
gave, cries and tumult filled the air. The whistle blew. Somewhere at
the bottom of a pile of players lay the ballââand Tom Roeder. When they
found the former it lacked a foot of being where it should have been
for a first down, and when they found Tom they turned him over and held
him quiet while the doctor ran onto the field. It was a blow on the
head, or possibly a kick, and Tom was of no more use that day. He was
borne off between two substitutes, his head lolling on his shoulder,
the little doctor striding along briskly behind, while a great cheer
went up for â_Roeder! Roeder! Roeder!_â
In sped Fayette to take his place. But Fortune had dealt hardly with
the Blue. She had lost her best back and she had lost the ball on
that play. Broadwood got through for six yards on a fake kick, gained
two more around Nortonâs end and made her distance through Jensen.
But on the next play she was thrown back, and, as the ball was still
perilously close to her goal-line, Captain Bishop dropped back and
got off a wonderful punt. Down went the Broadwood ends, with Dan and
Norton blocking them off. Dan disposed of his man, Scott, right tackle,
but Furniss got away from Norton and by the time Simms was under the
ball Furniss was ready for Simms. Bishop, meanwhile, had followed
his kick very closely, and when the ball descended into Simmsâs arms
Furniss tackled savagely. The pigskin bounded away. Dan and Bishop both
made for it, but Bishop was nearer. The Broadwood captain took it on
the bound, squirmed past Dan, and streaked for the goal-line, thirty
yards away. It was a close race, and had the distance been forty yards
instead of thirty Dan would have brought down his quarry. But as it was
Bishop plunged over the last white mark just before Danâs arms wrapped
themselves about him, and the score was tied!
It was Broadwoodâs moment and she made the most of it. She had no band
to help her, but she didnât need it! And while the wild cheers were
still thundering out, the Yardley players drew up in line under the
crossbar, Simms with tears streaming down his tired face, and Bishop
himself directed the canting of the ball held by Saunders.
A strange stillness settled over the field. If Bishop kicked the
goalââand it was not a difficult oneââit would probably spell a
Broadwood victory, for the last quarter was fully half over. There were
plenty of white faces on the Yardley stand just then and more than one
fellow, his clenched hands thrust into his pockets, settled back into
his seat and refused to look.
Very leisurely, Bishop, still fighting for breath after his run,
directed Saunders. Finally he stepped back, hitched his trousers at the
waist, cast a glance at the goal, andââkicked.
Up went the ball, straight for the bar. One brief instant of suspense,
and thenââbedlam on the Broadwood side and deep gloom across the field!
On the score board Broadwoodâs 5 changed to a 6.
âHow much time?â cried Simms as the teams trotted back to their
places. The timer held up one outstretched hand and two fingers of the
other.
âSeven minutes, Dan,â panted Simms. âThereâs time to kill âem yet.â
âAll right! Hard into it, fellows!â cried Dan.
Mr. Payson sent in Sayer for Norton and Plant for Mitchell, and the
game went on. Broadwood resumed the defensive now. Yardley got the ball
as far as the Greenâs thirty-eight yards only to lose it on downs, and
Broadwood promptly booted the leather far up the field again. Simms
got away for a twenty-yard run once, and Fayette, who, if he was not
Roederâs equal, was fresh and untired and eager, pulled off a wonderful
plunge through the left of the Greenâs line and squirmed and pulled
himselfââand three opponentsââalong for twelve yards! Hammel pounded
the line for gains and Stearns knifed himself through for a yard or two
at a time. Then came a fumble by Fayette and a Broadwood player pounced
on the ball. Once more Broadwood kicked. Stearns caught the punt on the
run, the interference formed about him, and he came pounding back for
nearly twenty yards.
Again Yardley took up the journey, but the time was growing perilously
short. Past the middle of the field she worked; Hammel; Fayette;
Stearns; then Hammel again. Finally an end run by Simms that laid the
pigskin on the thirty-five-yard line. A plunge by Fayette netted a
scant yard and Stearns tried a skin-tackle play and made six. But he
was hurt and Greene took his place. Broadwood seized the opportunity
to put three fresh men into her line. Greene was given the ball on the
next play and tore off three yards, making it first down again. Only
two minutes and a half remained. Simms, hoarse, almost staggering,
called signals, changed them and then looked appealingly at Dan.
âItâs all right!â yelled Dan savagely. âGo ahead!â
But it wasnât all right. Fayette should have had the ball, and Fayette
wasnât there. Simms was still clutching it when the Broadwood left
guard hurled himself through and slammed Simms to earth. Simms gave
up then for a minute. Ryan came on with the pail and the big sponge,
and Dan and Ridge talked together while the quarter struggled for his
breath.
âWeâd better have Holmes, hadnât we?â asked Ridge through two swollen
lips.
Dan shook his head, looking doubtfully at the side-line.
