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Title: The Brother of a Hero
Author: Barbour, Ralph Henry
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Brother of a Hero" ***


                              THE BROTHER
                               OF A HERO



By Ralph Henry Barbour


  The Brother of a Hero
  Benton’s Venture
  Around the End
  The Junior Trophy
  Change Signals!
  Finkler’s Field
  For Yardley
  The New Boy at Hilltop
  Winning His “Y”
  Double Play
  Forward Pass!
  The Spirit of the School
  Four Afloat
  Weatherby’s Inning
  The Half-Back
  On Your Mark
  Four in Camp
  Four Afoot
  For the Honor of the School
  Captain of the Crew
  Behind the Line
  The Arrival of Jimpson

D. APPLETON & COMPANY, NEW YORK



[Illustration: “Rodney, startled, whisked around”]



                              THE BROTHER
                               OF A HERO

                                  BY

                          RALPH HENRY BARBOUR

                     AUTHOR OF “BENTON’S VENTURE,”
                        “AROUND THE END,” ETC.


                            [Illustration]


                            ILLUSTRATED BY
                           CHARLES M. RELYEA


                          NEW YORK AND LONDON
                        D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
                                 1914



                          Copyright, 1914, by
                        D. APPLETON AND COMPANY


                Printed in the United States of America



                                  To
                       ELIZABETH BRADLEE FORREST



CONTENTS


 CHAPTER                                    PAGE
      I.――Rodney Climbs a Hill                 1
     II.――Rodney Meets the Twins              14
    III.――“Westcott’s”                        31
     IV.――Phineas Kittson                     40
      V.――Rodney Encounters Watson            48
     VI.――Rodney is Discovered                62
    VII.――Coach Cotting Exacts a Promise      79
   VIII.――Croquet and Confessions             91
     IX.――Reflected Glory                    103
      X.――Rodney Joins the Squad             115
     XI.――Kitty Supplies a Sensation         125
    XII.――Cotting is Puzzled                 136
   XIII.――The Final Cut                      148
    XIV.――The Twins are Bored                164
     XV.――Finger Rock                        182
    XVI.――Tad in Danger                      199
   XVII.――Kitty Climbs to the Rescue         211
  XVIII.――Ludlow Scores a Safety             222
    XIX.――Nearing the Goal                   233
     XX.――Rodney Hesitates                   242
    XXI.――Cotting Tells a Story              253
   XXII.――The Eve of the Battle              263
  XXIII.――Bursley Arrives                    271
   XXIV.――The Battle is On                   285
    XXV.――Rodney Finds Himself               294



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


 “Rodney, startled, whisked around”             _Frontispiece_

                                                       FACING
                                                        PAGE

 “Finally Jack sent a swift ball across the court”        186

 “Very slowly Tad turned his face over his shoulder”      212

 “Hands seized him and arms lifted him aloft”             300



THE BROTHER OF A HERO



CHAPTER I

RODNEY CLIMBS A HILL


“Greenridge! Greenridge! Have your tickets ready, please!”

There was a hoarse blast from the whistle and the steamer sidled in
toward the wharf. Rodney Merrill, his brand new suitcase tightly
clutched in his left hand and his ticket firmly held in his right,
followed the dozen or so passengers who were crowding toward where
three deck hands waited to push over the gangplank. As the _Henry
Hudson_ edged up to the landing the main street of the little town came
suddenly into view, leading straight up the hill at a discouraging
angle until lost to sight behind the overhanging branches of great
trees. Rodney thought he had never seen so many trees before. They were
everywhere――elms, maples, beeches and oaks――hiding the houses spread up
the side of the ridge so that only here and there was visible a gray
roof or a white wall or a red chimney top. Even here by the river edge
the trees seemed to be trying to dispute the margin with the wharves
and buildings. Where Rodney had come from folks first built houses and
then planted trees, afterwards tending them as carefully as though they
were rare flowers. Here, it seemed, folks had tucked their houses away
in a veritable forest. He mentally compared the leaf-roofed street
before him with Capitol Avenue, back in Orleans, Nebraska. Capitol
Avenue was lined with trees, too, but the trees were as yet barely
twelve feet high and cast about as much shade as would a lady’s parasol.

At the left of the wharf was a ferry slip, with a little brown shed
beside it bearing the legend, GREENRIDGE AND MILON FERRY COMPANY.
A handful of people waited there under the shelter and watched the
arrival of the river steamer. The paddles thrashed, the steamer
shivered and bumped, the gangplank thudded to the wharf, and the
disembarking passengers moved forward. Rodney followed, gave up his
ticket, and found himself on land. He yielded his bag and trunk check
to a hackman, asked directions, and with a farewell glance at the
_Henry Hudson_ gained the shadiest side of the ascending street.

It was still only a little after two o’clock and he had all the
afternoon before him. Somewhere at the top of the hill was Maple Hill
Academy, for which he was bound. But, as he would undoubtedly see quite
enough of that institution during the next nine months, he was in no
hurry to reach it. Rodney’s father had accompanied the boy to New York
and had fully intended coming to Greenridge-on-Hudson with him, but,
just as they had sat down to dinner in the hotel the evening before,
an imperative telegram had reached him, and this morning Rodney had
boarded a Hudson River steamboat and Mr. Merrill a Chicago train.
Naturally Rodney had been disappointed, but he was quite used to his
father’s erratic flights from home――it was the penalty of having
a father who was an important factor in a big railway system――and
he had made the best of it. There had been so much to see from the
moment the steamer had left its dock in the North River until it had
bumped against the big piles at Greenridge that Rodney had forgotten
to be lonesome. Besides, to a boy of fifteen, even though he has been
brought up to be self-reliant and is fairly accustomed to looking out
for himself, there is something inspiriting in journeying alone, in
being thrown on his own resources. He experienced a fine feeling of
independence as he loitered up the street, and perhaps was guilty of a
suggestion of swagger, for which I think he may be excused.

The street――River Street was the name of it, as he soon discovered――was
lined with funny, half-asleep little shops. There was nothing smart
about them. Their windows looked as though they were seldom washed
and the goods displayed therein were often dusty and fly-specked. And
then the names over the doors amused him; as “Liverwell and Nagg, Fine
Groceries and Provisions,” “Huckens and Soper, Hardware,” “Jernigen’s
Pharmacy, New York Prices,” “Sauerwien’s Home Bakery” and “Fogg and
Frost, Stationery, Books, Periodicals, Post Cards, Lending Library and
Candy.” Hands in pockets, he looked in the windows, peered up shady
side streets at the half-hidden doorways and porches of comfortable,
old-fashioned houses and, in short, loafed enjoyably, finding all sorts
of things to interest him in this queer, hundred-year-old-town.

Presently, when he had progressed three or four blocks up the hill, he
came to an uncovered bridge spanning the railroad. Below on one side,
reached by a flight of steps, was a small station. He paused there
above long enough to determine in which direction New York City lay,
and then, as no trains came along to offer entertainment, he went on
again, up and up under the wide trees. It was rather hard climbing and
the day was none too cool now that he had left the river behind. And
so at the next corner he entered a drug store and sank onto a stool in
front of the soda fountain. While he waited for someone to appear from
the dim mysteries behind the partition at the back, he amused himself
by deciphering the sign on the window. YCAMRAHP S’ELTTILOOD was about
the way it appeared from inside. When he had puzzled it out he glanced
around the empty store and chuckled. It was, he thought, well named.

“Chocolate ice-cream soda, please,” he requested presently, when a
youth with sandy hair strolled into sight wiping his hands on a soiled
white apron. “Lots of chocolate, please,” he added.

The clerk glanced doubtfully at the faucet inscribed “Choc.,” tried
it and shook his head. “All out of chocolate just now,” he announced,
looking dreamily across the street. “I’m going to make some more this
afternoon. Something else do?”

“Strawberry,” said Rodney.

This time the clerk had better luck. While Rodney consumed the
concoction, the clerk leaned wearily against the fountain and watched
the street. At last, “School?” he asked.

“What?”

“You an Academy boy?”

“Not yet.” Rodney glanced at the round faced clock in the center of the
partition. “Not till five o’clock probably.”

“Just come, eh?” continued the clerk with a slight show of interest.
“Well, it’s a pretty good school, I guess. ’Bout as good as any in New
York State, they say.”

“Is it?” Rodney didn’t seem much impressed. “If I’d had my way I’d have
gone to a military academy back in Michigan. But my brother used to go
here and he made dad send me, too. I suppose it will do.”

“Where’d you come from?” asked the other.

“Orleans, Nebraska. Ever been out there?”

“N-no. Nebraska’s quite a ways, ain’t it? Out――out near Illinois, ain’t
it? Or Texas?”

“Out that way,” replied Rodney dryly. “Sort of between those places and
Oregon. It’s the finest state in the Union.”

“That so?” The drug clerk grinned. “Guess you ain’t lived in the east
much, have you?”

“No, not lived, but I’ve been in about every state except Maine and
Vermont and West Virginia. And Nebraska’s got them all thrown and
hog-tied.”

“You must have travelled some! Ever been in Utah?”

“Several times,” answered Rodney, scraping the last particle of ice
cream from his glass with a sigh of regret.

“Is that so? I don’t suppose you ever ran across a fellow named
Stenstream out there, did you?”

“I don’t think so. What town is he in?”

“Town? I don’t know. One of those Mormon towns, I think. He’s a sort of
cousin of mine, Pringle is.”

“Did he come from here?” asked Rodney as he drained the last drop in
his glass.

“Yes, he used to work for Huckins, down the street. Always was a sort
of adventurous chap, though. Nobody wasn’t surprised much when he up
and lit out for Utah.”

“Utah ought to be a fine place for a fellow with a name like that,”
said Rodney gravely. “What did you say it was?”

“His name? Pringle Stenstream.”

“My, this is sure one fine place for names, isn’t it?” laughed the boy.

The clerk blinked as he washed the glass. “Names? How do you mean?
What’s the matter with the names?”

“Oh, they’re all right, but sort of――of unusual.”

“Stenstream ain’t unusual around here,” responded the clerk a trifle
resentfully. “There’s stacks of ’em in New York State. It’s as common
as――as my own name.”

“What’s that?” asked Rodney.

“Doolittle,” was the calm reply.

“Oh, is this your store?”

“Nope, it’s my uncle’s. I work for him. Gosh!”

“What’s the matter?” asked Rodney, following the clerk’s gaze through
the window.

“There’s that Watson feller coming, and he always wants chocolate and I
haven’t got any.”

“Give him strawberry,” suggested Rodney, amused by the clerk’s
expression of alarm. “Are those Maple Hill fellows?”

The clerk nodded gloomily. “Yes, and that Watson feller’s the worst of
the lot. The rest of ’em ain’t so bad.”

“Cheer up,” said Rodney. “Maybe they won’t come in.”

They did, though. There were four of them, their ages ranging
apparently from fourteen to seventeen. They came in laughing and made
directly for the soda fountain. As there were but three stools, Rodney
got up and moved to the corner of the confectionery case, curious to
see what manner of boys these Maple Hill students might be. It wasn’t
difficult to determine which was Watson. He was the biggest of the
four, good-looking in a heavy way, and evidently the leader of the
present expedition. It was Watson who sang out a greeting from the
doorway.

“Hello, Doolie, Old Top! Poisoned anyone to-day?”

Young Mr. Doolittle smiled uneasily. “You almost lost me my job that
time, Watson,” he said sadly. “That wasn’t a joke, that wasn’t!”

“Wasn’t it?” laughed Watson. “It was a peach of a joke!” He had caught
sight of Rodney on entering, and now he inquired confidentially but
quite audibly, “Who’s your dressy friend, Doolie?”

The clerk replied in low tones, leaning across the counter. Watson
grinned.

“What ho, fellows! Luck’s with us! Here’s a new one!” He regarded
Rodney jovially. “Doolie says you’re a Maple Hiller.”

“Yes,” replied Rodney pleasantly.

“Fine! Welcome to our school!”

“Thank you,” returned Rodney politely.

“Well, fellows, what’ll you have to-day?” asked the clerk.

“Hold your horses, Doolie. You see,” Watson went on, turning to the
newcomer again, “it’s a long-established custom here that new boys have
to stand treat. You’re lucky there aren’t any more of us, isn’t he,
Tommy?”

“Rather!” agreed a light-haired, freckle-faced boy of about Rodney’s
age. “If he doesn’t hurry up there may be.”

“You mean,” inquired Rodney interestedly, “that I’m supposed to buy
sodas for you chaps?”

“Spoken like a gentleman! Right you are, Old Top! Line up, fellows. Ice
creams all around, Doolie.”

The clerk looked hesitantly at Rodney. The latter smiled but shook his
head. “Suppose I haven’t enough coin, fellows?” he inquired.

“That’s all right, Doolie will chalk it up, won’t you, Doolie? Doolie’s
a nice, obliging little poisoner.”

“Very glad to charge ’em,” said the clerk. “What flavors?”

“Hold on,” protested Rodney. “I’m not one of you fellows yet. I won’t
be until I reach school. I guess that lets me out. Still, I don’t want
to seem stingy, so I’ll tell you what I’ll do.”

“What?” asked Watson, frowning darkly.

“I’ll buy ice-cream sodas for the crowd if you’ll all take the same
flavor. You――” nodding at Watson――“choose it. You’ve only got one
guess, though.”

“How do you mean, one guess?”

“Why, if you call for a flavor he hasn’t got, you lose. That lets me
out. Savvy?”

“Oh, that’s it? Don’t you worry, cutie. We know what we want, don’t we,
fellows?”

“I want――” began a younger boy.

“Cut it! You get what I order. Didn’t you hear him say so? Doolie, you
may prepare four of your finest chocolate ice-cream sodas.”

Had Watson observed the clerk’s expression during the arrangement of
terms he might have hesitated about agreeing to them, but he had not.
It was only when young Mr. Doolittle began to stammer vaguely that
Watson scented trouble.

“What’s the matter, Doolie?” he demanded peevishly. “Four chocolates.
Didn’t you hear the dressy party agree to pay for them?”

“I――the fact is, Watson――the――the chocolate is――is――――”

“The chocolate is what?” asked Watson, suspiciously calm.

“Out!”

“Out! Oh, run away and play, Doolie! Quit your joking! Of course you’ve
got chocolate! If you haven’t you’d better dig some up mighty quick,
Old Top! Get a move on now! Ginger up, Doolie, ginger up!”

“I’m awfully sorry, Watson, but there ain’t any. You see, I was just
going to make some when that fellow came in and――――”

“Asked for it, I’ll bet a doughnut!” exclaimed Watson. “Say, you, Mr.
Smart Aleck”――Watson’s jaw dropped. “Where is he?” he demanded.

“The new fellow?” replied one of the younger boys. “Oh, he just went
out!”



CHAPTER II

RODNEY MEETS THE TWINS


Rodney, smiling at his thoughts, was a block away. While he was by no
means running, he was at the same time proceeding decidedly faster
than before. The vicinity of Doolittle’s Pharmacy was not, he told
himself, a healthy locality for him just then. In fact, he was somewhat
relieved when the main street, as though despairing of being able to
climb any further in a straight line, broke in two like a letter Y.
Once around the turn to the left he would be no longer in sight from
the drug store. His instructions from the expressman had been to take
the left-hand road where River Street branched. What he was to do after
that he no longer recalled. Consequently when he came to a cross street
that appeared to curve back toward the other branch of the Y he let
it severely alone. But a few rods further on he doubted his wisdom.
The stores had stopped two blocks below――he was still climbing upward,
although at a more comfortable grade――and residences had taken their
place. About him now were large yards, with many trees and beds of
flowers; dahlias and asters and flaming scarlet sage and golden-yellow
marigolds; with quiet, peaceful old-fashioned white houses with green
window shutters tucked well away from the street. Ahead of him the road
seemed bent on losing itself in open country, and the dwelling houses
were growing scarcer. The Westcott house, whither his baggage had gone
and where he himself was leisurely bound, was opposite the Academy
campus; the letter from Mrs. Westcott had distinctly so stated; and
as yet there was nothing even dimly resembling a campus in sight. He
paused under the shade of a big elm, whose far-reaching branches had
already begun to carpet the street with their rusty-yellow leaves, and
looked about him.

Across the road a narrow side street, scarcely wider than a lane,
according to Rodney’s notions, ran briskly downhill until it passed
from sight. Rodney at once eliminated that thoroughfare from his
calculations. Rather than strike downward and have to climb that
hill again he would stay just where he was and starve to death. Not,
however, that there was any immediate danger of that contingency, for
he had managed to eat a particularly hearty meal some three hours since
in the big dining saloon of the steamer. But three hours is three
hours, and any normal, healthy boy can look with favor on food after a
fast of that duration. So he produced a piece of sweet chocolate from
a pocket, removed the tin-foil with some difficulty, since the warmth
of the day had softened the delicacy to a condition of mushiness,
and looked about him for a place to rest and refresh himself. A few
feet farther along a big granite horseblock stood at the edge of the
sidewalk――with a narrow gate in the fence behind, but he didn’t notice
that――and so he sat himself comfortably down on it and proceeded to
nibble. It was perceptibly cooler up here on the hill, for he was
almost at the summit of the ridge that paralleled the river for many
miles, and a fresh breeze was blowing along the shady street. It was
still only――he looked at his watch――only ten minutes after three and
he had nearly two hours of freedom yet, if he wanted it. He sighed
contentedly.

While he sits there let us have a look at him. Fairly tall for his
fifteen years――fifteen and a half, to be strictly accurate――splendidly
healthy and capable in appearance, Rodney Merrill was on the whole
distinctly attractive. Perhaps you would not have called him a handsome
boy. If not Rodney would have had no quarrel with you since, in a boy’s
language, handsome implies some quality of effeminacy most undesirable.
He had brown hair, brown eyes――very nice brown eyes they were, too――a
fairly large mouth and a full share of freckles in a face that was
well-tanned, clear-cut and wholesome. And there was a self-reliant air
about him that might have belonged to a much older lad. He was neatly
if not strikingly dressed. A plain gray suit of flannel, a straw hat,
brown shoes and black stockings, and a rather effective negligee shirt
of alternating rose and green stripes on a gray ground made up his
attire. Perhaps I ought to make mention of the black and white scarf
from which just at present he was flecking a crumb of sticky chocolate.

Once as he sat there he thought he heard a rustling in the hedge behind
him or the branches above, and looked around. But nothing was in sight.
A locomotive whistled somewhere below as it passed. The trees, however,
cut off his view of the railroad. In fact, from where he sat not even
the river could be glimpsed, and he thought vaguely that he would
like it better later on when the leaves were off and a fellow could
see something. He was accustomed to wide views at home and the trees
and hedges and shrubs were beginning to pall on him. He felt so sort
of shut in. He finished the last of the chocolate and sighed again,
this time with repletion. Then he rolled the tin-foil into a small and
glittering ball, lifted his hand to toss it away――――

“Was it good?” asked a voice behind him. And,

“Don’t throw it in the street,” warned another voice.

Rodney, startled, whisked around. On either side of the narrow gate
was a square wooden post terminating in a flat top. On either post
sat a girl. Rodney’s surprise turned to bewilderment as his glance
swept from one side of the gate to the other. Each member of his
unsuspected audience wore a white middy suit trimmed with red, each had
yellow-brown hair, each sat with crossed feet, hands folded in lap,
looking calmly down upon him; in short one was so startlingly like the
other that for a moment Rodney thought he was seeing double.

“It’s all right. There really are two of us,” announced the first
speaker reassuringly. “You see, we’re twins.”

“Oh!” said Rodney. “I――I should think you were!”

“Did we scare you?”

“Not much. What are you doing up there?”

“We were watching you,” replied the left-hand twin with a smile.

“Watching you eat your chocolate,” added the right-hand twin. At least,
reflected Rodney, relieved, their voices were different; and, yes, when
you looked closer you saw that, whereas the left-hand twin had very
blue eyes, the right-hand twin’s eyes were almost black. And perhaps
the latter’s nose was a little bit straighter. But for the rest――Rodney
wondered how their mother told them apart.

“You were mighty quiet about it,” he commented a trifle indignantly.
“It isn’t nice to sneak up and watch folks behind their backs.”

He discovered that he was still holding the wad of tin-foil in his hand
and again started to toss it away.

“Please don’t throw it in the street,” said the right-hand twin
earnestly.

“Why not?”

“It is untidy to throw paper and things in the streets.”

“May’s a member of the Village Improvement Society,” explained the
left-hand twin.

“Oh! What’ll I do with it, then?”

“Couldn’t you put it in your pocket until you get to a rubbish barrel?”
asked the right-hand twin. “You’ll find one at the next corner, you
know.”

“All right.” Rodney dropped the tin-foil in his pocket with a grin.
“You’re a funny pair, you two.”

“So many people say that,” replied the left-hand twin with something
between satisfaction and wonder. “I don’t see why, though. What is it
that’s funny, please?”

“Oh, I don’t know.” He hesitated. “I suppose it’s your being so much
alike and――and everything. Do you live in there?” He nodded toward a
white house that peeked out from over the overgrown lilac hedge.

“Yes,” replied the left-hand twin. “Our name is Binner. My name is
Martha Binner and hers is Mary Binner. We’re thirteen. What’s your
name?”

“Rodney Merrill.”

“I think Rodney’s a very pretty name, don’t you, May?”

“Yes. I don’t believe we have ever known a boy with that name, have we?”

“You said her name was Mary,” charged Rodney.

“It is, but she’s called May. I’m called Matty. What do they call you?”

“Rod, usually.”

“I don’t care for that,” said the right-hand twin judicially. “I think
we’ll call him Rodney, Matty.”

The left-hand twin nodded agreement. “Are you an Academy boy?” she
asked.

“I’m going to be before long. I’m on my way there now. Say, where’s
Mrs. Westcott’s house?”

“Oh, are you going to be a Vest?” exclaimed Matty.

“A what?”

“Of course he doesn’t understand,” said May. “He wouldn’t, you know.”

“I suppose not,” replied Matty. “You see,” turning to Rodney again,
“the boys at Mrs. Westcott’s are called Vests. It――it’s a pun.”

“Oh, is it?” he asked. “I don’t see any pun there.”

“You don’t? Why, Westcott――waistcoat――vest! Now do you see?”

Rodney shook his head puzzledly.

“Perhaps,” said May, “you’d better let me explain.”

Matty nodded. “Yes, you always explain things more clearly than I do.”

“Well, Rodney, you know a vest is called a waistcoat, and――――”

“Oh, I savvy! I’d forgotten. We call them vests where I come from. So
I’m a Vest, am I? Hope I’m not a fancy one! Well, I guess I’d better
pull my freight.”

“Do――do what?” asked Matty.

“Pull my freight; hit the trail; move along. Which way did you say Mrs.
Westcott’s was?”

“We didn’t say,” replied Matty, “but it’s the next house to ours,
around the corner on Bow Street. Must you go now?”

“I suppose so, pretty soon anyway. Won’t take me long to get there,
though, I guess.”

“Only a minute or two. If you like you can go through our garden.
There’s a place where you can get through the hedge. I suppose you came
on the boat, didn’t you?”

Rodney nodded.

“Most of the boys come on the train that gets here about four. Don’t
you think the Hudson River is perfectly beautiful?”

He did, but pretended he didn’t. “Rather pretty in spots,” he answered
patronizingly. “We’ve got rivers out west――――”

“O-oh!” exclaimed May from her post, with a protesting wriggle. “You
_know_ it’s beautiful! It――it’s wonderful!”

“It’s called the American Rhine,” added Matty conclusively, “and I
guess that settles it! And you needn’t say you’ve got rivers in your
state that are finer, because you haven’t, and we don’t believe it!”

“I didn’t say in my state,” denied Rodney. “I said out west. And we
have――stacks of them! They’re not so――so placid, maybe, but they’re
much grander and――and picturesquer.”

“They’re not,” said Matty indignantly.

“They are,” said Rodney firmly.

“They couldn’t be! How could they? Why――why――――”

“Still, Matty, we don’t _know_,” interposed May cautiously, “and so
perhaps we oughtn’t to contradict him. I don’t think it is very nice of
him to say our river isn’t beautiful, but maybe he doesn’t see beauty.
They say some folks don’t. It――it’s a deficiency, you know.”

“Beauty!” scoffed Rodney. “Why――――”

“Perhaps you’re right, May,” said the other twin thoughtfully. “And
so――we beg your pardon for contradicting you.”

“Both of us,” added May earnestly.

“Oh, that’s all right,” replied the boy, his good nature restored. “I
guess I contradicted you, too. Besides, I didn’t mean that your river
isn’t a very nice river, because it is. I――I guess you might call it
beautiful,” he added magnanimously.

“And of course you do have perfectly wonderful rivers in the west,”
replied Matty. “We’ve read about some of them and seen pictures of
them, haven’t we, May?”

“Yes, indeed. They are very fine.”

Rodney in the heat of the discussion had forgotten his announced
intention to finish his journey to Mrs. Westcott’s, and had reseated
himself on the horseblock. After all, there was lots of time yet. And
the twins were amusing, and, as girls went, quite pretty. He had three
sisters of his own and pretended to be something of an authority on
girls, their ways and idiosyncrasies.

“I suppose,” said Matty, after a moment, “you are going into the First
Form.”

“Yes, but I don’t know why they call it a form. Isn’t class good enough
for them? Form sounds so silly. I suppose it’s terribly English. And
then they call the Principal the Head Master!”

Matty giggled. “The boys call him ‘the Doc.’ And they have such lovely
names for the submasters, too. Mr. Howe is ‘Gussie,’ and Mr. Stanhope
is ‘P. N.’――――”

“‘P. N.’?” questioned Rodney. “Why do they call him that?”

“Because he’s always saying a thing is ‘perfect nonsense.’ They used to
call him that, ‘Perfect Nonsense,’ you know, but it was too long and so
they shortened it.”

“I see. And there’s a teacher they call ‘the baron,’ isn’t there?”

“Yes, that’s Mr. Steuben; he’s a dear old German; we adore him, don’t
we, May?”

“We adore him,” agreed the other twin firmly and calmly.

“And ‘Mike’ is awfully nice, too. That’s Mr. Kelly, the English
teacher. He has such beautiful coppery-red hair.”

“Any more?” laughed Rodney.

“Yes, there’s Mr. Cooper. The boys call him ‘Chawles’ because he talks
that way. We don’t like him, do we, May?”

“No, we don’t.”

“And that’s all,” continued Matty. “Except Mrs. Farron, the Doctor’s
wife. She’s called ‘the Missis.’ You’ll like her awfully. All the boys
do.”

“What’s Mrs. Westcott like?” inquired Rodney.

Matty pursed up her lips, shot a mischievous glance at May and replied
primly: “She’s very nice.”

“Oh,” said Rodney, doubtfully.

“She is just like a mother to her dear, _dear_ boys,” chanted May
gravely, her eyes fixed on space. “It’s such a happy little home!”

Rodney started perplexedly until the twins turned to regard each other
seriously for an instant and then go off into a gale of laughter that
threatened to shake them from their seats.

“Oh, that’s the sort,” muttered Rodney. “Well, she can’t be a mother to
me! Say, what sort of a chap is Watson? Know him?”

“Guy Watson?” Matty recovered her composure and her equilibrium and
frowned. “You won’t like him, I guess. We don’t, do we, May? He’s――”
she paused, searching for a word――“he’s coarse!”

“And ungentlemanly,” added May, nodding decisively.

“But I suppose,” said Matty, “we should also say that he is a very good
football player. And he is on the track team, too. He’s a Third Form
boy. Do you know him?”

“Not very well.” Rodney smiled. “I met him on the way up here. He and
three others.” Then he recounted the incident in the drug store and the
twins clapped their hands with delight.

“How perfectly splendid!” cried Matty. “Think of anyone getting the
best of Guy Watson like that!”

“He will be awfully angry, though,” said May. “I think you should look
out for him, Rodney. He won’t be satisfied until he gets even with you,
will he, Matty?”

“No, I’m afraid he won’t.” She regarded Rodney gravely and shook her
head. “I’m afraid you’ll have trouble with him. But perhaps――Who do you
room with?”

“Room with? I don’t room with anyone, I suppose!”

“Oh, yes you do. You have to.”

“I do?” asked Rodney gloomily. “If I’d known that I wouldn’t have come.
I didn’t want to, anyway!”

“Oh, but you’ll like it after awhile, really!” assured May earnestly.
“And if they put you in with a nice boy――Matty!” May’s eyes grew round.
“It’ll be ‘Kitty’!”

“Of course it will! Jack Leonard’s gone, hasn’t he?” Matty clasped her
hands in ecstacy, her blue eyes dancing. “You’ll room with ‘Kitty’!”

“Who’s ‘Kitty’?” asked Rodney suspiciously. “A freak?”

“‘Kitty’ is Phineas Kittson,” began May, “and he’s――――”

“No, May, no!” cried Matty. “We mustn’t tell him! It would just spoil
it!”

“So it would,” agreed May beamingly. “Oh, wouldn’t you love to be
there, Matty?”

“You mean when――――”

“Yes, when――――”

“Oh, wouldn’t I?” She gasped. “If we only could!” She turned to Rodney
and clasped her hands ecstatically. “Oh, Rodney, it’s going to be such
fun!”

Rodney arose and observed them disgustedly.

“I’m going,” he said.



CHAPTER III

“WESTCOTT’S”


“And this is Rodney Merrill!” exclaimed Mrs. Westcott, beaming upon
him as she swept into the parlor with rustling skirts. “I’m so glad to
see you! And how nice to get here early! Doctor Farron has told me all
about you, my dear, _dear_ boy, and we’re going to make you so happy
here at our wonderful school, so very happy!”

And Mrs. Westcott, shaking hands, beamed harder than ever. She was a
tall, thin woman with prominent features and a dark blue silk gown that
rustled. It was in that order that Rodney noted those particulars. Her
face was kindly if not very attractive, and her voice quite pleasant.

“You had a comfortable journey, I hope? Won’t you sit down a moment,
Rodney? This is our parlor. We meet here in the evenings and have such
pleasant, homelike times. One or two of my boys sing very nicely.”
Mrs. Westcott sank rustling into a chair, folded her thin hands in
her lap and beamed. “The Doctor said you were fifteen. That is right,
I presume? Yes. And you’re to be a First Form boy? Yes. Isn’t that
splendid? I hope you will like us all very much. I have such a fine
family this year, such dear, _dear_ boys! Perhaps you’d like to go
up and see your room? Your trunk and bag came and are awaiting you
upstairs. This way, if you please, Rodney.”

And Rodney, who had just seated himself uncomfortably on the edge
of a chair, arose and followed. The room, he had to acknowledge to
himself, was really rather jolly. It was at the back of the house but
had windows on two sides, each of which looked out upon the campus. It
was very nearly square and of good size. The furnishings were neither
elaborate nor particularly new, but there was a generous study table
covered with green baize――interestingly adorned with cabalistic marks
and ink stains――a sufficiency of chairs, two single white-enamelled
beds, two tall and narrow chiffoniers, and a bench which, evidently
of home manufacture, stood under the side window and did duty as a
window-seat. The floor was uncarpeted, but rugs, the kind that are
woven of old carpets, lay about the floor. Everything was immaculately
neat and clean. There was something about Mrs. Westcott that forbade
the thought of dust or grime.

The walls were painted a light tan, and the woodwork about the room was
of varnished pine. The effect, with the rugs, whose predominant color
was brick-red, was decidedly cheerful. There were no pictures――Rodney
learned that denizens of the Westcott Cottage were not allowed to hang
anything on the walls――but the back of one of the chiffoniers held a
number of photographs.

“This will be your side of the room,” announced Mrs. Westcott. “When
you have unpacked your trunk I will show you where to put it in the
storeroom. In the closet”――Mrs. Westcott swung open the door――“you will
use the seven hooks to the left and half the shelf. Clothes that are
not in present demand should be kept in your trunk. You will be able to
get to it whenever you like. We have no washstands in the room as the
boys use the bathroom, which is just across the hall, you see. In the
coat-closet downstairs you will find blacking and brushes for shoes. I
hope you will keep your shoes looking nice. I am very particular about
that. We have a regular bathroom schedule in the morning. Each boy is
allowed ten minutes by the clock. Your time will be from seven-twenty
to seven-thirty. You will find the schedule on the door. That is all
for now.”

Mrs. Westcott, who had delivered the foregoing in the manner of one
repeating a well-learned lesson, paused for breath.

“Who’s the other chap in here?” asked Rodney, who, hands in pockets,
was still examining his quarters.

“Your roommate,” said Mrs. Westcott, beaming again, “is Phineas
Kittson. Such a dear boy! You’ll like him, I know. He is a year older
than you, and in the Second Form. I hope you will be great friends.
Phineas is――” Mrs. Westcott paused and seemed searching for just the
right word. Finally, “so _interesting_!” she ended triumphantly. “Not
exactly like my other boys, you know, rather――rather exceptional.
We all expect great things from Phineas some day. He has such a――a
remarkable mind! Now perhaps you’d like to unpack and arrange your
things. The rest of my boys will be along very shortly. Two have come
already, but they’ve gone out. If you want anything, Rodney, you’ll
find me downstairs. Make yourself at home, my dear boy.”

When Mrs. Westcott had gone Rodney subsided into a chair and grinned
at the empty chiffonier. “She’s going to make me happy if it kills
me, isn’t she?” he inquired of the chiffonier. Then, with a chuckle,
he arose and again made the circuit of the room, testing the bed by
punching it, pulling open the drawers of the chiffonier, and pausing at
each window to take in the view.

The window at the rear, just at the foot of his bed, looked over the
back yard and across the intersection of two tree-lined streets.
Beyond that the foliage cut off his view, although he glimpsed the
copper-roofed turret of a building a block or so beyond. From the side
window the school buildings in the campus were in plain sight across
the street. There were four of them, all of red brick and limestone;
a large one in the center of the group with a tower at one end, two
others nearer at hand, and a fourth at the farther side of the campus.
The middle one Rodney rightly surmised to be the recitation hall
and the others dormitories. Maple Hill took care of one hundred and
fifteen pupils, of which number but ninety could be accommodated in
the dormitories. The newcomers usually had to go to one or other of
the half dozen private houses which, while run independently of the
Academy, were, as Rodney discovered later, very much under the Head
Master’s supervision. From the side window Rodney lounged across to
Phineas Kittson’s chiffonier and viewed the collection of photographs
there. Finding those but mildly interesting, and having by this time
returned to where his trunk and bag reposed upon a rug near the hall
door, he bethought him of unpacking. The bag was quickly emptied and
then he tackled the trunk. It wasn’t easy to decide which things should
remain in it and which should be stowed in his half of the much too
small closet. And he was still in the middle of his task when voices
and laughter and many footfalls below told him that the rest of the
household had arrived. He paused with a Norfolk jacket, which had twice
made the journey to the closet and return, in his hand to listen.

“Hello, Mother Westcott! What’s the good word with you? Got anything to
eat?”

“That’s so, Mother, we’re starving! Look at my poor thin form! Does it
not move you to tears of pity? Say, Mother, got any cake?”

“Shut up, Tad, and get out of Pinkie’s way! That’s my trunk, Pinkie,
the one with the lock busted. You know my room. Say, Pete, lend me a
half till to-morrow, will you?”

Now and then Mrs. Westcott’s voice was to be heard, but for the most
part the boys’ laughter and chatter filled the house. Presently heavy
steps on the stairs indicated the ascent of Pinkie with a trunk. Close
behind him other steps sounded and a voice called:

“Jack, we’ve a new one! He’s in with Kitty!”

“Shut up! He’ll hear you,” a low voice warned.

“What of it? I haven’t said――――” But the rest was drowned in the
general noise. There were three other rooms on the floor and the new
arrivals distributed themselves therein, still, however, keeping up
their conversation.

“We’ve got new curtains, Warren!” announced a triumphant voice.

“Get out! They’ve just been washed. I’ve got a new spread, though.
Mother always did love me best!”

“What do you think of that for favoritism! I’m going to kick! It isn’t
fair――――”

“Tom!”

“Hi?”

“Got my bag in there? Pinkie says he――――”

“Heads out, fellows! See who’s coming!”

Rodney could hear the rush to the front windows, followed by applause
and cries of “Good old Kitty!” “Breathe deep, Kitty, breathe deep!”
“What’s your time, old man?”

Presently the last arrival entered the house and Rodney heard Mrs.
Westcott exclaim: “Why, Phineas, how _well_ you look! You dear, _dear_
boy, I’m so glad to see you back again.”

A deeper voice answered, but as the uproar in the other rooms had begun
again Rodney heard no more. Desperately he doomed the Norfolk jacket
and the trousers that went with it to the trunk again, and began to
arrange his shirts in the second drawer of the chiffonier. Rodney was
rather proud of his collection of shirts. Most of them had been bought
in New York and were things of beauty, especially the negligees, which
ran to color combinations of lavender and blue, pink and green and old
rose and gray stripes. He was assorting them carefully and approvingly
and had for the moment forgotten everything else when footsteps at
the doorway caused him to turn his head. What he saw was sufficiently
interesting to put the shirts out of mind. Not Mrs. Westcott, who was
beaming from the threshold, but the boy who was with her. Rodney,
staring wonderingly, thought he had never seen a more remarkable person
in his life. And he went right on staring, most impolitely, but quite
excusably, until Mrs. Westcott’s voice broke his trance.

“Rodney,” she announced, “this is Phineas Kittson. Phineas, dear, this
is Rodney Merrill, your new roommate. I just know you’re going to be
_such_ good friends!”

“Great Scott!” thought Rodney.



CHAPTER IV

PHINEAS KITTSON


Phineas Kittson, or Kitty, as he was called, was sixteen years of age,
but looked a year older. He was large――perhaps bulky would be the
better word――very broad shouldered, very deep chested. His legs were
short and so were his arms, giving him the appearance of being all
body. He had a large, round face, somewhat sallow, but not unhealthy,
of which the principal features were his eyes and his mouth. The eyes
were of the palest green and unusually prominent and caused him to look
as though he had just made a most astounding, stupendous discovery and
was on the point of breaking into excited announcement of it. He wore a
pair of rubber-rimmed spectacles with big round lenses, which magnified
his eyes to an uncanny extent. His mouth was wide and very serious,
turning down at the corners as though in gentle disapproval of the
world. His nose was not remarkable, but appeared to belong on someone
else, being small and narrow and seemingly quite lost on such a broad
expanse. His hair was dark brown and stood in need of trimming. It also
appeared to stand in need of brushing, but later Rodney found that
brushing had little effect on Phineas Kittson’s hair. Its constantly
touseled appearance was due to the fact that it had never decided in
which direction to grow and so was trying them all. There was a tuft
over his left eye that grew straight, a tuft over his other eye that
grew down, a patch on the top of his head that curled to the right,
and a patch over one ear that shot straight out. And there were other
patches that were still experimenting.

Phineas wore a suit of some indescribable shade of grayish green which
looked as though he had slept in it, and carried in one hand a much
worn suitcase and in the other a brown straw helmet with a green-lined
brim and a metal peak on top for ventilation. Afterward Rodney made the
discovery that his hands were very small, as were his feet, and that of
the latter the left one was encased in a dusty black Oxford and the
right one in a low-cut Blucher that had at one time been tan.

“How are you,” said Phineas, advancing and shaking hands. “Glad to know
you.” He had a deep, pleasant voice and spoke slowly, pronouncing each
word very distinctly. When he had shaken hands he looked Rodney over
attentively with his startled eyes and asked, “Ever try inhaling?”

“I don’t smoke,” replied Rodney disapprovingly. The green eyes blinked.

“Not smoke, air. Fresh air. Try it. Fine for the lungs. Take long walks
and inhale. Expand. Nothing like it, Merriwell.”

“Merrill,” corrected Rodney, amused.

“Beg pardon. I don’t remember names.” He placed his hat on the table,
sat down, got up, saw that Mrs. Westcott had gone, and sat down again
with a sigh. “Twelve minutes, twenty-eight and two fifths,” he said.

“Indeed?” asked Rodney politely.

Kitty nodded gravely. “I’ve done better than that by nearly two
minutes. In the winter. Air’s better then. Lungs work better. It
follows, of course.” He seemed to demand an answer and Rodney nodded
gravely, too.

“Naturally,” he agreed. “What the dickens are you talking about?”

Kitty viewed him thoughtfully. “My fault,” he said after a moment.
“Thought you knew. Walking up the hill, you know. Station to house.
Twelve minutes, twenty-eight and two-fifths.” He pulled a stop-watch
from his pocket and studied it. Apparently satisfied, he clicked the
hands back into place again. “Warm to-day. Heat enervates the air.
There’s a difference. You’ve noticed it, I guess.”