âNo, Simms can do it if it can be done. Why, oh, why, Hal, havenât we
a fellow who can kick that ball over from here? Iâd try it myself if
there was a ghost of a chance. Even Nortonâs off now, and heâs about
the only oneâââ
He broke off and hurried over to Simms. The quarter was on his feet and
staring rather dazedly around him.
âWhatâs the down, Dan?â he whispered huskily.
âSecond; twelve to gain. Come back here.â He led him away. âWhat do you
think? Forward pass? Or Number 24? Or shall we try to smash it out, Al?â
âSmashingâsââno goodâânow,â panted Simms. âRoederâs the only
fellowââwho could get us by. Better try a forward, Dan; itâs the only
chance. Isnât it? What else can we do, Dan? Thereâs only a couple of
minutes more, and itâs second down. Gee, Dan, I donât want to lose this
game!â Simms was almost whimpering now.
âCut out the weeps,â said Dan brutally. âBrace up, Al. Try a forward.
Give it to me and Iâll get through with it somehow!â
Simms dug a dirty knuckle into one eye, took a long breath and said
quietly: âAll right, Cap. Weâll get âem yet!â
âHurry up,â said the referee impatiently.
âYouâve got two minutes more,â cried the timer, running up, watch in
hand.
âAll right here,â said Dan. âNow, fellows, get into this and make it
go! Youâve got to do it! Theyâre half dead already! They canât stop
you! They canât stop you! Look at them! Theyâre beaten now and they
know it!â
âWeâd be dead for sure if bluff counted,â growled Bishop, as he edged
along in front of Dan.
The whistle blew.
Simms laid his hand on Foggâs back and raised his voice huskily:
âTwenty-sevenââtwenty-oneââfifteenââthirty-threeâââ
âHold on!â cried Greene. âHereâs a sub coming!â
Simms straightened up again. Onto the field raced a youth in a pair of
long gray trousers and a blue sweater.
âWhatâs the matter?â cried Dan impatiently. Simms nodded.
âSubstitute for right half, sir!â cried the newcomer.
âWho the dickensâââ began Greene in disgust as he tore off his
headgear. Dan hurried back, frowning.
âHere, who sent you on?â
âMr. Payson.â
âHurry up, please!â cried the referee.
But Dan and Simms and the newcomer were whispering together and paid no
heed.
âIâll penalize you for delay if you donât start,â threatened the
referee.
âAll right, fellows!â cried Dan, springing back to his place, and,
â_Change signals!_â shouted Simms.
CHAPTER XXVI
KENDALL MAKES THE FIRST
As Mr. Dana, followed by Kendall, had gone around the end of the stand
the Yardley players had come crowding past. Behind them, talking to
Dan, was Mr. Payson, and the coach, observing the football in Mr.
Danaâs hand, had stopped a moment.
âYouâll be lame to-morrow if you do,â he said with a smile.
âNot me,â replied Mr. Dana; âI know better. Iâm going to try to solve a
mystery, Payson.â
The coach nodded and went on, and Mr. Dana and Kendall skirted the back
of the stand until they reached the edge of the links. Then Mr. Dana
turned to Kendall.
âNow pull your coat and vest off, turn up your trousers and show me,
Burtis!â
âKick it, sir?â asked Kendall wonderingly.
âKick the stuffing out of it! See how near you can come to putting it
over there by that red flag.â
Kendall threw aside coat and vest, took a good reef in his precious
gray trousers at the bottoms and took the ball. âDrop-kick, sir?â he
asked.
âYes.â
Kendall poised the ball in his hands, judged distance and direction,
took a step, dropped the pigskin and met it fairly with his toe. It was
a fairly good kick, the ball traveling some thirty-five yards or more
before it struck, but it landed twenty or thirty feet away from the
flag. He turned apologetically to Mr. Dana.
âThat wasnât very good, but you see I havenât kicked for two or three
weeks. Shall I try it again?â
âYes, try a placement.â
Mr. Dana led the way with long strides to where the ball lay and
picked it up. âIâll hold it for you,â he said. âMake it straight and
goal-high, Burtis. Suppose you were kicking from the thirty yards.â Mr.
Dana dropped his cane, tossed his hat beside it and stretched himself
out on the turf. Then with the ball lengthwise between his hands he
waited directions.
âIââI never had anyone hold it for me,â said Kendall dubiously. âWill
you put it more that way, please?â
âHowâs that?â
âAll right, I guess.â Kendall stepped forward, swung and the ball
shot away, turning on its shortened axis, straight and true. Mr.
Dana, poised on one knee, watched. Had there been a crossbar within
thirty-five yards that ball would have gone over it with room to spare.
Mr. Dana arose, brushed his knees and elbows lightly and shook his
head. Kendall saw and was humble.