“I can’t say I ever have,” replied Rodney, turning again to his shirts.
“Must be quite a climb up that hill, though. Did you lug that bag with
you?”

“Yes. Forgot I had it. That counted against me, of course.” He looked
for a moment at the suitcase. Then, “Funny about my trunk,” he
meditated aloud.

“What’s wrong with it?” asked Rodney indifferently.

“Left it in New York. Ferry station. Forgot to recheck it. Got any
collars?”

“What size do you wear?”

“Oh, thirteen or fourteen, I think. I’ll borrow a couple. Thanks,
Morrill.”

“You’re welcome,” replied Rodney dryly. “It’s Merrill, though.”

“Of course. Beg pardon. What time is it? I forgot to wind my watch
yesterday.”

Before Rodney could oblige him with the desired information there was
a sound of approaching footsteps and voices in the hall, and in a
moment half a dozen boys whose ages varied from fourteen to seventeen
years flocked in. In deference to the stranger their entrance was quite
decorous. One boy, a youth of Rodney’s own age, was grinning broadly,
but the rest were politely serious.

“Thought we’d come in and get acquainted,” announced the eldest of the
six, a tall, nice-looking chap of seventeen, who was evidently the
leader at Westcott’s.

“Hello,” responded Kitty. “Funny about my trunk――――”

“Never mind about your trunk,” laughed another visitor. “We’ve heard
all about it, Kitty. I wonder you didn’t forget to bring yourself!”

The others chuckled, and Rodney, a trifle embarrassed, smiled. The boys
seated themselves here and there about the room and there was a painful
silence. Kitty, viewing them absently, was apparently deep in thought.
Finally, with a laugh:

“Come on, Kitty,” said the eldest youth. “Introduce your friend.”

“Eh?” Kitty looked vaguely around the room until his eyes encountered
Rodney, still standing at the chiffonier. “Oh, yes. Beg pardon. This
chap’s name is――er――” Kitty paused at a loss and turned inquiringly to
Rodney. “What is it, now?”

“The same as it was a few minutes ago,” laughed Rodney. “It’s Merrill,
Rodney Merrill.”

“Glad to know you,” replied the older boy. “My name’s Billings. This
grinning ape is Mudge. Mr. Greenough is the thoughtful gentleman at
your left. Over there are Hoyt, Trainor and Trowbridge. There’s no use
waiting for Kitty to introduce. He’d fall into a trance in the middle
of it.”

Kitty smiled untroubledly. The others, having nodded, or, if near
enough, shaken hands, laughed. The irrepressible Mudge――Tad, for short;
Theodore Middlewich for long――removed the last vestige of restraint.

“Welcome, Merrill, to our happy little home,” said Tad. “Hope you’ll
like us and our quaint ways. Pete, get up and give Merrill a seat, you
impolite loafer.”

“Thanks, but I don’t want to sit down,” replied Rodney. “I was putting
my things away.”

“Don’t let Kitty impose on you,” advised Tom Trainor, a slender,
light-complexioned chap. “If you don’t watch him he will have his
things all over the place. Sometimes he forgets which is his own bed
and goes to sleep in the other one. You got here early, Merrill.”

“I came on the boat from New York. It was very nice.”

“It’s nice enough once――or even a couple of times――” said Hoyt, a
short chap with a snub nose and a bored expression. “After that it’s
monotonous.”

“I’d hate to be world weary as you are, Warren,” said Jack Billings,
dryly. “Well, we’re having early supper to-night, fellows, so
we’d better move along. Come in and see us, Merrill, when you get
straightened out. By the way, it’s Faculty Reception to-night; about
seven-thirty; better come along and meet the tyrants. We’re all
going――all except Kitty.”

Kitty looked across in greater surprise than ever and blinked. “Thought
I’d go,” he said.

“You think so, but you’ll forget it,” laughed Jack.

After the visitors had dispersed to their own rooms, Phineas turned
to Rodney and said, “I haven’t a very good memory for some things.
Sometimes I forget. They like to joke about it. I don’t mind, of
course. It amuses them, Maynard.”

“I see.” Rodney didn’t correct him this time. What was the use?



CHAPTER V

RODNEY ENCOUNTERS WATSON


School began on Wednesday, and by Friday Rodney was pretty well settled
down in his groove. Finding his place at Westcott’s was easy enough.
As it happened he was the only First Form boy there, although Tad
Mudge, Warren Hoyt and Tom Trainor were of his age. Phineas Kittson and
Pete Greenough were sixteen; Eustace Trowbridge――called Stacey――and
Jack Billings were seventeen. On the whole they were a nice lot of
fellows, Rodney thought, although they were rather different from the
boys he knew at home. He liked Jack Billings immensely; everyone did,
he found; and he liked Tad Mudge and Pete Greenough and Tom Trainor.
Warren Hoyt he thought disagreeable. Warren put on airs and pretended
to be bored by everything. Stacey Trowbridge was a quiet fellow who
kept to himself a good deal and was hard to know. Rodney thought
that he would probably like Stacey if he ever got really acquainted
with him. As for Phineas――well, Rodney realized that he would have to
make the best of that strange roommate of his. Not that Kitty caused
any trouble. He didn’t. Let Kitty alone and Kitty let you alone. He
seemed to live in a different altitude from the others, on some higher
and finer plane. He studied a good deal, had a wonderful memory for
lessons, and stood well in class. When he was not poring over his
lessons he was either exercising or reading books on physiology,
hygiene and kindred subjects, of which he possessed a veritable
library. When Kitty exercised he hung a pedometer from his belt, took
a stop-watch in hand, and walked violently about the country for hours
at a time. Kitty’s theory, as Rodney soon learned, was that if a fellow
developed his lungs properly his other organs would look out for
themselves. He talked a good deal about something he called “glame,”
and inhalation and expansion and contraction, and Rodney got rather
tired after a while of those subjects. But, on the whole, Phineas was
a well-meaning, good-humored chap who bothered no one and who was quite
contented to be left to his own devices.

The entering class that year numbered twenty-seven. Rodney had a chance
to look them over Thursday evening when the new First Form held a
meeting in the Assembly Hall and organized. A fellow named Sanderson
was elected president, and a youth named White was chosen for secretary
and treasurer. Rodney took small part in the proceedings, but met,
after the business meeting was over, quite a number of his classmates.
They seemed a decent lot, he thought. They ranged in age from twelve to
fifteen and hailed from seven States, most of them living within a half
day’s journey. Rodney was the only Nebraska representative and came
from farther away than any of them, except one boy whose home was in
Colorado.

So far he had not again encountered Guy Watson, and was rather glad of
it. Not that he was physically afraid of Watson, but he anticipated
trouble sooner or later, and, being a sensible chap, preferred to avoid
it as long as possible. One thing that amused Rodney was the fact that
no one had as yet connected him with his brother, who had graduated
from Maple Hill four years previous. Sooner or later fellows would
discover that the famous Ginger Merrill and the unknown Rodney were
brothers. Until they did Rodney was satisfied to remain in obscurity,
having no desire to shine in reflected glory. He hadn’t been there
twenty-four hours before he heard Stanley’s name mentioned――they
didn’t call him Stanley, however; he was Ginger to fame. At Maple Hill
they compared every promising football player with Ginger Merrill,
and each year’s team to the team that Ginger had captained four years
before. Of course, Rodney knew that that remarkable brother of his had
been something unusual on the football field, but he didn’t realize
Stanley’s real greatness until he reached Maple Hill and heard fellows
hold forth. They spoke of Ginger almost with bated breath, at least
with a pride and reverence that warmed Rodney’s heart and made him
wonder if fellows would ever speak like that of him after he had been
gone four years. If they ever did, he reflected, it would not be
because of his prowess on the gridiron, for football had no place in
Rodney’s scheme. He liked to watch the game and could get as excited
and partisan as anyone over it, but as for playing――well, one football
hero was enough in a family, and Rodney had confined his athletic
interests to baseball and tennis. Of those he was fond, especially
tennis. He rather prided himself on his tennis. He had tried football,
had even played a whole season on a team composed of grammar school
youngsters in Orleans, but he had never become an enthusiast, nor ever
made a name for himself. If someone, ball in arm, ran the length of
the field and fell triumphant over the goal line, it was never Rodney.
Rodney played in the line, took his medicine unflinchingly, did his
best to give as good as he got, and was always somewhat relieved when
the final whistle sounded. No, it wouldn’t be for his football prowess
that posterity would remember him.

Rodney had an interest in life, however. He liked to learn things, all
sorts of things; mathematics even. History had no terrors for him. He
could even find reasons to remember dates. Latin he liked immensely,
and Greek he found absolutely romantic, although, what Greek he knew
he had picked up almost unaided. Modern languages――well, a fellow had
to know French and German, of course, but Rodney was less enthusiastic
about them. Geography, physics, even botany――all was grist that came
to his mill. This love of learning he had inherited from his father.
Mr. Merrill had started in life as a farmer’s boy, and by sheer passion
for learning things had climbed up and up until to-day at forty-five
he was the actual if not yet the official head of one of the biggest
railroad systems of the country. Of Mr. Merrill’s five children, two
boys and three daughters, only Rodney had succeeded to his father’s
thirst for knowledge. Stanley was smart enough and had managed to do
fairly well at his studies both at school and at college, but, to use
his own expression, “he was no shark.” Stanley was far more contented
in the Omaha office of the railroad than he had been in the classrooms.
Perhaps Rodney’s youngest sister, Eleanor, was more like Mr. Merrill
than any of the children save Rodney; although aged thirteen, her
thirst for knowledge took the form of ceaseless questioning.

At grammar school, back at home, Rodney’s friends and companions had
viewed his studiousness with surprise, and for awhile with disapproval.
Finding eventually, however, that aside from his strange love for
lessons he was very much the same as they were, they forgave him his
peculiarity. But at Maple Hill scholarship was not regarded askance.
In fact, Maple Hill rather went in for learning, and Rodney found
himself in congenial surroundings. Maple Hill had its own local idiom,
and in its language to study was to nose, and one who was of professed
studiousness was a noser. Doubtless the word was suggested by the
expression “with his nose in his book.” At all events, Rodney became a
noser, and settled down quite happily and contentedly.

Of course, just at first there were some lonesome hours. In fact there
was one whole day of homesickness. That was Thursday. On Thursday
Orleans, Nebraska, seemed a terribly long way off and the trees sort
of smothered him, and the cool, crisp breeze that blew along Maple
Ridge brought an ache with it. But somehow on Friday morning it was
all different. He awoke to find Kitty lying on his back in the middle
of the floor, chastely attired in a suit of white and pink pajamas,
going through his first exercises. He had different ones for almost
every period of the day. Just now he was stretched at length, inflating
and deflating his lungs and making strange, hoarse noises in his
throat. Rodney looked on for a moment in amusement, and then suddenly
discovering that the sunlight streaming across the foot of his bed
was very bright, that the morning air held an invitation, and that he
was most terribly hungry, he made a bound that just cleared Kitty’s
prostrate form and was ready for anything that fate had in store. And
fate, as it happened, had quite a number of things up its sleeve.

After breakfast――and, oh, how he did enjoy that meal――he had only to
cross the road, enter through a little revolving stile in the fence,
and follow a path for a short distance across the campus to reach the
classrooms in Main Hall. He went alone because none of the other Vests
were ready. It was the custom to wait on the porch of the cottage
until the morning bell began to ring and then make a wild dash for the
hall, arriving there just as the last clang sounded; you say ‘Good
morning, sir,’ and be quick about ten minutes before the hour, but they
were not deserted. Main Hall entrance was a sort of general meeting
place for the boys, a forum where all sorts of matters were discussed
before, between, and after recitations. This morning the wide stones
held some twenty youths when Rodney approached. Two First Formers,
sticking close together for companionship, nodded to Rodney eagerly. He
had met them last evening, and now he would have joined them if fate
hadn’t sprung its first trick just then.

“Hello, little brighteyes!” greeted a voice. The appellation was novel
to Rodney, but the voice had a familiar sound and so he turned. The
speaker was Guy Watson. He was grinning, but Rodney didn’t like the
expression back of the grin.

“Hello,” he answered quietly, and crossed over to join his classmates.

“Not quite so airy, please,” continued Watson. “A little more respect,
sonny. Now, then, try it again.”

He lolled over in front of Rodney, a frown replacing the grin.

Rodney was puzzled. “What is it you want?” he asked.

“I’ll tell you what I don’t want, you fresh young kid. I don’t want any
of your cheek. Get that?”

“I haven’t cheeked anyone,” protested the other. “You said ‘Hello,’ and
I answered you.”

The boy next him was nudging him meaningly, but Rodney was still at a
loss. Watson sneered.

“Innocent, aren’t you?” he demanded. “Don’t they teach you manners
where you live? Where is that, anyway?”

“I live in Nebraska,” answered Rodney.

“Nebraska, eh! Out with the Indians. Well, of course you wouldn’t know
any better. So I’ll explain to you, Mr. Wild West, that here at Maple
Hill a First Former says ‘Sir’ to Third and Fourth Form fellows. Get
that?”

“Yes, thanks. How was I to know you were a Fourth Former, though?”

There was a ripple of amusement at that and Watson flushed. “You’re
supposed to know, kid. It’s your place to find out. Now, then, let’s
try it again.”

“Try what again?”

“You know what I’m talking about! Now you say ‘Good morning, sir,’ and
be quick about it.”

“Oh! That’s it? Why, good morning, sir. How do you do?”

“Cut the flip talk, now!” warned the older boy angrily. “You’re too
smart for this place, anyway. You need taking down, you do, and I
wouldn’t be surprised if you got what you need; I wouldn’t be at all
surprised.”

“Oh, let him alone, Guy,” protested another boy. “He’s new yet.”

“And he’s fresh, too,” answered Watson. “He can’t get off any of his
funny pranks with me, though.”

“That’s just his breezy Western way,” laughed the boy who had spoken.
“He’ll get over it.”

“You bet he will! And let me tell you something, kid, whatever your
name is. You owe Doolittle for four ice-cream sodas and you’d better
trot down and settle. First Formers aren’t allowed to have tick.”

“I don’t owe Doolittle a cent,” replied Rodney firmly. “And if he waits
for me to pay him he will wait a powerful long time.”

“Oh, you’ll pay all right,” laughed Watson. “You thought you’d played a
funny trick, didn’t you? Well, you got stung, kid.”

Rodney shrugged his shoulders. Watson, he decided, was getting tiresome.

“Don’t do that!” exclaimed the other sharply.

“Do what?”

“Don’t shrug your shoulders at me! You pay Doolittle what you owe or
I’ll pay you what _I_ owe. Understand?”

“What’s the row, Guy?” asked a quiet voice. Jack Billings suddenly
appeared at Watson’s elbow.

“Hello,” grumbled the latter. “It’s none of your affair, Jack. This
kid’s been getting fresh, that’s all.”

“Merrill’s in my house,” responded Jack, gravely. “What’s wrong,
Merrill?”

“You’d better ask him,” answered Rodney resentfully. “He’s been
nagging me for five minutes.”

“Oh, drop it,” advised another youth. “Let up, Guy, and forget it.”

“Don’t you get fresh, too, Billy,” warned Watson, turning to the
speaker. Billy laughed.

“All right, Mister Grouch. Want me to say ‘Good morning, sir?’”

“I want you to mind your own business.” Then, turning to Jack, “If
this kid’s in your house you’d better teach him a few things, such as
respect to upper form fellows, Jack. If he opens his mouth to me again
I’ll punch his fresh young head for him!”

“Then I’ll punch yours,” said a deep voice.

Watson swung around, looked, grunted, and grinned. Phineas Kittson,
blinking hard behind his goggles, viewed him calmly.

“Merrill’s a friend of mine,” went on Kitty. “Good fellow. Roommate,
fellow Vest, and all that, Watson. Mustn’t thump him, you know. I’d
make trouble.”

The assemblage, which had been increasing every moment, burst into a
shout of laughter. “Good old Kitty!” “Don’t hurt him, Kitty!” “How are
the lungs this morning, Kitty?”

“I’ll punch you, too, if you get gay, Kittson,” Watson informed him.
Then he swept the laughing throng with his gaze. “And if any of you
other fellows are looking for trouble――――”

But at that moment the bell in the tower overhead began to clang, and
Watson’s belligerent voice was drowned. The boys swarmed up the steps
and into the hall, still laughing and joking. Rodney, following, found
Jack Billings beside him in the press. Jack put an arm over the younger
boy’s shoulders.

“Keep away from Watson, Merrill,” he said kindly. “He’s got a mean
temper. And don’t answer back. And never act fresh, Merrill.”

“I didn’t! At least, I didn’t mean to. He came up and――――”

“All right. You can tell me about it some time,” interrupted Jack.
“Scoot along now. If he tries to make more trouble for you, get away
from him and come to me.”

And, with a smiling and reassuring nod, Jack pushed Rodney toward the
stairway.



CHAPTER VI

RODNEY IS DISCOVERED


“Thanks for――for what you said to Watson,” said Rodney when, after
morning school, he was once more in his room in the cottage. Kitty,
pulling a heavy sweater over his touseled head――he had a theory that
the sort of sweaters that buttoned up the front were not as good as
the old style――emitted an unintelligible reply from the woolen folds.
“It was mighty nice of you,” went on Rodney, watching with fascination
the gradual appearance of Kitty’s moonlike face above the neck of the
garment.

“Nothing at all,” panted Kitty. “If he touches you come to me.
Overbearing fellow, Merrill.”

“Y-yes. He doesn’t seem very popular either, Kittson.”

Kitty considered. “Don’t know about that. Pretty well liked, I believe.
Fellows understand him. Plays good football, you know. Too bad,
though, about his lungs.”

“What’s the matter with them? You don’t mean he――he’s consumptive?”

“Worse,” said Kitty solemnly. “Undeveloped. Never exercises them. Too
bad. I’ve spoken to him often. Begged him. No good. Laughs at me. Show
him some time, though. Where’s pedometer?” And Kitty, armed for the
fray, strode out.

Rodney saw him a moment later from the window. Head and shoulders
back, the faded brown turtle-neck sweater enveloping most of his
body, Phineas Kittson disappeared rapidly from sight down the street,
determination in every stride. Rodney smiled as he lounged back to the
table and searched for a book.

“Queer old duffer,” he murmured.

Later Jack Billings sought him out and heard his story of the trouble
before school. “I don’t see that you were much at fault,” he said
finally. “Still Watson had an excuse, Merrill. You see, First Form
fellows are supposed to be respectful to the upper form fellows; that
is, the Third and Fourth Formers. It isn’t necessary always to say
‘Sir’ to them, but it’s proper to be respectful. Of course, when you
get to know an upper form fellow it’s different. For instance, you
needn’t stand on ceremony with me. None of the fellows in the house do,
because we all know each other pretty well. But if I talk to a lower
form chap from one of the dormitories or another house, I expect him to
stick the ‘Sir’ on. I dare say it’s sort of a silly idea, but it’s the
custom.”

“I didn’t know about it,” said Rodney. “I wouldn’t have minded saying
‘Sir’ to him if I’d known that was what he wanted. The trouble is, he’s
peeved with me about that――that drugstore affair. And he says I’ve got
to pay Doolittle for the sodas they drank. That isn’t fair, because I
stipulated――――”

“Where do you get hold of such big words, Merrill?” laughed Jack. “Go
on. You ‘stipulated’?”

“That if the fellow didn’t have what they called for the first time
I wasn’t to pay. And Watson said chocolate and he was out of that,
and――and so it’s got nothing to do with me!”

“And you knew there was no more chocolate and knew that Watson always
asked for it,” commented Jack, smiling. “On the whole, Merrill, I don’t
think it would do you any harm to have to pay. It was――well, it was a
little bit too tricky. Don’t you think so?”

Rodney considered. “Maybe it was,” he acknowledged at last. “But I
don’t think he had any right to ask me to stand treat, Billings.”

“Yes, he had a perfect right. It’s a custom and customs are laws that
haven’t grown up. While you’re here at Maple Hill you’ll have to play
the game the way we play it, Merrill. Now, if I were you, I’d drop down
to Doolittle’s this afternoon and pay up that score. If you’re short of
cash I’ll let you have it.”

“I’ve got plenty, thanks. It wasn’t that.”

“And that reminds me of another thing you ought to know,” continued
Jack. “First Form fellows are not allowed to have credit at the stores.
It’s in the rules. Perhaps you didn’t notice it.”