âItâs awfully hard to judge, Mr. Dana, when there arenât any lines to
go by. Iâll try again, if you like.â
Mr. Dana eyed him thoughtfully. Finally,
âIâll tell you frankly, Burtis, that your form is miserable, but thatâs
something that can be easily mended. If you swung freer from your hip,
kept your knee locked tightly, youâd get another ten yards, I believe.
But Iâm not finding any fault, my boy. I used to be a pretty good
kicker in my day, but I couldnât have equaled that last one before my
freshman year in college. Letâs try a couple more if youâre not tired.â
âIâm not tired at all,â Kendall answered, trying to hide the pleasure
he felt, âbut Iâm a little stiff yet.â
âAll right; weâll get rid of some of that stiffness.â
Ten minutes later Mr. Dana, satisfied, told Kendall to get his coat
and vest. Then they went back to the field. On the way Mr. Dana said:
âBurtis, I ought to apologize to you. When you told me youâd done
seven out of ten from the thirty-five-yard line Iââwell, frankly, I
thought you were spreading it a bit thick. After what youâve shown
me, though, I donât doubt it. The one thing I donât understand is why
Payson hasnât had you in training. Well, I wonder how the fortunes of
war are going. You go back to your bench, Burtis, and have a rest. I
want to see Payson.â
He found the coach down opposite the play, crouching low and pulling
gently on a pipe that had long since gone out. Broadwood had kicked her
goal and Yardley had the ball near the Greenâs forty yards. Mr. Payson
looked up as the other knelt beside him.
âHello,â he said. âHave you noticed that quarter-back of theirs, Dana?
Heâs going to make the All-American some day if he keeps on the way
heâs started.â
âThat so? I hadnât noticed him especially.â Yardley lost the ball on
downs and Broadwood punted. âThink we can do the trick, Payson?â
âI doubt it. Our fellows are getting pretty tired. Watch this now.
Simms has got it.â The little quarter-back skirted the end and made
his twenty-yard gain, while the stand behind them shrieked wildly.
Then Fayette got through for twelve, and the coach took his pipe from
his mouth, tapped the ashes out carefully and replaced it between his
teeth. Mr. Dana, watching sympathetically, smiled. He knew pretty well
how the coach was feeling just then, for he had been through it himself.
A minute or two later came Fayetteâs fumble, Broadwoodâs punt and
Stearnsâs clever run after the catch.
âTime must be getting short,â said Mr. Dana. The coach nodded.
âI guess so. Not more than five or six minutes, I suppose. A clean
forward pass might help now.â
But Simms was using his backs and Broadwood was steadily losing ground.
Then came Simmsâs run around the left end of the line and the ball
lay on the thirty-five yards. Seven more by plunges, and time out for
Stearns. Mr. Payson looked, walked up the line and called âGreene!
Hurry up!â When the substitute ran up to him he only said: âAll right.
Send Stearns out. You know what to do. Tell Simms to plug away.â
âWouldnât it be a good idea to try a field goal?â asked Mr. Dana.
âThere canât be more than a couple of minutes left.â
âHavenât a man who could come within twenty feet of the bar,â replied
Mr. Payson shortly.
âNot out there you havenât,â said Mr. Dana. âBut thereâs a chap back
there on the bench who could probably do it for you.â
Mr. Payson turned with a frown. âWho do you mean?â he asked.
âBurtis, of the Second.â
âNever heard of him. Someoneâs been stringing you. Three fresh men for
Broadwood, eh?â He puffed hard at his empty pipe. The whistle blew and
the lines crouched again.
âNo, I know what Iâm talking about,â continued Mr. Dana quietly. âHeâs
sort of a protĂ©gĂ© of mine. Iâve just had him back of the stand and he
made two or three drops and placements of anywhere from thirty-five to
forty-five, Payson.â
âWhat! Are you crazy, Dana?â
âNo.â
The coach took his eyes from the scrimmage for one short moment. âBring
him here,â he said curtly.
Mr. Dana hurried back to the center of the field, his gaze searching
the benches for Kendall. But Kendall was not to be seen.
âIâm looking for Burtis,â he said anxiously to some of the substitutes.
âThe coach wants him.â
The fellows shook their heads. âDonât know him, sir. Whatâs he like?â
asked one, eager to assist.
âHe was on the Second,â replied Mr. Dana impatiently.
The boy who had spoken hurried down to where the Second Team men sat.
âAny of you fellows know who Burtis is?â he demanded.
âBurtis! Yes, he was here a while ago. Want him?â
âHe went up into the stand about five minutes ago,â volunteered
another. He stood up and turned toward the crowd beyond the rope.
âBurtis!â he bellowed at the top of his lungs. âBurtis wanted!â
In the middle of the stand a boy arose uncertainly and looked down. Mr.
Dana saw him and beckoned impatiently. And when Kendall had wormed his
way to the bottom he was over the rope and was pulling him along.