“I did, but I wasn’t trying to get credit. I didn’t intend to have them
charge those sodas to me. They hadn’t any right to, either.”

“No, not according to the terms of the agreement. But you played a
pretty sharp trick on Watson and he got back at you with another. I
don’t think there’s much choice between you. Take my advice and settle.
Then keep away from Watson until he has forgotten all about it.”

“Well,” said Rodney unwillingly. “All right. I’ll pay. And after I do
he’s got to let me alone.”

“Watson? He probably will,” returned Jack soothingly. “Don’t let him
worry you.”

“He doesn’t,” said Rodney stoutly. “I’m not going to. He’s a regular
bully, though.”

“He isn’t so bad really, Merrill, after you get to know him a little
better. He’s hot tempered and he can be as mean as a pup when he
wants to be, but――well, I’ve known Guy to do some very decent things.
Besides, Merrill, it’s a mighty good idea not to start off disliking
anyone. You usually find out later that you are wrong, and then you’re
a bit sorry. And besides that, disliking folks hurts you more than it
does them.”

First football practice was held that afternoon, and Rodney, nothing
loth, accepted Tad Mudge’s invitation to walk over with him. Tad
had taken a great liking, it appeared, to the new Vest. Tad was only
five months older than Rodney and seemed even younger. He was a
gay-spirited, happily irresponsible youth with a ready laugh and an
inexhaustible flow of conversation. Tad was in the Second Form and
roomed with Eustace Trowbridge, who was as quiet and reserved as Tad
was talkative and frank.

“Leave your books here,” instructed Tad, piling his own on the marble
slab above the big radiator in the entry of Main Hall. There were many
other piles there already and Rodney added his. “No good going over
to the house,” continued Tad. “Just wastes time and wears out shoe
leather. Come on.”

There was a winding driveway that encircled Main Hall and led on one
side to East Hall and on the other to West Hall. The third dormitory,
known as Beecher, stood nearer the front of the campus. Tad, however,
didn’t trouble to follow the curve of the gravel road, but struck off
straight for the gate. There were several small signs near at hand
bearing the words: “Keep Off The Grass.” Rodney nodded at one.

“Don’t those mean anything, Mudge?” he inquired.

Tad glanced at them contemptuously. “Oh, those!” he answered. “Those
are for the faculty.”

A gate at the back of the campus opened into Maple Street. Tad led the
way across the leaf-strewn road and through another gate opposite. Here
a wide walk ran straight between hedges. On one side was a stone and
shingle cottage, which Tad explained was Doctor Farron’s residence.
Rodney couldn’t see much of it for the shrubbery, but what little was
visible looked very attractive. A little further along there was a
break in the hedge, and another path led across an expanse of turf to
a two story building with a copper-roofed turret in the center. This
Rodney recognized as the building he had seen above the trees from his
window.

“That’s the gym,” said Tad. “It’s a peach, too. We’ll have a look at it
after practice.”

“Are those tennis courts beyond there?” asked Rodney.

“Yes. Do you play?”

“Yes, do you?”

“I taught McLoughlin all he knows,” laughed Tad. “We’ll have a game
some day. Take you on to-morrow morning if you like.”

“I’d like to very much. I guess you’re better than I am, though.”

Tad observed him thoughtfully and shook his head in doubt. “I don’t
know. You look dangerous, Merrill. Say, what’s your other name?
Roderick, isn’t it?”

“Rodney.”

“That so? That’s some name, isn’t it? How’d you like to go through life
with Theodore pinned to you?”

“Seems to me I’ve heard of a Theodore who made quite a stir,” replied
Rodney.

“You mean Teddy? Bet you they’d have given him a third term if his name
had been John or William. Theodore’s a beast of a name. I’m going to
call you Rod. It’s easier than Merrill.”

They had come to another street and another gate and in front of them
spread a wide field of closely cropped turf that was just beginning to
lose its summer green. Two stands flanked a blue-gray running track,
within whose oval the white lines of a newly marked gridiron shone
brightly. Already the scene was a busy one. Practice had not actually
begun, but many candidates were on hand and a greater number of fellows
were grouped and strung about the edge of the field to look on.

“That’s a dandy field!” exclaimed Rodney admiringly as his gaze went
off across to where a line of young willows marked the further side of
the enclosure.

“Almost seven acres,” said Tad proudly. “Bet you there isn’t a better
field in the country. And look at the view!”

Rodney obeyed. From where they stood near the entrance they could look
down over the dwindling houses of the end of the village, and follow
the course of the Hudson for many miles as like a broad blue ribbon it
wound slowly and majestically northward between sloping hills of forest
and meadow.

“That’s Milon over there,” explained Tad. “And Wickerstaff further
along. If you look sharp you can see Bursley. See where the railroad
goes through a cut there? Then look above and just a little to the
right. That’s it. You can see three or four of the buildings.”

“I do, but what is it? Bursley, I mean?”

Tad stared. “Why, Bursley School!”

“Oh!” But Rodney still looked mystified. “It is――is it a good one?”

“A good one!” groaned Tad. “It’s fierce! It’s our hated enemy, Rod. We
loathe it! That is, we do theo――theo――what’s the word I want?”

“Theoretically?”

“Yep, theoretically. Between you and me and――and the grandstand, it’s
a pretty fine place. They’ve got us beaten all hollow on buildings and
such things, only we don’t acknowledge it. But they haven’t a field
that can touch this. They’ve got more fellows than we have, but at that
we manage to wallop them about as often as they wallop us. I think
they’ve done us up at football fourteen times to our twelve. Something
like that. They beat us last year and three years ago. There was once
though when we got ’em three years running. That was when Ginger
Merrill―― Say, your name’s Merrill, too, isn’t it?” Tad turned to
observe Rodney curiously. “Do you play, too?”

“Football? Not much. I’ve tried it but never made it go very well. I
like baseball though.”

“So do I! They can keep their old football; give me baseball every
time! I played substitute outfielder last year on the second nine. Not
that I don’t like to see a good game of football, though. This fellow,
Ginger Merrill, I was speaking of was a wonder! Of course I never saw
him; he was before my time; but I’ve heard fellows talk about him. They
made him captain in his Third Form year! We beat Bursley that year and
the year before and the year after. He was captain two years and I
guess that shows that he was pretty good, eh?”

“I should think so,” replied Rodney as they moved on toward the
gridiron. “He must have been popular.”

“He was. I guess he was the most popular fellow we’ve ever had here.
You want to speak soft and cast your eyes down when you mention him.
He’s a sort of Saint, Saint Ginger!” And Tad chuckled. “Funny your name
should be the same though,” he went on presently, when they had paused
at the inner edge of the running track and Tad had acknowledged the
salutations of numerous comrades. “He doesn’t happen to be a relation
of yours, does he?”

“This Ginger chap? Why, do I look like him?” Rodney smiled.

“I’ve only seen his pictures, but――but I kind of think you do――just
a little. Still I guess if you were related to him you’d know it. So
would we,” he added with a laugh. “You’d be likely to mention it!”

“Who’s the tall fellow in the funny sweater?” asked Rodney.

“That’s Doyle. He’s captain. What’s the matter with the sweater?”

“Nothing except it’s a funny color.”

“It’s just faded. It used to be light green. I suppose you know that
the school colors are green and gray? Green for the maple trees and
gray for the rocks.”

Rodney nodded. “What’s Bursley’s color?”

“Punk! Red and blue. There’s Cotting, our coach. They say he discovered
Ginger Merrill.”

“Discovered him? How?”

“Why, saw that he had the making of a good player and――and trained him.
Taught him all he knew, they say.”

“Rot!” said Rodney. “Stanley knew football before he ever saw Maple
Hill!”

“Well, I don’t know. That’s what I heard.” Tad swung around suddenly
and stared at his companion. “Look here, how the dickens do you know so
much about Ginger Merrill?” he demanded in surprise.

“Why――you told me about him, didn’t you?”

“I didn’t tell you his name was Stanley, I’d forgotten it, they always
call him Ginger; I didn’t tell you he knew football when he came here.”

“Didn’t you? I suppose――I’ve heard lots of fellows speak of him. What’s
Cotton doing?”

“His name is Cotting,” answered Tad, still eyeing Rodney speculatively.
Finally, when the other had refused to meet his glance, he turned to
look at the coach. “He’s taking the fellow’s names. A lot of them are
new boys. Why don’t you have a try, Rod?”

“No good. Besides I’m a bit young yet for the team.”

“Cotting likes to catch them young. Stacey began in his first year, and
now look at him.”

“Where?” asked Rodney.

“I mean look where he is on the team. Only a Third Form fellow and
first string quarterback!”

“Do you mean Stacey Trowbridge?” asked Rodney in surprise.

“Of course. The chap I room with. Why not?”

“Why――why, no reason at all, except――why, somehow he seems so――so sort
of quiet and――――”

“Oh, he doesn’t talk much, but he can _think_ like――like a judge! Jack
says we have a well balanced room; says all the talking’s done on one
side and all the thinking on the other!” Tad laughed. “But Stacey is a
wonder at football. You wait till you see him drive the team some day.
I guess it’s just because he doesn’t talk much that fellows listen when
he does.” Tad was silent a brief moment. Then, “Guess I’ll try that
myself,” he added thoughtfully.

The candidates, who had gathered around the coach, were now dispersing
in squads to different parts of the field. In all there seemed fully
sixty of them, and Rodney expressed his surprise.

“Oh, most of them don’t last long,” replied Tad carelessly. “After
three or four days Cotting will make a cut, and then a lot of them will
retire to private life. Finally he gets down to about thirty-two or
three. Then he divides that bunch into two teams, a first and a second.
Watch Tyson punt. He’s got the ball now. He’s a daisy at it. Look at
that! The chap running to catch it is Wynant. He didn’t get it though.
Gordon cut in on him.”

“Does Billings play?” asked Rodney.

“No, Jack’s baseball captain this year. He’s a dandy fellow. Don’t you
like him?”

“Immensely. He gave me a lecture this noon.”

“Jack did? What about?”

“Oh, about not disliking fellows at first, till you get to know all
about them. Other things, too.”

“Who is it you dislike? Me?”

“No, that Watson chap.”

“Oh, yes, Pete was telling me about Watson ragging you before morning
school. Watson’s like that. Still――” Tad thought a moment. “Jack’s
right though. Watson isn’t a bad sort after all. I’ll tell you
something――――”

But Rodney didn’t hear it just then for Tad’s voice died away. A few
feet distant Cotting, Captain Doyle, and Guy Watson were standing just
inside the side line. “There he is now,” murmured Tad.

“And he looks as though he wanted to jump on me again,” added Rodney.
“Come on. I promised Billings I’d keep away from him.”

Rodney turned to stroll away, Tad following, when a voice called:

“Tad Mudge!”

The boys turned. Captain Doyle was coming toward them, followed by the
coach and Guy Watson. “Wait a minute, Tad,” said Doyle.

“Want me to take your place to-day, Terry?” asked Tad.

“Not to-day, Tad.” The football captain was a tall well built boy
of eighteen with coppery-red hair, gray eyes and a pleasant and
unmistakably Irish countenance. “Introduce your friend, Tad,” he added,
with a glance at Rodney.

“This is Merrill, First Form. Rod, shake hands with Captain Doyle.”

“Glad to know you,” said the captain. Then, turning to Coach Cotting,
who had joined them, “It’s Merrill, all right, Coach.”

Cotting smiled. “Thought I wasn’t mistaken,” he said, studying Rodney
with frank interest. “Shake hands, boy. Your brother and I were pretty
good friends.”

Rodney flushed. “Yes, sir. I――I’ve heard him speak of you.”



CHAPTER VII

COACH COTTING EXACTS A PROMISE


Rodney felt rather than saw the look of hurt surprise and disgust on
Tad’s face, but the incredulous astonishment that sprang into Watson’s
countenance he viewed with secret satisfaction. Doyle’s surprise was
less but his interest greater, while the coach showed only pleasure in
the meeting. Mr. Cotting looked about thirty and was small and wiry,
with keen gray eyes in a thin and deeply tanned face. He had a pleasant
smile and a pleasant voice and spoke quickly and incisively.

“And how is that brother of yours, Merrill? Doing well, I hope.”

“Yes, sir, Stanley’s getting on finely. He’s in Omaha, in the railroad
office. He’s assistant to the Traffic Manager.”

“I’d like to see him again. He’s never been back but once since he left
us. Then he came up one fall and helped with the coaching for three or
four days. You look like him in the face, but you’re built lighter.”

“Look here,” interrupted Watson, “do you mean that this kid is Ginger
Merrill’s own brother?”

“Certainly,” replied Mr. Cotting. “I knew it the moment I set eyes on
him. Why didn’t Ginger let us know you were coming, Merrill?”

“He――he wanted to, sir, but――I asked him not to.”

“I see.” The coach smiled. “Wanted to avoid publicity, eh? But how is
it you’re not out to-day? You play, of course.”

“No, sir, that is, not well.”

“How old are you?”

“Fifteen, sir. I’ll be sixteen next January.”

“You’ve got lots of time then. You’d better come out to-morrow and let
me see how bad you are.” He smiled encouragingly.

“I’m pretty bad,” answered Rodney. “And I don’t care much for
football,” he added apologetically.

“Nonsense!” This was Captain Doyle, and he spoke impatiently. “You
don’t expect us to believe that Ginger Merrill’s brother isn’t a born
football player. Where have you played?”

“At home, Orleans, Nebraska.”

“I mean what position, Merrill.”

“Oh, guard and tackle. I’ve never played much. I’m――I’m no good at it,
sir.”

“Well, you haven’t any objection to proving it to us, have you?” asked
the coach with a laugh. “You come out to-morrow, Merrill.”

“I――I’d rather not, sir, if you please.”

“Rather not!” The coach stared. Watson laughed. Captain Doyle exclaimed
impatiently. “Come, come, Merrill! That’s no way to act,” protested Mr.
Cotting. “The school needs good material. You may not be a wonderful
player now, my boy, but, for that matter, neither was your brother
when I first saw him. But he buckled down and learned. You can do the
same, I think. Anyhow, it’s up to you to try. Of course, if you really
find you can’t make a go at it, there’s no harm done and it’s nothing
against you. But you really ought to try, Merrill. You owe it to the
school――and to Ginger.”

“He knows I’m a duffer, sir; he says so himself,” answered Rodney sadly.

“He does?” Mr. Cotting seemed impressed by that and looked Rodney over
again doubtfully. “Well, you are fairly light, but――hang it, Merrill,
you look intelligent and you’re well put together and seem healthy. You
come out to-morrow and report to me. If you can’t show anything I’ll
let you go. That’s a bargain, eh?”

“Very well, sir,” answered Rodney.

“Look here,” said Doyle, “if you haven’t played football where’d you
get those muscles and that chest?”

“Tennis, I guess. And I’ve played baseball a little, too.”

“That settles it,” grunted Watson. “Never knew a tennis player that was
any good at football. I guess the kid knows what he’s talking about,
Coach.”

“We’ll see. To-morrow, then, Merrill.” The coach nodded, smiled and
turned away. Doyle and Watson kept pace with him. Tad turned to Rodney
indignantly.

“You’re an awful liar, Rod!” he exclaimed.

“I didn’t lie,” replied Rodney calmly. “I didn’t say Ginger wasn’t my
brother. You asked if we were related, and I just asked if I looked
like him.”

“Well, you let me think so,” grumbled Tad.

“What if I did?” asked Rodney cheerfully. “That isn’t lying, is it? If
I didn’t care to own up to it, that’s my business, isn’t it?”

“Well, I don’t see why you’re ashamed of it. Gee, if Ginger Merrill was
my brother I’d be strutting around and clapping my wings and crowing
all over the shop!”

“Oh, no you wouldn’t,” laughed the other. “Besides, you see what’s
happened. I knew that would be the way of it if they found out.”

“What has happened?” asked Tad.

“Why they think I can play, and they’re making me try it. I can’t play,
and they’ll find it out, and then they won’t have any use for me at
all.”

“How do you know you can’t play?” asked Tad. “Why Cotting can make a
football player out of――out of a piece of cheese!”

“Thanks! I’m not a piece of cheese, though. It would take fifty
Cottings to make a football player out of me, Mudge. And besides that
I don’t _want_ to play football!”

“Oh, that wouldn’t matter. If you can play you’ll have to. Maple Hill
expects every man to do his duty. You’ll learn all right, Rod. Bet
you’ll be on the second team before the season’s over!”

“Don’t talk silly! And look here, Mudge, use your brain, can’t you?
Don’t you see that even if I did learn a little football the school
would expect a whole lot of me just because I’m Stanley Merrill’s
brother? And I couldn’t deliver the goods, and everyone would be
disappointed in me. That’s why I didn’t want to play at all.”

“But if you’re Ginger’s brother,” replied Tad confidently, “you _must_
know how to play. It stands to reason. Or, as Kitty says, ‘It follows.’
Maybe you _think_ you can’t play football, but it’s in you somewhere,
Rodney, old boy, and Cotting will get it out! Don’t you worry!”

“You make me tired,” sighed Rodney. “I wish I’d never come here. I
haven’t got time for football anyway. I want to study.”

“You want――to――what!” exclaimed Tad incredulously.

“Study. That’s what I came here for, isn’t it?”

“My word!” Tad looked at him sorrowfully. “You’re a queer one, Rod. You
don’t want folks to know you’re Ginger Merrill’s brother; you don’t
want to be a football hero; and you want to study! Honest, old man, you
positively alarm me! I don’t know whether I ought to associate with
you. Suppose I caught it, too!”

“I guess it wouldn’t do you any harm,” laughed Rodney. “Where are you
going?”

“Over here. Come along.”

Tad made straight for a group of boys near the center of the sideline,
a firm grip on Rodney’s arm impelling that youth to follow. What
followed was distasteful to Rodney, distasteful and embarrassing. Tad
hailed the biggest boy of the group when a few yards away.

“Fielding! Want you to meet a friend of mine. This is Merrill, First
Form. He’s a brother of Ginger Merrill. Shake hands with Fielding, Rod.
And this is Sykes, and Canterbury, and Jones, and Kemp.”

Between names Rodney’s hand was shaken by different members of the
group, who expressed surprised delight at meeting him and hurled
questions. Rodney, very red of face, muttered politely and, when it
was over, turned upon Tad in wrath. “What did you do that for?” he
demanded. “I felt like a perfect fool!”

Tad grinned. “You needn’t, Rod. We’re none of us perfect!”

“Well, I’ll thank you to mind your own business after this, Mudge,”
replied Rodney crossly.

“Look here.” Tad turned upon him soberly. “You are Ginger Merrill’s
brother, aren’t you?”

“Yes, but――――”

“Then fellows have a right to know it. They want to know it.”

“It’s none of their business――――”

“You bet it is! We’re proud of Ginger Merrill here and if Ginger
Merrill’s black cat or his skye terrier came here we’d want to know it.
That’s why I introduced you to those chaps.”

“I don’t thank you,” returned Rodney, ungraciously. “And I’ve had
enough of this. I’m going back.”

Tad, hands in pockets, watched Rodney’s back for a while with a
puzzled frown on his face. Then he whistled expressively, shrugged his
shoulders and turned again to watch practice.

Rodney, thoroughly angry at he didn’t quite know what, left the
athletic field behind him, and instead of entering the back campus,
as the ground containing the head master’s house and the gymnasium
was called, turned to the right on Larch Street and wandered down
it, kicking the dead leaves out of his path. He was heartily sick of
hearing the name of that tiresome brother of his. If, he told himself
savagely, anyone said ‘Ginger Merrill’ to him again to-day he’d――he’d
strike them! The last thing he wanted to do was to join the football
candidates, and here he was pledged to appear to-morrow afternoon for
practice. And he didn’t even possess a pair of football trousers. He
wished heartily he had kept away from the field.

He passed one intersecting street which, he knew, would take him back
to Westcott’s, and kept on. He wasn’t ready for home yet. There would
probably be fellows about and he wasn’t in the humor to talk to them.
At the next corner progress ahead was closed to him, and having the
choice of turning to left or right, he turned to the left. A block
further on he realized that the street looked strangely familiar, a
fact explained when he sighted a granite horseblock set at the edge of
the sidewalk in front of a narrow gate in a lilac hedge.

“I hope,” he muttered, “I don’t run into those silly twins.” And then
in the next instant he found himself hoping he would. Somehow he felt
a desire to unbosom himself to someone sympathetic, and girls, even if
they did hold strange views on a good many subjects, were sympathetic.
So when he reached the gate he looked through, and there on the croquet
lawn which he had traversed the other day were the objects of his
thoughts. They didn’t see him and he stood for a moment and looked and
listened.

“I’m very sure, just as sure as I can be, that you haven’t been through
the middle wicket,” declared one of the twins――he hadn’t the faintest
idea at that distance which twin she was!

“And I’m perfectly certain I have been,” declared the other with equal
firmness. “I came across there after I sent you into the geranium bed
and got in position for the side wicket――――”

“And I came over here on my next shot. And then you went through the
side wicket and your next shot took you over there――――”

“And I went through the next turn!”

“You didn’t, because I hit you and took my two shots――――”

“But you left me in position and I went through!”

“Oh, I do wish there was someone here to settle it! I’m just as sure as
sure that I’m right!”

“And so am I! I suppose we’ll just have to begin over again.” Rodney
could hear at the gate the sigh accompanying this. “This makes three
times that it’s happened. We never will get a game finished!”

“Because you always forget what wicket you’re for.”

“No, because _you_ forget.”

“We-ell, come on, then. It’s your first again.” One of the twins sent
her ball toward the further stake.

“Tell you what you do,” said Rodney. “Get a couple of clothespins,
tie different colored ribbons on them and then, when you go through
a wicket, stick your clothespin on it.” He was enjoying the looks of
surprise on the faces of the twins. “It’s a good scheme, really.”

“It’s――now whatever did he say his name was?” exclaimed one of the
girls.

“I forget. I remember we said it was an unusual name, though,” was the
reply. The two viewed each other doubtfully.

“I think it was Reginald.”

“No, Roderick!”

“Anyway, it began with an R!”

“It’s Rodney,” laughed that youth. “May I come in?”



CHAPTER VIII

CROQUET AND CONFESSIONS


“Of course. We are trying to remember your name. That’s why we didn’t
invite you in. How do you do?”

“Fine.” Then he remembered his tribulations of a few minutes ago and
added, “That is, pretty fair.” He closed the gate behind him and joined
the twins, who had started down the path to meet him. “You must be hard
up for something to do,” he said with a superior air, “if you have to
play croquet!”

“We’re very fond of it,” replied the blue-eyed twin. “Do you play?”

“I used to sometimes,” answered Rodney carelessly. “It’s a girl’s game
though.”

The blue-eyed one――he remembered now that she was Matty――smiled. “Would
you like to play a game?”

“I don’t mind. I’ll stand you two.”

“I think we’d better each play separately,” said Matty. “You see, May
and I play pretty well. We do, don’t we, May?”

“We do,” replied the other gravely.

“All right,” Rodney laughed. “Each for himself then. Have you another
mallet and ball?”

May supplied them from a box on the floor of the tumble down, rustic
summer-house nearby. “I’ve brought you green,” she announced. “Somehow
you suggest green to me, Rodney. Does he to you, Matty?”

“N-no, I think brown,” answered the other twin reflectively. “Perhaps a
greenish-brown, though.”

“Oh, I’m not as green as I look. Who goes first?”

“May does. She plays red. Then you come next. Then I play.”

May took the first two wickets in one, got into position at the third
wicket with the next shot, went through it with the next and then
placed her ball in front of the middle arch. Rodney negotiated the
first two wickets cleanly but his next shot left him badly placed for
the third and his attempt to go through resulted disastrously. His
ball glanced off a wire and rolled into the path of the on-coming
Matty. When she arrived she hit the green ball, skillfully sent it to
the further side of the third wicket, went through herself, hit him
again, sent it into the path and herself to the middle wicket, played
off May’s ball for two wickets and finally landed within a yard of the
further stake. Rodney frowned as he recovered his ball. Evidently these
young ladies knew more about croquet than he had ever dreamed of.

May cleverly got herself into position again and Rodney rolled short.
Matty hit the stake, took the next two wickets at one stroke and
crossed to the further side arch. May reached the first of the double
wickets on her next play. Rodney got into position for his third. He
was still at the middle wicket when Matty, closely pursued by May,
struck the home stake.

“These wickets are awfully narrow,” murmured Rodney. “Want to try
again?”

“We’d love to if you’re not tired,” replied Matty. “I’m sorry you had
such poor luck, Rodney. And then of course, you’re not used to the
grounds. There’s a lot in being used to the grounds, isn’t there, May?”

“Lots,” agreed May. “It’s your first, Rodney.”

The second game resulted as disastrously for Rodney as had the first,
and when it was over he had the grace to acknowledge that the twins
were “some players.”

“I thought I knew a little about the game,” he said ruefully, “but I
guess I don’t. You girls play better than anyone I’ve seen play.”

“We play a good deal,” replied May. “Almost every day in summer.
Practice makes perfect, you know.”

Rodney wished she hadn’t used the word practice. It reminded him
unpleasantly of what awaited him on the morrow. His face clouded up
and he sighed. Matty, seeing his expression, imagined him tired and
suggested a rest. So they went into the summer-house, which was almost
enveloped in honeysuckle vines, and sat down on the curving seat.

“How are you getting on at school?” asked Matty politely.

“All right, I guess. The studies aren’t hard.”

“Probably that’s because you are naturally smart,” responded the girl.
“You impress us as being clever. Doesn’t he, May?”

“You do,” said May. “We both said so the other day.”

“And, Oh, please tell us how you like your roommate!” And Matty clasped
her hands eagerly. May giggled. Rodney frowned at the levity.

“He’s all right,” he replied. “Sort of a peculiar fellow, but I rather
like him.”

“And how are his lungs?” asked May very, very solicitously.

Rodney grinned. “All right, I guess. He wants me to take walks with
him. Says it would do me a lot of good.”

“Perhaps it would,” said Matty, “although you don’t look very weak.
You’re not, are you? May and I decided that you looked rather athletic.
Do you go in for football or baseball? Anything besides croquet?”

Rodney caught the little mocking gleam in the girl’s blue eyes and
flushed uncomfortably.

“That’s all right about the croquet,” he said defensively. “If I
played half as much as you kids――――”

“He’s quite right, Matty,” declared May. “I think you should not have
said that.”

“I was just in fun,” replied the other twin contritely. “I’m sure you’d
play the game beautifully if you had more practice.”

“I guess,” said Rodney, mollified, “I’d never get good enough to beat
you two. I’ve never played very much. Out home I used to play with my
sisters sometimes. They like it.”

“Where do you live?” asked Matty. “We meant to ask you the other day.”

“Orleans, Nebraska. Ever been in Nebraska?”

Each shook her head. “We haven’t travelled much,” confessed May. “After
we finish High School, though, we’re going abroad with mother. Have you
ever been in Europe?”

“No. Don’t want to. What’s the use?”

“Oh, but think of seeing the pyramids!” exclaimed Matty.

“And the tomb of Napoleon!” said May with calm rapture.

“And Venice!”

“And the Alps!”

“Pompeii!”

“The Nile!”

“Piffle!” grunted Rodney. “What’s the Nile? Ever been down the Missouri
and Mississippi? They’ve got the Nile beaten to a thick froth! As for
the Alps, why, you could set them down in the Rockies and never be able
to find them again! Say, ever see the Grand Canyon, you girls?”

They shook their heads in unison. They did almost everything in unison.

“Well that’s something worth while! You come out in my part of the
world and I’ll show you things that’ll make your eyes pop out. You
won’t think about Europe after that, nor Africa either!”

“But――but the antiquities!” said Matty.

“All right. We’ve got antiquities in our own country, haven’t we?”
asked Rodney indignantly. “Look at the cliff dwellings!”

“What are those?” asked May.

“There it is!” he exclaimed triumphantly. “I knew it! Never heard of
the cliff dwellers! That’s always the way with folks who spout about
Europe. They don’t know what――what’s in their own country!”

“We will read about them,” replied May untroubled. “We will find a book
in the library that tells about them. Please remind me, Matty.”

“You’d better,” grumbled Rodney. “Learn about your own country first,
that’s what I say!”

“Of course,” agreed Matty, “only――well, we might not have another
opportunity to go abroad for years and years, and so it wouldn’t do not
to go just because we hadn’t seen those places you spoke of, would it?”

Rodney agreed that it wouldn’t. After that they talked of many things
out there in the summer-house, while the sun sank lower and lower over
the trees. And finally, just as Rodney had secretly hoped it would,
the story of his dilemma came out. He wanted sympathy, and he received
it, but he was a little bit annoyed at the manner in which the twins
clasped their hands and said “Oh!” quite breathlessly when he told them
that he was a brother of Ginger Merrill’s.

“Think of that!” exclaimed Matty, who was the first to recover from her
surprise. “Aren’t you proud?”

“No, I’m not,” returned Rodney, speaking in very bored tones. “I wish
Stanley had never been at school here.”

“Why, Rodney!” This was May, scandalized. “How can you say such a
thing? Just think what it is to be the brother of a real hero like
Ginger Merrill! You can’t mean it!”

“Do, though,” grunted Rodney doggedly. “I’m sick of hearing about him
and sick of seeing his pictures all over the shop. And look what a mess
I’m in on his account. Got to go out to-morrow and fall around on a
slippery old football and get bruised up. I can’t play and I told them
so, but it didn’t do any good.” He kicked exasperatedly at the mallet
he held. “I’ve a good mind not to go at all!”

“Oh, Rodney!” cried Matty. “You must! Think what a splendid thing it
will be to get on the team and play against Bursley and maybe win the
game for us!”

“Tell you I’m no good at it!” said Rodney impatiently. “I’ve tried it.
Besides, I don’t want to play football. I won’t have time.”

“Why won’t you?” asked Matty.

“Because I want to study. I’m going to try for a scholarship. I’m
willing to try for the baseball team and I like to play tennis, but I
don’t want anything to do with football.”

“But――but――you ought to, Rodney! Your duty to the school――――”

“Piffle!”

Matty looked pained. “But you _did_ ought to――――”

“_Had_ ought to, I think,” corrected May.

“_Should_ ought to,” laughed Rodney. “Oh, well, I’ll have to see it
through, I guess. After I’ve been out a few days they’ll be glad to let
me alone. Only that’s going to get fellows sort of down on me. They’ll
say ‘Ginger Merrill’s brother is an awful duffer. He can’t even hold
the ball!’”

“But I don’t believe you’re nearly as bad as you try to make out,” said
Matty, smiling. “How could you be? Ginger Merrill’s brother――――”

“There you go! I wish they’d forget I’m Ginger Merrill’s brother. You,
too. I’m going home.”

“Well, it was very nice of you to play croquet with us, wasn’t it, May?”

“It was,” agreed May promptly and calmly.

“And to-morrow, if mama will allow us to, we’ll go over to the field
and watch you practice.” And Matty smiled encouragingly.

“Rather you didn’t,” replied Rodney gloomily. “So long.”

He squirmed through a thin place in the hedge that separated the
Binner’s garden from Mrs. Westcott’s yard, and entered the cottage.
Mrs. Westcott, as luck would have it, was seated in her private parlor
at the left of the door, and at sight of Rodney hurried into the hall.

“My dear, _dear_ boy!” she exclaimed rapturously. “I’ve just heard the
news!”

“What news, ma’am?” asked Rodney unsuspiciously.

“Why, that you are Stanley Merrill’s brother! Why didn’t you tell us?”
She had both his hands now and was beaming radiantly upon him. “Just to
think that we never suspected it! Why, I can’t tell you how proud I am,
Rodney! Your dear brother used to come very often to my house to see
my boys, and he and I were the best of friends! And to think that you
are his brother!”

“Yes’m,” replied Rodney flatly. “It――it’s quite remarkable.”



CHAPTER IX

REFLECTED GLORY


“Guess who we’ve got here in the house!” exclaimed Pete Greenough,
encountering Jack Billings in front of the cottage just before supper
time that evening. Jack, who had been playing baseball, carried a
favorite bat in one hand, and now he raised it threateningly.

“Go ahead with your joke,” he said grimly.

“It isn’t a joke at all,” Pete protested. “It’s something about this
chap Merrill. Tad just told me. Who do you suppose he is?”

“Tad?”

“No, Merrill, you silly goat!”

“His name is Rodney Merrill,” replied Jack calmly. “He lives in
Orleans, Nebraska, and he is a younger brother of Ginger Merrill, of
blessed fame!”

“Oh, somebody told you!” exclaimed Pete disappointedly.

“No, I guessed it, two days ago. I heard Merrill say he was from the
west and I stopped in at the office and looked him up. Then I got an
old catalogue and found that Ginger came from the same town. After that
it was only necessary to compare their looks.”

“Well, why didn’t you tell a fellow?”

Jack shrugged his shoulders as he entered the gate. “He didn’t seem to
want to have it known, Pete, so I kept still.”

“That’s what gets me,” said Pete. “Why the dickens did he keep so mum
about it? Anyone would think he was ashamed of it! Say, it’s a bit of
a feather in our hat, isn’t it? Having Ginger Merrill’s brother in our
house, I mean.”

“Why, yes,” answered Jack, taking a seat on the top step and studying a
nick in his bat. “It’s going to be a little hard on Merrill though,” he
added soberly.

“What is?”

“This being Ginger’s brother. Fellows will expect a lot from him, won’t
they?”

“I guess so,” acknowledged Pete thoughtfully.

“Yes, and from what I see of young Merrill he’s just a decent, ordinary
sort of kid. That’s what I mean. If he doesn’t turn out a great
football player or a great something else, the fellows are going to be
disappointed in him. Besides that, Pete, he stands a pretty good show
of getting a swelled head on his brother’s account, eh?”

“Oh, we’ll look after that,” returned Pete confidently. “If he shows
any of that sort of thing we’ll take it out of him. He doesn’t yet,
though, does he? His keeping quiet about Ginger looks as if he was sort
of a modest kid, eh?”

“Yes, unless――――”

“What?”

“Unless he did it to get a better effect, if you see what I mean.”

“Can’t say I do, Jack.”

“We-ell, he must have known that it would come out sooner or later.
Maybe he thought if he kept quiet about it it would make more of a
sensation when it did become known.”

“Oh!”

“That’s only what might be, Pete. I’m not saying it’s so. From what
I’ve seen of Merrill I rather like him. Perhaps a little too――too
independent, but a decent sort for all that. What he’s got to be made
to understand, Pete, is that being Ginger Merrill’s brother butters no
parsnips; that if he’s going to make good he’s got to forget that and
dig out on his own account.”

“Going to tell him so?”

“Me?” Jack shook his head slowly. “No, at least not in so many words.
Perhaps a hint will do him good some time though. I don’t believe in
interfering much, Pete. Every fellow has his own row to hoe, and you
can’t help him very much. For my part, I shan’t say anything to him
about his brother. Better let him think we don’t care much about whose
brother he is. Who made the discovery, Pete?”

“Cotting. Tad says Cotting knew him the moment he saw him, and came up
and shook hands with him.”

“Oh, is Merrill out for the team?”

“Not yet. He and Tad were looking on. He’s going out to-morrow though,
Tad says. Cotting wouldn’t take no. Merrill says he can’t play, but
Cotting wouldn’t believe him. Neither do I. Stands to reason that
Ginger Merrill’s brother can play football, doesn’t it?”

“I don’t see why, Pete. Anyhow, I hope he makes good. It’ll save him a
lot of trouble if he does. Let’s go and wash up.”

Rodney came down to supper looking self-conscious in spite of his
efforts not to. He suspected that all the other fellows in the house
had learned of his relationship with the redoubtable Ginger, for Kitty
had shaken him gravely by the hand ten minutes before and assured him
that he considered it an honor to have Ginger Merrill’s brother for a
roommate. Kitty also declared that the records showed Ginger to have
had one of the finest chest developments in the history of the school,
a fact which ennobled that youth more in Kitty’s estimation than all
his football prowess. Pete Greenough, reading Rodney’s expression
aright, recalled Jack’s theory and concluded that perhaps after all
young Merrill wasn’t such a modest kid as he had thought. At table,
however, not a word was said about Ginger Merrill until Mrs. Westcott
herself brought up the subject. Wasn’t it delightful, she asked, to
have dear Stanley’s brother with us? Whereupon Jack said:

“Pass the bread, please, Tom,” and Warren Hoyt expressed the hope
languidly that Merrill could chase a pigskin half as well as his
brother had. That gave Rodney the opportunity he wanted.

“I can’t though,” he said bluntly. “I’m no good at football and I don’t
want to play it. I told Mr. Cotting so but he insisted that I was to
come out to-morrow. I won’t stay long though.”

“No, he will drop you quick enough if you can’t deliver the goods,”
said Tom Trainor. Tom spoke from sad experience. Stacey Trowbridge
looked across from the other end of the table.

“You’ve played, have you, Merrill?” he asked quietly.

“Yes, a little. Enough to find out I’m no good at it.”

“You can’t tell,” said Pete. “Cotting has a way of making the most of
fellows, I guess.”

“He makes mistakes sometimes though,” said Tad Mudge gravely. “He let
Tom get away.”

There was a laugh at this sally, which Tom joined in good-naturedly,
and the conversation wandered to other subjects. After supper Rodney
and Tad made up their tiff.

“Sorry I was so grouchy,” said Rodney.

“That’s all right. I don’t blame you, Rod. I guess I was rather fresh
anyway. Want to take a walk?”

By the next morning Rodney’s fame had spread throughout the school.
Fellows nudged each other at sight of him and whispered when they
thought he couldn’t see. But Rodney did see, or at least knew it
somehow, and was half pleased and half annoyed. He was glad that
fellows held his brother in the esteem they did and hoped that some
day they might like him half as well, but it was a little bit annoying
to be looked on as Ginger Merrill’s brother, as though he was of no
importance on his own account. One of the submasters, Mr. Steuben, who
was known as the Baron, shook hands with him and told him pleasant
things about Stanley, and inquired solicitously after that youth.

“We vare friends, your great brother and I,” said the Baron, smiling
through his thick lenses. “Ven you write to him you must tell him I
still think of him. And tell him also, that I am so glad to have his
brother here to teach him the German and the physics.”

Rodney and Tad went over to the gymnasium at three, Rodney lugging a
bundle of football togs donated by Tad. The new boy had never been
inside the gymnasium before and he was both surprised and impressed by
the elaborateness of it. Apparently it contained everything desirable.
Big windows threw light everywhere and even the darker corners under
the running gallery were walled with white glazed brick so that even
there one could see perfectly. The big floor of white oak shone
with cleanliness and even the chest weights and more complicated
apparatus that lined the walls were miraculously free from dust. In
the dressing and bath rooms the floors were of concrete, and wherever
possible concrete brick and steel took the place of wood. There was a
fine batting cage in the basement, a bowling alley and smaller rooms
for fencing and boxing. A staircase of steel and slate led from the
entrance hall to the second story where a low-ceilinged room held a
rowing tank and several rowing machines. Doors led from the upper hall
to the running track, and Tad pushed them open and the boys descended
the sloping curve at the turn and viewed the gymnasium from the gallery
railing.

“Looks bigger from here, doesn’t it?” asked Tad. “Those little black
dots painted on the floor are to show you where to stand in gym class.”

“What’s the circle in the middle?” asked Rodney.

“For basket ball. We used to play it a lot, but faculty got down on it
and now it’s barred, except for scrub playing. We used to have some hot
old games with Bursley. Fellows got hurt a lot though. Bursley played
too rough,” Tad chuckled.

“Meaning Maple Hill didn’t?” asked Rodney with a smile.

“Oh well, when the other fellow starts something you’ve got to keep up
with him,” responded Tad with a grin. “I guess it was about an even
thing.”

Back in the hall Tad drew Rodney’s attention to a cabinet against the
wall under the broad, high window. “Trophy case,” he explained. Inside,
behind the glass doors, were a dozen or more footballs, each inscribed
with the score of the game in which it had been used. “The winning team
keeps the ball, you know,” said Tad. “Look at this one over here. ‘M.
H. 28; B. 9.’ That was a peach of a game, I’ll bet. That was the second
year your brother was captain. And here’s the one the year before.
‘Maple Hill 12; Bursley S. C.’”

There were baseballs there, as well, and a few hockey pucks, and
against the back of the case some faded silk banners whose gold
lettering was well nigh illegible. The latter, Tad explained, were old
track trophies and dated back to what he called the dark ages. On the
walls about the trophy case and all the way down the stairs were hung
dozens of group photographs――football teams, baseball teams, track
and field teams, rowing crews, hockey teams, basket-ball teams. Under
each photograph was set down the year and, in most cases, cabalistic
letters and figures, as, under one group of lightly-clad youths, the
inscription: “M. H. 64½; B. 31½.”