âPayson wants you,â he said. âHere, pull off that coat and vest. Whoâs
got a sweater to loan?â Several of the substitutes jumped to their feet.
âTake this, sir!â
âThanks!â Mr. Dana selected one and tossed it to Kendall. âGet into
it,â he said quickly. âLook after these things, somebody.â He tossed
Kendallâs beloved gray coat and vest helter-skelter in the direction of
the bench. âCome on,â he said.
Simms had just been buried under the big form of the Broadwood left
guard when they reached Mr. Payson.
âHereâs your man, Payson,â announced Mr. Dana.
The coach took his eyes from the inert form of Simms for a moment and
looked Kendall up and down.
âDana says you can kick,â he said inquiringly.
âYes, sir, some.â
âWere you on the Second?â
âYes, sir, for awhile.â
âThink you could go in there now and put that ball over the goal for
us?â
Kendall looked and shook his head slowly.
âIââI donât believe so, sir,â he faltered.
Mr. Payson shrugged his shoulders and glanced at Mr. Dana.
âThought so,â he said.
âWait a minute,â said Mr. Dana as the coach turned his attention to the
field again. âWhat do you mean, Kendall?â he asked sternly. âThe ballâs
on the twenty-eight yards. Thatâs not a hard kick.â
âNo, sir, only IââIâve never tried to kick in a real game, andâââ
âYouâre afraid!â sneered Mr. Dana. âI thought you had some spunk!â
Kendall colored and stared miserably before him. âDo you mean that
youâd rather see Broadwood win than go out there and try to make an
easy goal like that!â
âNo, sir,â replied Kendall. âIâll try.â
Mr. Dana looked at the coach. Mr. Payson hesitated for a moment. Then
he took his pipe from his month and dropped it into his pocket.
âAll right,â he said. âGo in there, send Greene out and tell Simms I
say youâre to kick a goal. And you _do_ it, do you hear?â
âIâll try, sir,â replied Kendall.
âReport to the referee first, Burtis,â said Mr. Dana, clapping him on
the back. âAnd just forget that thereâs anyone near you. Make believe
youâre kicking just to show me what you can do, my boy. Never mind
whatâs ahead of you. Watch the ball and boost it a good one!â
And Kendall, very frightened, ran onto the field.
â_Change signals!_â cried Simms. â_Kick formation!_â
Kendall stepped back slowly, measuring the distance, and dug his heel
in the turf. Simms scuttled back and dropped to the ground.
âHold hard now!â cried Dan.
There was a great silence. The stands held their breath and even the
players settled into quiet. Only the sound of their labored breathing
came to Kendall as he dropped further back.
âThirty-one! Sixty-four!â cried Simms. âSeventeen! Eightâââ
Back came the ball to his hands. He turned it end up, canted it a
trifle, settled it to earth. Kendall stepped forward. He had forgotten
that the enemy, desperate and determined, were waiting to throw
themselves upon him. He only saw the ball and, dimly, the whitewashed
posts straight ahead. The lines broke. Broadwood came rushing through.
Canvas rasped against canvas. Inarticulate cries filled the air.
Kendallâs toe met the ball squarely below the lacing. Somebody plunged
against him and he went over backward.
But the ball went true, safe over the upstretched hands of the leaping
Broadwood forwards, straight up and up, turning leisurely in its
flight, over the crossbar!
Later, when Kendall, somewhat dazed, sat again on the bench with a
dozen fellows questioning and laughing about him, the game paused a
moment and Arthur Thompson, throwing off his blanket and sweater,
limped onto the field to play the final thirty seconds and win his Y.
And then it was all over, and Yardley, triumphant, dizzy with joy,
cavorted over the battleground and tossed hats and caps over the
crossbars, while the Greenburg Band thumped out a brazen march of
victory!
THE END
By RALPH HENRY BARBOUR
YARDLEY HALL SCHOOL STORIES
Forward Pass!
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A story of the new football in which a forward pass, brilliantly
played, wins for Yardley.
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Winning His âYâ
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Gerald Pennimore, a new boy, wins his âYâ at hockey.
For Yardley
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All the favorites of earlier stories reappear in this one. Base ball,
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Change Signals
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A country boy comes to Yardley, is initiated into the mysteries of
âinsideâ football, and figures as the hero of the big game of the year.
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK
BY RALPH HENRY BARBOUR
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The Story of a Boy Who Works His Way through School. Illustrated in
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Captain of the Crew
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Transcriberâs Notes:
ââText in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
ââExcept for the frontispiece, illustrations have been moved to
follow the text that they illustrate.
ââPrinter's, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently
corrected.
ââArchaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
ââVariations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
ââThe authorâs em-dash style has been retained.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Change Signals, by Ralph Henry Barbour
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 59623 ***
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