“That’s the 1911 track team,” said Tad. “They slammed it into Bursley
good and hard, didn’t they?”

“Yes,” murmured Rodney. His gaze had wandered to a group of football
players, eighteen sturdy looking youths in togs of whom the center
figure, holding a football on his knees, looked strangely familiar. It
took a second look to identify the youth as Ginger Merrill, for Ginger
in the picture looked years younger, and of course was without the
carefully cared for mustache that nowadays adorned his upper lip.

“That,” said Tad at Rodney’s shoulder, “was the team that won 12 to
6. That was your brother’s first year as captain. He was only a Third
Former then. Here he is the year before that.”

Rodney looked where Tad pointed, and finally distinguished his brother
peering over the shoulder of a comrade from the rear row of the group.
He looked in that picture scarcely older than Rodney himself at the
present moment. Tad exhibited him several more times――as captain of the
victorious eleven which had sent Bursley down to defeat by the 28 to 9
score, as a substitute on a hockey seven, and as a member of a baseball
team which had met defeat.

“Seems to be all over the shop,” grunted Rodney. “Wonder if he ever did
a lick of work when he was here.”

“Who cares?” asked Tad flippantly. “He did a heap of things that
counted just as much.”

“Better not let any of the faculty hear you say that,” laughed Rodney.
“They wouldn’t agree with you.”

“Faculties never did agree with me,” responded Tad, leading the way
down stairs. “I can’t stand the things. I’m in favor of abolishing ’em,
Rod.”



CHAPTER X

RODNEY JOINS THE SQUAD


“Well, Stanley used to tell wonderful yarns about this place,” said
Rodney as they reached the lower hall, “but I didn’t believe quite all
he said then. I do now. It’s certainly a fine building. Still――――”

“Still what?” asked Tad jealously.

“Well, I don’t see what the idea is in putting so much expense into a
gymnasium, Tad.”

“Why not?”

“We-ell, it seems to me that a building that is used so little――――”

“Used so little! Say, you want to come over here some evening next week
and see the gymnastic class at work! And pretty soon they’ll begin
the regular gym work. I guess, Rod, this place is as much used as any
building here. Why, I’ve seen this dressing-room so full in spring that
you couldn’t move around without treading on some fellow’s toes!”

Tad secured a locker for Rodney and the latter changed to his football
garb. The trousers were a bit too tight at the waist, but by lacing
them not quite close they answered very well. The jacket fitted better.
As for jersey and shoes, Rodney furnished those himself. Before he
was dressed the other candidates began pouring into the room, and the
place, which had been almost deserted when the two boys arrived, hummed
like a beehive. Guy Watson nodded to Rodney as he took a seat on a
neighboring bench, and to Rodney’s surprise the nod seemed to express
toleration rather than dislike. Captain Doyle came up and said a few
words, and Stacey Trowbridge smiled gravely across at him. A big chap
with a good-natured round face that broke into a dozen creases when he
laughed was Pounder, who played center. “‘Two Hundred Pounder,’ the
fellows used to call him,” explained Tad, “although he only weighs a
hundred and seventy or so. He’s a dandy center. The fellow with the
bandage on his head is Roger Tyson, left half. He’s a wonder. If we had
ten other fellows like old Roger we’d beat everything of our size in
the country.”

“What’s the matter with his head?” asked Rodney.

“Hurt it yesterday. Got an awful crack, they say. It was after you
went. He was down and out for five minutes. Are you all fixed? Let’s
start along, then.”

“I’m going to put you with the kindergarteners to-day, Merrill,”
announced Mr. Cotting when Rodney reported. “I guess you won’t stay
there long. Don’t try to overdo it to-day. Save your muscles. Gordon,
will you take charge of Merrill, please? By the way, you might give me
your name and so on first.” And the coach drew out his memorandum book
and Rodney supplied answers to the questions he put. Then he trailed
off with Gordon, who was fullback on the first team, and joined a group
of tyros at the further side of the field. Most of them were Fourth
Form boys, although there were three or four older youths in the squad.
Gordon was extremely patient, but it wasn’t difficult to see that he
didn’t love his task. Teaching the rudiments to a group of beginners
is rather uninteresting work. Rodney passed the ball, caught it, fell
on it, practised starts, and went through the usual programme that
afternoon. In comparison with the performance of the others in the
squad his efforts were almost brilliant and Gordon viewed him with
hopeful interest. Once when the ball had eluded him and dribbled its
way to the sideline, Rodney, rescuing it, heard his name spoken, and
looked up to discover the twins standing nearby.

“You’re doing beautifully!” called Matty with enthusiasm. “We’re
awfully proud of you, Rodney, aren’t we, May?”

“Awfully,” agreed May, calmly emphatic. “And we were sure all the time
that you could play, Rodney!”

“This isn’t playing,” scoffed Rodney. “Anyone can do this sort of
thing!”

He was glad when it was finally over and he could retire to a bench
under one of the stands, draw a blanket around him, and watch the first
and second squads trot about the field in signal work. On the other
side the twins were still looking on, Tad Mudge and Warren Hoyt in
attendance. The twins were not the only representatives of their sex
present, for amongst the spectators from outside the school Rodney saw
quite a number of girls. Later Rodney joined the twins and Tad――Warren
Hoyt had taken himself off――and walked to the gymnasium steps with them.

“How did it go?” asked Tad with a grin.

Rodney shrugged. “All right. I’ve been through it before. I’m sort of
weak in the knees, though.”

“We thought you played very nicely indeed,” said Matty. “We watched you
all the time. You did much better than those other boys.”

“I should think I might,” laughed Rodney. “They were all beginners, I
guess.”

“They want us to play croquet,” announced Tad. “I said I would if you
would. Want to?”

“Why yes, if there’s time. Won’t it be pretty late?”

“Not if you get a move on,” answered Tad. “We’ll go ahead. You hurry up
and come over. Matty and I will stand you and May. I’m a fierce player,
but it’s good fun.”

It _was_ good fun, although there was only time before supper for two
hard-fought games, both of which were won by Tad and Matty. It was
Matty, however, who really won, for Tad was even weaker than Rodney
with a croquet mallet. Matty, playing rover, came back and nursed
Tad’s ball through the wickets, and while May later performed the same
service for Rodney, the luck was against them and they had to accept
defeat. On the way across to the cottage Tad observed:

“I didn’t know you knew the Binner twins. Where’d you run across them?”
Rodney explained and Tad laughed at the picture of the girls seated
atop the fence posts. “They’re funny kids. They’re good-hearted,
though, and lots of fun. Rather pretty, too, eh?”

“I suppose so,” Rodney replied indifferently. “Have they a father? I
never hear them speak of him.”

“No, he died a long time ago I think. And Mrs. Binner is a sort of an
invalid, never goes out much, except to drive in a carriage. They say
she’s awfully nice, but I’ve never seen her. The kids go to high school
and are so smart that they jump a class every year, I guess.”

“They ought to be through pretty soon, then,” laughed Rodney. “If
they’re as clever in school as they are at croquet I can understand it.”

“Say, can’t they play?” asked Tad admiringly. “Of course, it’s only a
girl’s game, but――hang it, it makes a fellow sort of mad to have those
kids beat him every time! And they can play a pretty decent game of
tennis, too. There’s a neighborhood court over on Dunn Street. Some
time we’ll take the twins and have a four-handed set. By the way, we
didn’t get our game this morning. I forgot it, did you?”

“Yes, until about noon. I’ll play you to-morrow, if you like.”

“To-morrow’s Sunday, you idiot.”

“Well, we’ll try it some other time. I hope we have something good for
supper. I’m starved!”

Rodney’s first Sunday at school passed quietly and uneventfully.
There was church in the morning for everyone, the boys walking to and
from their chosen place of worship with one of the submasters. Tad
confided to Rodney that there were more Episcopalians than any other
denomination in school because the pews in the Episcopal church had
higher backs and you didn’t have to sit up all the time. In spite of
that attraction, however, Rodney joined the group of fellows who, in
charge of Mr. Cooper, attended service at the little white Methodist
church down by the river. It was a long way down there and a longer way
back, and when Rodney gained the cottage once more he was quite ready
for the Sunday dinner, which at Mrs. Westcott’s was a very elaborate
meal. Rodney topped off with two dishes of ice cream and two slices of
cocoanut layer cake and then went upstairs and tried to write a letter
home. But it was a wonderful, warm September day and the outdoors
called him. So, after a brief struggle, he took his tablet and fountain
pen downstairs and found a shady spot under a pear tree at the side
of the house. Before he had written more than “Dear Mother and Dad,”
however, he was joined by Tom Trainor and Pete Greenough. A few minutes
later Tad added himself to the group, and Rodney laid his letter
aside. For an hour and more they lay on their backs on the grass and
talked, discussing idly and lazily all the hundred and one subjects
of interest to boys, from the incidents of church going to the college
football situation, including the catching of black bass and the best
way to get money from parents.

“I used to write that I wanted to get my hair cut,” confided Tad
reminiscently, staring up into the branches. “That did pretty well when
I was a youngster――――”

“What are you now?” asked Pete Greenough slightingly.

“Shut up! Finally, though, mother wrote me that she had been keeping a
record and that I’d had exactly fifteen haircuts in four months, and
she was afraid my hair might get discouraged and then I’d be bald. So I
had to think up something else.”

“What?” asked Tom Trainor interestedly.

“Subscriptions to school societies and things. At Christmas vacation
father asked me how many societies I belonged to, and I forgot and said
one. That spoiled that.”

“You know you were lying,” said Pete severely.

“Ye-es, I suppose I was, in a way. But I didn’t think of it then,
honest. I don’t do it any more. Now when I want extra money I write
and tell the truth.”

“What do you say?” asked Rodney.

“I tell them that Pete has borrowed all I had!”

“What do you think of that?” asked Pete indignantly. “I only owe you
seventy-five cents. And I’ll pay you the first money I get, you fresh
kid!”

“Please don’t Pete!” begged Tad. “If you do, I’ll have to think up
something else.”

“Just lend it to me instead,” suggested Tom helpfully. “I don’t mind.”

“That wouldn’t be lending,” replied Tad. “That would be giving it.”

That letter of Rodney’s didn’t get written until evening.



CHAPTER XI

KITTY SUPPLIES A SENSATION


On Sunday Rodney had returned from church by way of River Street and
the sight of Doolittle’s Pharmacy had reminded him that he had not yet
kept his promise to Jack Billings. So on Monday he slipped down the
hill between Latin and English recitations to settle his indebtedness.
Young Mr. Doolittle didn’t remember him until Rodney recalled the
circumstances and informed him that he wanted to pay for the four
ice-cream sodas.

“Oh, you were the fellow that played the trick on Watson, eh?” asked
the clerk with a chuckle. “Say, maybe he wasn’t peeved about it!”

“Was he? Well, he got them anyway.”

“Yes, he made believe he was going to pay for them himself, and then
when he and his friends had drank ’em he said I was to charge ’em to
you.”

“That’s all right. Forty cents, wasn’t it?”

“He’s all the time doing things like that,” continued the clerk
grievedly. “Did I tell you about the time he got a bottle of liniment
off the shelf and emptied it into the sarsaparilla tank when I wasn’t
looking? Well, he did. And Deacon Whittier and Si Moon――――”

“What?” laughed Rodney. “Who’d you say?”

“Si Moon; keeps the livery stable,” replied the other, puzzled by the
boy’s amusement. “Know him?”

“No, but I’m going to start a list of names. You’ve got some corkers
around here! What do they call Mr. Moon for short? Sirocer?”

“They call him Si,” replied the clerk with the hauteur of one who
discovers that he has made a humorous remark and doesn’t know what it
was. “Don’t know what you mean about Si Rocker.”

“Never mind. What happened to old Si-moon?”

“He was sick as a horse, he and the Deacon, too. And――――”

“Perhaps it was horse liniment?” suggested Rodney gravely.

“No, ’twa’n’t, it was Hipplepot’s Embrocation. I know because I found
the bottle behind the fountain there. ’Most half empty it was, too.
Might have killed ’em!”

“How did you find out Watson did it?”

“Why, he’d been in here a while before, and I just naturally suspected
him. And when I asked him he owned right up.”

“Well that was honest anyway, wasn’t it? He might have told a lie about
it.”

“Watson wouldn’t,” said the clerk grudgingly. “I’ll say that for him.
He’s a terror, all right, but he owns up to things. I nearly lost my
job that time, though.”

“Too bad. Well, here’s the money. Just cross off that bill, will you?”
and Rodney laid a half dollar on the counter. The clerk looked at it
doubtfully.

“What’s that for?” he asked.

“Why, to pay for those sodas.”

“Oh! They’re paid for. Thought you knew. Watson came down Saturday and
paid for ’em.”

“He did!” Rodney stared and thoughtfully returned the money to his
pocket. “I wonder what he did that for?”

“I don’t know. Said something about only being in fun the other time. I
just took the money and was glad to get it. There’s lots of fellows up
to school don’t pay up as well as he does.”

Hurrying back up the hill Rodney wondered why Watson had changed his
mind, and debated whether to speak to him about it. He finally decided
to let the matter drop. Whatever Watson’s motive might have been,
Rodney had an idea that the older boy wouldn’t care to be thanked.

It was two days after that that Phineas Kittson startled the school
and provided several days of amusement by announcing his candidacy
for a position on the football team. Rodney learned of it first. He
found Kitty frowning over a book of football rules that afternoon
after practice. Kitty looked up as Rodney came into the room, nodded,
and went back to his study. Rodney observed the blue covered book
curiously, until in a moment Kitty asked:

“Merrill, what do you mean when you say a ball is ‘dead’?”

“Why, that it isn’t――isn’t playable. Like when the fellow who has it is
tackled, you know, or when it goes over the goal line.”

“Oh. Seems to me the person who wrote these rules tried to make them as
difficult as possible. All mixed up, I call them. Silly.”

“Aren’t thinking of playing, are you?” asked Rodney smilingly.

Kitty turned down the corner of a leaf and nodded slowly. “Yes, I’ve
decided that I’ll have to try,” he replied calmly. “Got more time this
year. Reading in a paper yesterday that football is great developer
of the lungs. Don’t see why it shouldn’t be, eh? Course, a fellow
couldn’t rely on football alone. Have to take regular exercises,
too. It follows. But in its way, don’t see why football wouldn’t
be――er――beneficial. Would it seem so to you, Merrill?”

“Yes.” Rodney struggled to keep from laughing. “Yes, I’d say football
might develop the lungs beautifully.”

“Shall try it. Been trying to get the sense of that.” He nodded at the
rule book. “Guess you have to play the game to learn what it’s all
about though. Complicated. Contradictory. Can’t make heads nor tails
of it. What do you wear?”

“Oh, you wear canvas breeches and a canvas jacket thing that laces up
the front. And a jersey underneath. And long stockings and shoes with
cleats.”

“Cost much?”

“Mm, that depends. Twelve dollars will do it, I guess.”

“Buy them in the village?”

“I think so. Yes, Tad told me I could get most everything here. I
forget what the name of the shop was.”

“Porgan’s, I guess.”

“Or Humpernickle’s,” suggested Rodney with a grin.

“Don’t know that. Think I’ve seen footballs and such things in
Porgan’s. Where’s Humpernickle’s?”

“Search me,” laughed Rodney, “but I’ll bet there’s a place of that name
here somewhere. When you going to start, Kittson?”

“Me? Oh, tomorrow, I guess. What do you do? Any――er――formalities?”

“N-no, just――just go over to the field dressed for play and tell――”
Rodney’s grin wouldn’t be suppressed any longer――“tell Mr. Cotting you
want to try for the team.”

“I see. All right. Much obliged. Mind going down to Porgan’s after
school and helping me buy things?”

“Glad to,” replied Rodney gravely. “I say, do you mind if I tell the
fellows about it?”

Kitty stared across in mild surprise. “About me? No.” The tone implied
that Kitty didn’t see why he should mind! “Tell ’em if you want to. Not
important though, is it?”

“Oh, well, I only thought that――that they’d like to know.”

“Suppose they would. What time is it? Half past five! I’m late this
evening!” And Kitty gravely threw aside his jacket, pulled his faded
brown sweater over his head, attached his pedometer to his belt, and
set forth on his final stunt of the day, which was a little jaunt down
to the river and back up the hill at top speed.

Rodney left the room close on the heels of Kitty and burst into Jack
Billings’s room. Only Tom Trainor was there, Tom bending over a book
with both hands clutching desperately at his hair.

“Busy,” grunted Tom, without looking around.

“Don’t care if you are,” answered Rodney. “You aren’t too busy to hear
some news.”

“Yes, I am. Don’t want to hear any news. Get out, Rod!”

“It’s about Kitty.”

“Nothing is news about Kitty,” scoffed Tom. But he stopped tearing his
hair and looked around. “What is it?”

“He’s going out for the team!”

“What team?”

“Football!”

“Never!”

“He is! Honest injun, Tom!”

“Not _Kitty_!”

“Kitty!”

“Whoops!” Tom’s chair went over with a crash and he flew to the hall.
“Fellows! Pete! Stacey! Everybody this way!”

“Shut up!” came a wail from the closed door of Pete Greenough’s room.
But Stacey answered, and he and Tad tumbled into the hall. “What’s up?
Where’s the fire?” asked Tad.

“News, fellows! Glorious news! Kitty――――”

Pete, who had opened his door and stuck his head out, groaned and
started back.

“Hold on, Pete! Wait till you hear it! Kitty’s going to play football!”

There was a moment of intense silence. Then shrieks of delight broke
forth, and Tom and Tad clasped each other ecstatically and danced along
the hall. At that moment Jack Billings and Warren Hoyt appeared on the
stairs, and the news was broken to them very gently by five voices
shouting in unison. After that they piled into Jack’s room and laughed
and joked to their heart’s content.

“I know where I’m going to be to-morrow afternoon at three-thirty,”
announced Tad. “Right on the sideline, fellows, where I can see it all!”

“That’s where we’ll all be!” gurgled Tom. “And he’s going down to
Porgan’s after school to-morrow to buy an outfit. Let’s all go along
and help, fellows!”

But Jack demurred. “That would be too strong,” he said. “It is funny,
but we don’t want to hurt old Kitty’s feelings. It’s going to be funny
enough anyway, without that.”

“That’s so,” Stacey agreed. “Besides,” and he smiled in his quiet way,
“he might take offence and quit then and there.”

Further discussion was halted by the sound of steps on the stairway.
The fellows grinned at each other and Warren Hoyt called: “Is that you,
Kitty? What’s this Merrill’s telling us?”

Kitty appeared at the doorway, breathing deeply and perspiring freely,
and observed them anxiously through his spectacles.

“About football?” he inquired. “Yes, I’m going to try it. I’ve read
that it is fine for the lungs. May be wrong though. What do you think,
Stacey?”

“Nothing better,” replied Stacey gravely.

“I think it’s fine of you,” said Tad earnestly. “Cotting will be so
pleased, Kitty!”

“Think so?” Kitty looked modest. “Of course I don’t know much about it.
Learn, though, I guess. Understand strength and stamina are requisites
of football. Got ’em. You fellows know that.”

“You bet we do, Kitty! I’d back you against Sandow any old day,”
declared Tom. “My word, but it’s a bully thing for the team!”

“Don’t know about that. Afraid it’ll take me a while to learn
the――er――fine points, eh?”

“Pshaw!” said Warren. “A fellow of your ability can learn the game in a
day, Kitty!”

“Suppose you’re kidding me,” replied Kitty good-naturedly. “Don’t mind.
May be an ass, but I’ll have a try at it.”

And Kitty, nodding with a final owl-like stare, took himself off.



CHAPTER XII

COTTING IS PUZZLED


News travels fast in school, and by ten o’clock the next morning it was
known from one end of the campus to the other that Kittson was going to
report that afternoon for football practice. The result was that every
fellow who could possibly get to the field was on hand long before the
fateful hour of three-thirty. Tad, who had the effrontery to walk to
a point of observation some ten feet away, declared later that it was
worth a thousand mile journey to see the expression on Coach Cotting’s
face when Kitty informed him that he would like to try for the team,
please. Kitty, in brand new football togs, with his trousers at least
six inches too long for his short legs――there had been no time to alter
them――and his knotty calves incased in green stockings, was a sight to
behold. And yet there was no suggestion of self-consciousness about
him. Had you attired Kitty in the uniform of a Scotch Highlander or a
Turkish _bashi bazouk_ he would have shown no awkwardness. Kitty had a
mind above clothes.

Coach Cotting, maintaining his composure with the utmost difficulty,
entered Phineas Kittson in his red book and consigned him to
the awkward squad. Rodney, who had just been promoted from that
aggregation, mourned the fact. He wanted so much to be near when Kitty
fell on his first ball.

The school at large cheered when Kitty followed his companions down the
gridiron, and after that, flocking closely along the side line, they
watched his every performance and offered him enthusiastic applause and
encouragement. Kitty knew well enough that he was being joshed, but he
didn’t mind. Fellows were always poking fun at him for one thing or
another. Let them! Kitty had his own ideals and pursued them, his own
views and held to them. No, Kitty didn’t mind much. Not nearly so much
as Gordon. The fullback stood the ribald shouts and laughter and cheers
as long as he could, and then walked over to the throng and informed
them that this was football practice and not a funny show, and that if
they didn’t shut up he’d have Cotting put them out and close the gates.
After that practice proceeded more decorously.

Meanwhile Kitty was having his troubles. But the queer thing about
Kitty was that he had a funny notion that troubles were things you
could get the better of if you put your head down and worked hard. So
Kitty did as he was instructed to do to the best of his ability, using
up a good deal of unnecessary strength in the doing, and was perhaps
after all no more awkward than half a dozen others in the squad. And
Gordon, who had smiled for a while at first, soon came to admire the
fellow’s dogged courage and perseverance, and was extraordinarily
patient and gentle with him toward the last. By that time the novelty
had worn away for the spectators and the crowd had thinned out,
and Kitty’s return to the gymnasium in the wake of the others was
unattended by any demonstration. On the next day he was again the
cynosure of all eyes, as Tad so aptly put it, and again on the day
following. But after that the school decided that the fun had worn thin.

On Friday Coach Cotting made the first cut, and some dozen youths
abandoned aspirations for that season. Strange to say, however, Kitty,
at the good-natured solicitation of Gordon, was retained and became a
fragment, a rather weighty fragment, of the third squad. Rodney, too,
was retained, and whether he was glad or sorry he couldn’t make up his
mind. He was confident that he would never survive the next cut, and
he begrudged the time that practice took from his studies, although
for that matter he couldn’t honestly say that his class standing was
suffering any. On the other hand, he had discovered to his surprise
that he was getting not a little interested in football. He rather
liked the camaraderie of it, and the feeling of well-being that
followed a hard afternoon out there on the yellow turf and――yes, and
he would have been less than human otherwise――he liked the knowledge
that less fortunate fellows observed him with respect as one who had
succeeded where they had failed, and as one chosen to uphold the
gridiron honor of Maple Hill. And all the time he was growing to like
it better he was telling himself that no matter how hard he tried or
how hard Coach Cotting tried he would never become anything more than
an indifferent player. But meanwhile he did as best he could, and
Cotting and Captain Doyle puzzled over him considerably.

“He knows football,” said Doyle one day when he and the coach were
discussing Rodney, amongst other candidates, “but he doesn’t seem to
get beyond a certain point. He plays as well and not much better than
he did the first day, as far as I can see.”

“I can’t make him out,” acknowledged the coach. “He seems willing
enough to learn, and he seems to try hard enough, but he gets no――no
‘forrader.’ Why?”

Doyle shook his head. “Blessed if I know. Guess he lacks football
instinct.”

“‘Football instinct,’” echoed the coach smilingly. “You’ve been reading
stories, Terry. ‘There ain’t no such critter’ as football instinct.
Instinct is a natural impulse. You may say that a boy has a natural
impulse toward athletics and, if he happened to come of athletic
parents, you’re probably right. But football hasn’t been played long
enough in this country to generate instinct, if you see what I mean.
Perhaps in another hundred or two hundred years boys may be born with
football instinct, but not now, Terry.”

“Well, it’s something,” replied the other vaguely, “and Merrill doesn’t
seem to have it.”

“Call it football sense,” said the coach. “He does as he is told and
as he has been taught, but he appears to have no initiative. In other
words, if he found himself during a game suddenly in a position where
he had to depend on his own resources, mental and physical, he’d likely
fail right there. Strange, too, that I was speaking to Mr. Howe about
Merrill yesterday. Howe has him in two classes, I think. He said he’d
never found a boy with a greater aptitude for learning nor one with
a more retentive memory. But then perhaps that proves my contention.
Merrill, I dare say, lacks imagination. Well, we’ll keep him along for
another week or so and see what happens.”

Maple Hill went down the river a few miles on Saturday and played her
first game of the season. Her opponent was Phoenixville High School, an
aggregation not at all formidable. In fact the contest was looked upon
as nothing more than a slightly glorified practice, and for that reason
Coach Cotting took along two complete elevens and used every player at
some time during the game. Phoenixville managed to score a touchdown
as the result of a fumble by a Maple Hill substitute near the end of
the last period, but the Green-and-Gray ran up twenty-eight points
and was well enough satisfied. Neither Rodney nor Phineas was taken
along that day. How Kitty spent his afternoon I don’t know; probably,
however, in taking a little ten mile jaunt around the country; but
Rodney, after declining the invitation of Tom and Pete to follow the
team as a rooter, remained at home and joined Tad and the twins at
tennis. Rodney had Matty for a partner, and there were two hard fought
sets. For some reason Rodney’s strokes were less certain than usual
and, although he played perhaps as well as Tad, the opponents won each
set, the first 7–5 and the second 9–7. Matty was not up to her sister
on the tennis court, and May’s better playing accounted for the double
victory. They had a jolly time, however, and afterwards Tad played
host at Doolittle’s and they consumed ice-cream sodas and talked over
the contests. Tad insisted that playing football had injured Rodney’s
tennis.

“It always does,” he said. “Your arm gets sort of stiff and set, you
see. A fellow has to keep his wrist pretty supple to do good backhand
work.”

Rodney agreed that possibly football was to blame. “As soon as they let
me go, I’ll try you again,” he said.

“Don’t worry. They won’t let you go, Rod. Why, you’re doing finely,
aren’t you?”

“No, I’m not. I’m playing about as poorly as the rest of the duffers in
the second squad, I suppose. I guess another week will settle me.”

At this there were lamentations from the twins. They had, it seemed,
made up their minds that Rodney was to be a football star like his
famous brother. “You oughtn’t to talk like that,” Matty protested
earnestly. “You――you must _think_ you’re going to do well, mustn’t he
May?”

“Yes, indeed. What we think we are,” replied May gravely.

“I _think_,” laughed Rodney, “that I’m full of soda.” He pushed his
glass away.

“Don’t you like it?” asked Matty, viewing his unemptied glass.

“Yes, but I’ve got to walk up that hill yet. I’m thinking about that.”

“You don’t have to go back yet, do you? Let’s you and I play against
them at croquet. It’s only fair we should beat them at something!”

So presently they toiled up the street to the little side gate in
the hedge, and after recovering from their exertion――for thirty
games of tennis leaves one rather disinclined for further effort for
awhile――they played three fairly hard games of croquet, of which Rodney
and Matty managed to win two.

A week later autumn announced her arrival. Rodney awoke one morning
to find a brisk wind blowing and the trees nearly bare of foliage.
Yellow and red and russet-brown leaves frolicked along the roads and
there was a keen nip in the air that lent zest to living. After that
football practice was less like hard labor, and the players didn’t
come off the field bathed in perspiration and feeling as though they
had emerged from a particularly strenuous Turkish bath. That afternoon
Coach Cotting drove his charges hard. As soon as the candidates reached
the field they were put to work punting or catching, all, that is, save
Stacey Trowbridge and Roger Tyson, who put in the time trying goals
from the field. At last, when all the players were out, there was one
lap around the track at a fast jog, the pace being set by Mr. Cotting,
who, clad in a faded green jersey and an old pair of gray flannel
trousers, trotted at the head of the bunch. For several minutes one
heard only the fall of many feet on the cinders, the swish-swish of
rasping canvas, and the breathing of the runners. When the circuit was
complete the several squads assembled quickly and, under the direction
of shrill-voiced quarterbacks, went through twenty minutes of signal
work. Then:

“All right!” called the coach. “Get your head guards!”

That was the signal for scrimmage, and the fellows hurried to the
sidelines and donned the black leather helmets. Somehow, everything
to-day was done on the jump. The brisk weather was incentive enough,
and the coach’s perfunctory “Look alive, fellows!” was quite
unnecessary. Later, though, when the second squad backs appeared to
have lost some of their snap, the coach’s voice rang out harshly enough.

“Stop loafing, you backs! If I catch you at it again out you come! _And
you don’t go back!_ Now get into it!”

The warning had the desired effect, for Coach Cotting kept his word and
every fellow knew it.

The third squad went over to the practice gridiron and played the Third
Form Team, and both Rodney and Kitty got into the game and enjoyed it
thoroughly. The Third Form Team had had only a few days of practice
under the direction of one of the submasters and so were not formidable
opponents. The third squad scored almost at will, and in some fifty
minutes of actual playing ran up forty-nine points against their
opponents, who, taking a long chance on a forward pass that ought not
to have worked but did, crossed the third squad’s goal line for a
solitary touchdown.



CHAPTER XIII

THE FINAL CUT


Meanwhile, across on the main gridiron, Mr. Cotting was hammering speed
into his teams. The formation used this year for the backfield differed
somewhat from that of the previous season and the players were having
difficulty with it, simple though it was. The left half, fullback and
right half lined up behind quarter in a slanting tandem in the order
named, left half being to the left of quarter, the fullback behind
him and the right half at his right. From this formation the order
to shift――which became “Hep!” in the quarterback’s vernacular――was
followed by one or two quick jumps to the right or left as the signal
demanded. It was a good “shift formation,” since it allowed the backs
to get into position for the play very quickly, and at the same time
was capable of all sorts of combinations. A jump to the right by the
tandem changed what seemed like an attack on the right of the opposing
line to an attack on the left, and, since it was only necessary for the
backs to come to momentary pause before the ball was snapped, the enemy
had short time in which to change its defence to meet the play at the
threatened spot. Even when the shift had taken the backs to the right
of their quarter there was, however, no certainty that the play would
hit that side of the line. Often enough left half and fullback would
plunge around quarter for an attack on the opposing tackle, while the
right half caused a diversion by banging straight ahead. Or sometimes
it was the left half who faked an attack on the other side, leaving
fullback and right half to charge at the enemy’s center. And it lent
itself excellently well to end running besides. But it was new as yet
and Coach Cotting had much fault to find with the execution of the
plays. And he wasn’t over kind that afternoon to the forwards of either
team.

“Where were you going that time?” he demanded sharply of Tyson after a
line plunge had been smothered by the second.

“Through guard, sir.”

“No, you weren’t! You were over here at tackle. Why didn’t you follow
your signal?”

“There was no hole at guard, sir. That man was in the way, and so――――”

“I don’t care who was in your way, Tyson! The signal told you to carry
that ball through guard. If the hole wasn’t there for you that’s
none of your business. That’s up to the linemen. You go where you’re
supposed to. Now, then, whose place was it to open up that hole? Yours,
Doyle? All right, then it’s up to you. Now try it again. And don’t try
to _push_ them back; get down and _lift ’em up_!”

The play was tried again, and this time a second squad back plunged
through and upset the runner in the line. The coach jumped into the
mêlée.

“Who got through then? Watson? That’s the way to do it, Watson!” He
thumped the second squad man on the back. “That was dandy! You keep
on playing like that and I’ll have you over on this side, by jingo!
Now, then, you first team, what have you got to say? Who let that man
through? That was you, Pounder. Look at him! Weighs half what you do!
Now you fellows quit this half hearted playing and get down and _work_!
I want to see that play go and _go right_! Same signals, Quarter! And
make it good!”

“A formation! 34――45――87! _Hep!_”

Back came the ball to Stacey, away plunged the fullback, the pigskin
went to Tyson at a hand pass and, following in the wake of the big
fullback, the right half tore through for three full yards, in spite
of the fact that the second knew where the attack was coming and had
concentrated its secondary defence there. The players scrambled or were
pulled to their feet, panting, and Mr. Cotting voiced approval.

“That’s better, fellows! Put some punch into it! All right now! Fourth
down and six to go!”

Then, with Gordon back and his arms outstretched for the ball for all
the world as though he meant to dropkick it over the crossbars, now
only twenty odd yards away, the pigskin went to Tyson again, and that
youth skirted the second team’s right end and, with the coach crying
“Cut! Cut!” finally found his opening and cut for a good twelve yards
and a first down.

And so it went for thirty minutes or so of the hardest sort of work,
with no let-ups. When a player showed signs of exhaustion he was sent
off and a substitute summoned on from the waiting line at the edge of
the field. There was no loafing that afternoon. And all the time the
coach’s sharp voice barked criticism or censure or, less frequently,
commendation. “Clean up that line, Second! Get under ’em! Put ’em
back!” ... “Ball! Ball! Bring it back five yards here, First. Don’t
let me catch you doing that again, Watson! All right. Third down and
five to go!... Rotten! Rotten, Second! Look where your guards were
playing. Spread out your line! Try that again!” ... “Signals! What
are you giving ’em, Trowbridge? What? On their twenty yard line? Use
your brain, man!... Fuller! Fuller! Come in here and play left tackle!
Show these fellows how to hold that side of your line!... Low, low!
Play low, Second! That’s better!... Wynant, where were you then? Fall
asleep, did you? Start with the ball, man! You were all out of the
play!”

And even when finally the scrimmage was ended, the first having earned
a touchdown and a field goal and held their opponents scoreless,
there was still work for the centers, backs, and ends. The other
players trotted breathlessly back to the gymnasium, but a dozen or so
unfortunates remained for punting practice, the centers to snap back
the ball to the punters, the backs to catch and run the pigskin back,
and the ends to get down under the kicks and head off the catchers.
It was almost dark when the last thump of boot against ball was heard
and Mr. Cotting let them go. In the locker room at the gymnasium
fellows grinned tiredly at each other, and shook their heads as if to
say, “Don’t ask me what got into him to-day! All I know is I got mine
aplenty!”

But an hour or so later, refreshed by showers, trooping into supper,
the hard words and hard knocks were all forgotten, or, remembered, had
lost their sting. “That was _some_ practice, old man! Say, didn’t he
rub it into us for fair? Bet you, though, we learned more than we have
all season so far, eh? He’s a little wonder when he gets het up, what?”
And bruises were exhibited proudly, vaingloriously, while a wonderful
glow of wellbeing encompassed their wearied bodies as they satisfied
gigantic appetites, and already they were thinking of the morrow and
looking forward eagerly to the next practice, each fellow resolved in
his heart to “show him a few things next time!”

It’s a wonderful game, this football; wonderful for what it will do for
flabby muscles and hollow chests, but more wonderful still for what
it can do for flabby characters. There’s young Jones, for instance,
who came to school with a quick and mighty ugly temper, an intolerance
of anything savoring of discipline, and no especial ambition beyond
doing as he pleased and being as selfish as fourteen years of spoiling
at home had taught him to be. And there’s young Smith, fat and flabby
and lazy when he came up, with only a sneering laugh for the form of
school patriotism that caused other boys to keep their bodies clean
and healthy and to toil on gridiron or diamond or cinder path for the
glory of the school. Don’t look the same to-day do they? They fought
and struggled and matched muscles and wits against each other this
afternoon for a solid hour or more, took hard knocks and gave them,
sweated and panted for breath, and rolled in the mud of a wet field,
lost their tempers perhaps now and then for a brief instant――they’re
only youngsters yet, after all. And now, side by side, they’re talking
it over, laughing at the mishaps, criticising the misplays, praising
each other’s good feats, each feeling for the other the respect――yes,
and the affection, too――that every brave warrior has felt for a worthy
opponent since the world began. Yes, it’s a wonderful game, this
football, a gentleman’s game.

    Who misses or who wins the prize,
      Go lose or conquer as you can;
    But if you fail or if you rise
      Be each, pray God, a gentleman!

Young Jones learned to accept criticism and submit to authority, to
govern his temper and consider the welfare of someone other than his
own selfish little self. I fancy it didn’t come very easily, just at
first; it was probably something of a shock to him to discover that on
the football field he was only one, and an inconsiderable one, of many,
and that no one cared a straw if he got a black eye. But he learned
and profited, and it did him a heap of good. And should you ask him
to-day about the young Jones that he used to be he’d probably tell
you frankly and succinctly that that boy was “a selfish little brat!”
And Smith worked the flabbiness out of his body and his mind, and got
rid of his fat and his laziness together. It didn’t take him long to
discover that his fellows had scant sympathy for his views, and that
his sneers met only disgust and dislike. Doubtless he would have found
himself ultimately without the aid of football, but football turned the
trick very expeditiously. Smith, they say, is in line for the captaincy
now. Success to him!

The second game of the season was played with Mumford Preparatory
School, and in the fourth period, when Maple Hill was two scores to
the good, Rodney had his first experience on the firing line. He and
two other third string men went in for a few minutes, just before play
ended. Rodney was trying for halfback. He was given the ball but once,
since Maple Hill was on the defensive most of the time he played, and
then managed to get the two yards required for a first down. An instant
later the whistle sounded and Maple Hill was the victor by a 15 to 5
score. But if that brief experience in the line up had not especially
advanced Rodney’s chance of being retained, although he could not be
certain of that, it had left him with a redoubled desire to make the
team. Figuratively, he had smelled the smoke of battle, and he wanted
to fight again.

And so it was with not a little anxiety that he awaited the next cut in
the squad. This had been looked for on Friday but had not come, and it
was now whispered about that it would be made Monday. On Sunday Rodney
observed to Kitty:

“Well, Kittson, I suppose you and I will get our walking papers
to-morrow. For my part it’ll be rather a relief――” There he stopped,
realizing that he had been about to say something very far from the
truth. Instead he ended: “A relief to know.”

Kitty, engaged on a letter, looked up and blinked through his
spectacles. “How do you mean, Merrill?” he asked.

“Why, Cotting’s going to make another cut to-morrow, they say.”

“Cut? You mean he’s going to let some of the football players go?”

“Yes, some of the second squad fellows. He’s got too many, you see.”

“Really? Think he will keep you, don’t you?”

“I don’t believe so. I don’t see why he should. He’s got five perfectly
good backs without me.”

“Oh, I hope he will,” said Kitty earnestly. “I――I’d feel a bit lonesome
if you weren’t there, you know.”

Rodney stared. Then he laughed. “Well, you seem pretty sure of your
place, Kittson! It might just be that we’d both get fired.”

Kitty stared untroubledly and shook his head gently. “I don’t think
so. Team needs fellows like me. Too many weak chaps on it. Cotting’s
sensible, eh? You’ll see. Maybe I might say a good word for you, what?”

“I don’t think you’d better,” replied Rodney soberly. “I hope he does
keep you, Kittson.” And, after a moment spent in reviewing the events
of the last week of practice, “I don’t see why he shouldn’t, either,”
added Rodney thoughtfully. “You’ve shown up pretty well, by Jove!”

Kitty blinked agreement. “For a beginner, eh? Seems so to me. May be
mistaken, though. Hope not. Like the game. Fine for the chest. Fine for
the whole body. Surprised me, really, what a lot of exercise there was
in it!” Kitty took a long, deep breath that threatened to expand his
lungs beyond the capacity of his Sunday waistcoat, and patted his chest
approvingly. “Great for the lungs, Merrill!”

Monday afternoon Rodney entered the gymnasium in a funk. He had watched
Tracey and two other Vests start along, and then, keeping behind
them, had followed. He wanted to be alone when he faced the little
black bulletin board in the entrance of the gymnasium. But in spite
of his scheming he wasn’t, for when he swung open the big outer door
and passed into the little lobby inside, two boys were in front of
the board. One was Guy Watson and the other Peterson, the right end.
There were so many notices of different kinds posted on the board that
Rodney couldn’t see, from where he stood a few feet away, whether the
announcement of the cut had been posted. He waited with his heart
thumping a little harder than usual, for the others to move away. And
then he heard Peterson say, with a laugh:

“Kittson! Well, what do you know about that, Guy?”

“That’s Gordon’s doings,” growled Watson, with a shrug of his broad
shoulders. He turned then and saw Rodney, and nodded. “Hello, Merrill.
Want to see the list?” he asked. “You’re down. Come on, Jim.”

They went on through the swinging doors, leaving Rodney alone in the
lobby. So he and Kittson were both dropped! Well, now that he knew,
it wasn’t so bad. And it had been foolish of him to expect anything
else. Only――well, he _had_ expected, or at least hoped! There was no
especial reason now for reading the list, since Watson had told him,
but he felt a desire to see for himself. As he stepped to the board he
wondered why Watson had not taken the opportunity to sneer a little. He
didn’t read the heading, but began with the names, which were arranged
alphabetically. “Anson, Atwell, Browne, Burnham, Doyle――――”

“_Doyle?_” Rodney read it again. How could they drop Doyle? Then his
eyes flashed to the top of the sheet and he read:

“Football candidates. The following are retained. Cotting, Coach.”

With a leap of his heart Rodney’s eyes swept down the list. “Johnson,
Kittson, Merrill――――”

He wasn’t dropped! He still had a chance!

For a full minute he stood there with his eyes on that one word, stood
there until the sudden turning of the big latch behind him warned
him that others were coming. Then he pushed on through the swinging
doors, turned to the stairway, and took the stairs at four bounds,
stopping, however, at the foot to pull his features into an expression
of becoming calm before he entered the dressing-room. The room was well
filled, for most of the thirty-two fellows who had been retained were
already there, but the first figure that Rodney’s gaze fell on was
Phineas Kittson, Phineas in his new togs, now somewhat soiled, with his
ridiculous trousers dropping half way to his feet. Kitty smiled and
blinked at his roommate, and as Rodney joined him he said:

“Saw your name on the board up there, Merrill. Awfully glad. Cotting’s
sensible, though. Said so right along. Better hurry. Most half past.”

Rodney got into football attire in record time, his heart beating a
very happy tune, and raced across to the field. Stacey Trowbridge saw
him and walked to meet him.

“Glad you made it, Rodney,” he said kindly. “Good luck to you.”

Then he smiled and walked away. It was the first time Stacey had called
him by his first name. Rodney felt happier than ever, and a little bit
proud. To-day practice went with a vim. Even tackling the dummy seemed
rather good sport, and usually most of them hated it. There was a full
twenty minutes of scrimmage later. Rodney and Kitty were on the second
team, Kitty as substitute guard and Rodney as substitute left half.
Both got into the play in the second ten minutes and both performed
acceptably if not brilliantly. The coach seemed to take a good deal
of notice of Phineas, and more than once instructed him. Slowness,
Rodney gathered, was Kitty’s failing. Had he but known it, lack of
initiativeness was his own trouble. More than once he was stopped with
the ball for the simple reason that, finding himself unable to gain
where the signals indicated, he slowed up, at a loss, and was brought
down.

“Why don’t you fight, Merrill?” demanded the second team quarter once.
“Hang it, what do you stop for? This isn’t a game of tag!”

And Rodney, returning to his position, would make up his mind to do
better the next time. And when the next time came he would fail in just
the same way.

The first team ran away with the scrimmage game that afternoon, piling
up four touchdowns and kicking three goals after them, while the second
failed to get nearer to the other goal than the twelve yard line. Two
days later the tables were turned, for the second kept the first from
crossing their goal line, and then in the last two or three minutes of
play sent a neat kick from the field over the cross-bar. Rodney played
fifteen minutes that day, but I can’t honestly say that much of his
team’s success was due to his presence. Rodney had a whole lot to learn
yet. But “old Kitty” was making good.



CHAPTER XIV

THE TWINS ARE BORED


Brother Stanley wasn’t a very good correspondent. Rodney had written
him a whole long, newsy letter a fortnight after he had arrived at
Maple Hill and had sent him weekly messages in his epistles to his
parents, but it was not until well toward the last of October, by
which time Rodney had been a Maple Hiller for over a month, that a
reply arrived from Ginger. And after he had read it Rodney didn’t know
whether to be most amused or most annoyed.

    DEAR KID [Stanley wrote],

    I meant to answer your letter long ago, but I’ve been awfully
    busy at the office and outside it, too. Of course the mater and
    dad have kept you posted on home news. Not much goes on there
    anyway. Even Omaha’s pretty dull this fall. Well, I’m glad
    you’ve got shaken down so well at school. It’s a great little
    school, and I hope you appreciate the advantages you are
    getting there. I tell you, Rod, if I had it to do over again
    I’d make a lot better use of my time than I did both there and
    at college. A fellow never knows until it’s too late what a
    lot of chances he is wasting at school. But you are more of a
    grind than I ever was――you call it noser at Maple Hill, don’t
    you? And I guess you’ll do better in the study line. I see by
    your letters home that you’ve gone out for football. More fool
    you. You haven’t the making of a good player, as I’ve told you
    lots of times and you’re just wasting your time. I tell you
    football takes a lot of time away from study just when a fellow
    needs it most. At the beginning of the year a fellow ought to
    pay a lot of attention to study, or else he gets in wrong and
    queers himself at the start. You take my advice, Kid, and let
    football alone. You say Cotting made you come out. That’s like
    old Cot, too. But if he hasn’t found out yet that he’s wasting
    his time on you, you tell him I say he is and that he’s to let
    you go. Wait until spring and try for baseball. You’re a pretty
    good baseball player for a young fellow, and you might make
    good there. But you stick to study this fall and winter. If you
    don’t you’ll have to answer to me when I see you, Rod. I’m not
    going to have you get through there and not learn anything. I’d
    like to get back east for some of the big games next month,
    especially our game with Yale and your game with Bursley. Hope
    you fellows wipe the earth with them. Give my best to Cotting
    and tell him he’s to come out here this winter and see me. Tell
    him I’ll show him a good time all right. Best to the Baron,
    too, and any of the others that may remember me. Now, Kid, you
    do as I say and quit trying to play football. You’re not built
    for it in the first place, and then besides you haven’t the
    head for it. Cotting’s an ass to waste time on you, and I guess
    he’s doing it as a sort of favor to me. I wish he wouldn’t
    because it’s no good. You tell him I say so. Write and tell me
    how things are shaping, and send me a school paper once in a
    while. Here’s a fiver which may help out. Be good and work hard.

    Yours,
    STAN.

That letter sounded so much like Stanley that Rodney had only to close
his eyes to get a mental picture of that big brother of his frowning
over the paper as he set down all that virtuous advice. Rodney smiled
as he read it over again and noted the lack of punctuation and the
slovenly composition. The writing of English had never been one of
Ginger’s accomplishments, and Rodney had often wondered how the former
had managed to get through four years at school and a like term at
college without showing any improvement in that art. But his smile
disappeared as he finished the letter for the second time, and a frown
took its place. On the whole he thought Stanley had a good deal of
cheek to write him that he was no good at football, or at any rate to
be so cocksure of it. He guessed that Stanley had forgotten that he
wasn’t much of a player himself until Mr. Cotting had taken hold of
him. He thought that his big brother was a bit more conceited than he
had suspected. That remark to the effect that Mr. Cotting was probably
encouraging Rodney merely as a favor to Stanley indicated it.

“I’d just like to make good to show him that he doesn’t know it all,”
muttered Rodney. “He seems to think he’s the only one in the family
that’s good for anything. Maybe if Mr. Cotting takes as much trouble
with me as they say he did with Stanley, I’ll do mighty nearly as well.
Anyway I don’t intend to quit just because he says so. And I’ll tell
him so, too!”

But by the time Rodney got around to answering that letter his
annoyance had decreased to such an extent that he could write quite
good-naturedly. “I don’t think he took me on just on your account,”
he wrote. “They say here that he likes to get hold of fellows in the
first year, catch them while they’re young, you know, and nurse them
along. That’s about what he did with you, isn’t it? Of course I don’t
expect ever to be a wonder at football, but I like the game, and as
long as Cotting wants to keep me on I’ll stay. Maybe, though, I’ll get
fired before the season’s over. But they made the last cut the other
day and I survived it. Everyone here seems to think I ought to know how
to play just because I’m Ginger Merrill’s brother, and of course that
is nonsense. Still I may learn in time. Anyway I’m having a lot of fun
out of it so far. And a lot of work, too. Cotting’s a bear at making
the fellows work. We’ve got an average team here this year, they say.
Doyle is a dandy captain, and the fellows think a lot of him. So far we
haven’t developed our attack much. Cotting has been hammering defence
into us right along, and I think we’re pretty well developed that way.
He’s teaching us a shift formation that’s a peach. I wish you might
come on for the Bursley game, Stan. Can’t you do it? They’d make a
regular hero of you, I guess. I wouldn’t wonder if the town would hang
out flags and meet you with a brass band. Try to come, please. I saw
a lot of pictures of you in the gym awhile ago, groups, you know. Gee,
but you were a funny little tyke, weren’t you?”

Rodney smiled maliciously as he wrote the latter sentence. He could
imagine Stanley’s gasp as he perused that bit of cheek from his kid
brother. You see Rodney’s awe of Stanley was fast disappearing.

He confided the tenor of Stanley’s letter to Tad, reading a few choice
bits of it to that youth, and Tad was properly indignant and outraged.
“What’s he think you are, anyway?” he demanded. “A babe in arms? I’d
write back and tell him to chase himself around the block, I would!
That’s the trouble with older brothers though,” he continued feelingly.
“They’re all alike. I’ve got two and I know! They think a fellow can’t
do anything on his own hook, and want to fill you up to the chin with
their silly advice. You take it from me, Rod, it doesn’t do to humor
’em. You’ve got to sit on ’em hard just about so often. That’s the way
I do. And say, you go ahead with your football and show Ginger that he
isn’t the only fellow who can play the game. Why shucks, Rod, I’ll bet
you anything you’ll make his record look like a punctured tire by the
time you’ve been here three more years!”

“No, I shan’t do that,” answered Rodney, “but I might make the team.
And that would be something, wouldn’t it?”

“Open his eyes a bit, I guess,” replied Tad, with a chuckle. “Funny
how your older brothers don’t seem to think it’s possible you can be
any good at anything! You’d think they’d take it for granted that if
you were their brother you’d be bound to be a wonder, if you see what
I mean.” Tad paused to silently con his sentence. Rodney nodded his
comprehension and Tad went on, relieved. “But they don’t. They think
they’re all to the good themselves and that you’re a sort of idiot.
Not flattering to them, I say. But they’re all proper fools.” He
shrugged his shoulders hopelessly over the incomprehensibility of elder
brothers, slipped a hand into Rodney’s arm, and led him down the steps.
“Come on over and see what the twins are up to,” he suggested.

The twins were up to nothing, as it proved. They were frankly bored.
As it was Sunday afternoon, croquet was naturally an impossibility
and they were seated on the porch, in a sunny angle, each with a book
turned face down on her knees. They hailed the appearance of the two
boys with all evidences of pleasure as the latter slipped through the
hedge, but warning gestures of fingers to mouths cautioned the visitors
to be quiet. Matty jumped off the porch and met them half way across
the grass.

“Mama’s asleep in there,” she whispered hoarsely, pointing to a nearby
lower window of the house, “so we mustn’t make any noise. Let’s go over
to the summer-house.”

“Let’s take a walk,” said Tad as May joined them. “The summer-house is
too near, and Rod’s such a noisy fellow he might wake your mother up.”

Matty observed her sister doubtfully. “Do you think she’d mind?” she
asked.

“I don’t believe so. Not if we told Norah we were going and didn’t stay
very long. I’d love to go. We’ve been just bored to death ever since
dinner, haven’t we, Matty?”

“Bored stiff,” responded Matty inelegantly and emphatically. “You run
and tell Norah, May, please.”

A few minutes later they made their escape through the narrow gate and
turned northward along Hill Street.

“You see,” confided May, “it was the dumplings.”

“What was the dumplings?” asked Rodney, perplexed.

“That made us bored. They always do. We’re very fond of them, and Norah
gives them to us for Sunday dinner quite often. But she oughtn’t to,
because they make us feel very bored.”

“Bored is a new name for it!” laughed Tad. “_I’d_ call it indigestion!”

“Oh, but it really isn’t! At least, I don’t think it is. Do you, Matty?”

The blue-eyed twin gazed doubtfully into the distance and laid an
inquiring hand on the front of her white gown. “I――I don’t know, May.
It might be. I think――I think I did feel sort of queer inside after the
third dumpling.”

“After the third!” exclaimed Tad. “Great Scott, how many did you eat?”

Matty turned surprised eyes to him. “Why, I ate four, and May ate――how
many did you eat, May?”

“Only three to-day,” was the virtuous reply. “Sometimes I eat five.
They’re rather small dumplings, Tad. But to-day I――I began to feel
bored quite soon.”

“I should think so! I’d be ‘bored’ after two of the things, I guess,”
said Tad with a grin. “I think a walk is just what you girls need.”

“I suppose dumplings are a little indigestible,” acknowledged Matty.
“But they’re awfully good. Norah puts lots of cinnamon in with the
apple and we have just heaps of hard sauce. I think, May, that there
were several left over. They’d be nice cold for supper, wouldn’t they?”

“Talk about a boy’s appetite!” said Tad despairingly. “Gee, we don’t
know anything about stuffing ourselves, do we, Rod?”

“How would it do,” suggested Rodney, “if we――if we had those cold
dumplings when we get back?”

Matty and May clapped their hands and laughed. Tad smiled and winked at
Rodney. “Not a bad idea, that,” he answered. “Just to keep the twins
from killing themselves, eh?”

When they were a good two miles into the country, with the river lying
below them silver-blue in the afternoon sunlight, Matty announced that
she was no longer bored. May, too, thought she had recovered from her
affliction, and so they wheeled around and started homeward, those
cold dumplings seeming to beckon from the distance. When they got back
to the house Mrs. Binner had finished her nap and had retired to her
room upstairs and there was no longer any necessity for keeping quiet.
The twins left the two boys in the tumble-down summer-house and went
on to find Norah. When, a few minutes later, they returned, they bore
a tray on which were the cold dumplings, a generous portion of hard
sauce, saucers and spoons, a pitcher of water and four tumblers. You
just had to have water when you ate dumplings, May asserted. Cold apple
dumplings may not appeal to the reader, especially when eaten out
of doors on a late October afternoon with a westerly breeze sending
shivers up and down one’s spine in spite of a heavy sweater, but
they tasted awfully good to the boys, and even May and Matty managed,
without much apparent effort, to dispose of one apiece. Finally,
surfeited, they laid the remains of the feast aside and sank back in
comfort.

“How do you feel, Tad?” asked Rodney with a sigh of repletion.

“I feel――I feel just a tiny bit ‘bored,’” answered Tad. “I also feel
as if it will be quite unnecessary for Mother Westcott to prepare any
supper this evening for me.”

Rodney agreed as to that, and for a few minutes the conversation dealt
desultorily with all sorts of subjects, from the chill in the air to
the outbreak of mumps in Beecher Hall, where several of the First Form
youngsters were confined to their rooms. Tad chuckled.

“Yesterday Tommy Sands went over in front of Beecher and yelled ‘Heads
out!’ And when about eight or ten kids came to the windows with their
faces tied up, Tommy pulled a nice big lemon from his pocket and held
it for them to see. They say you could hear the groans ’way over at
East Hall!”

“That was a mean trick,” laughed Rodney. “Mumps are――is――which should
you say? Mumps _are_ no fun, or mumps _is_ no fun?”

“I think mumps are singular,” hazarded May. “I mean, _is_ singular.”

“Plural,” said Tad. “Mumps is a disease of the parrot glands――――”

“Of the _what_ glands?” demanded Rodney.

“Parrot, I think. These glands here, anyway.”

“Parotid, I think. Well, anyway, as I started to say, mumps is no fun,
and――――”

“That doesn’t sound just right, does it, May?” said Matty. “‘Mumps is.’”

“Ever have them?” asked Tad.

The twins nodded gravely. “Yes, we had them together――” began Matty.

“Oh, you had them together all right,” laughed Tad. “You do everything
together, you two!”

“Yes, and we had whooping-cough together,” replied May, “and measles
and scarlet fever――――”

“It was only scarlatina, though,” interrupted Matty apologetically.

“――And――and――quinsy――――”

“And mastoids!” added Matty triumphantly.

“I don’t see but what you two kids have been pretty well through the
list,” laughed Tad. “Ever have charley-horse?”

“What?” asked Matty.

“Don’t mind him,” said Rodney. “You get it playing football, when you
bruise your hip. Hello, there goes Kitty! Let’s call him in. Do you
mind?”

“Of course not,” said the twins in unison.

So Rodney hurried to the gate and brought back Kitty, who, clad for
walking, with his faithful pedometer at his belt, was very red of face
and moist of brow.

“Had a dandy stroll,” declared Kitty as he joined the others in the
summer-house. “Went all the way over to Finger Rock and back.”

“Finger Rock!” exclaimed Tad. “Why, that must be five miles!”

“Just about.” Kitty consulted his pedometer. “A little less, I think.
This thing says nine and about a half. Fine day for walking, though.”

“Isn’t it?” agreed Matty. “And――and are your lungs pretty well,
Phineas?”

Kitty nodded gravely. “Yes, thanks; can expand eight inches now. Never
felt better than I do this fall. Think football is good for me, too.
Think I can observe a slight――slight benefit.”

“What is Finger Rock?” asked Rodney.

“It’s wonderful!” declared Matty, and May nodded agreement. “It’s down
the river nearly to Thurling. Haven’t you ever seen it?”

“I’ve never been further that way than we went this afternoon,” replied
Rodney.

“Oh, but you can see it from the field,” said Tad. “They call it Finger
Rock because it stands up like――like a sore thumb! It’s ’most a hundred
feet high, isn’t it, Kitty?”

“Eighty-six feet, they say. Quite sheer, though.”

“Quite――what?” asked Rodney.

“Straight up and down,” explained Tad. “I guess not many folks have
ever climbed to the top of it, although you can get up about half way
without much trouble.”

“I’ve been on top,” said Kitty. “Twice.”

“Oh, run away!” exclaimed Tad.

Kitty nodded soberly. “Fact. Last year, and then about three weeks
ago. Hard work, though.”

“I’d like to see it,” said Rodney. “Will you show it to me some day,
Kitty?”

“Yes, any day you say.”

“He will walk you to death,” warned Tad. “I say, fellows――and young
ladies――wouldn’t it be fun to take some lunch and go down there some
day? Have a sort of picnic, you know. What do you say?”

“We’d love to!” cried Matty. “Wouldn’t we, May?”

“Love to,” echoed May ecstatically. “But I don’t suppose mama would let
us do it,” she added doubtfully.

“I wonder if she would,” mused her sister. “Anyway, we could ask her.
When would we go, Tad?”

“Why, I don’t know. You fellows have practice in the afternoons, don’t
you? We might go some Saturday morning and get back about two. We could
hire a rig――――”

“Oh, it would be so much more fun to walk,” said Matty.

“Walk! All the way there and back?” Tad groaned. Then, with a shrug of
his shoulders, “All right. I’m game if you are. Will you come along,
Kitty?”

“Thanks. Like it very much.” Kitty looked both surprised and gratified
at being included.

“Let’s make it next Saturday morning,” suggested Rodney, “and get
a good early start so we can get back in time for the game in the
afternoon. You ask your mother, Matty, and see if you can go.”

“We have our music Saturday mornings,” said Matty sadly.

“Then I guess we’d better wait until spring,” responded Tad with a
somewhat relieved tone in his voice.

“Perhaps, though,” said May thoughtfully, “we could get Miss Mapes to
let us have our lesson Friday after school. We could ask her, Matty.”

So, in the end, it was agreed that the twins were to try to arrange
things so that they could get away next Saturday morning, and that, if
they were successful, the party was to start out for Finger Rock at
half-past eight, or as soon after as possible. Then, the twins having
volunteered to attend to the luncheon, and the boys having indicated
their preferences in the matter of viands, the assemblage broke up,
Kitty by this time being thoroughly chilled through, and the boys
retired to their own premises by way of the hedge.

“We’ll let you know to-morrow noon,” called Matty from the porch.

“All right,” answered Tad. “And I say, Matty! If we do go, keep away
from dumplings the day before, please!”

They could hear the twin’s laughter as they gained their own side of
the hedge.



CHAPTER XV

FINGER ROCK


The fall tennis tournament began the day following. Both Tad and Rodney
had entered, Rodney at Tad’s earnest solicitation. “You see,” Tad had
explained, “I want to feel that there’s some one in the tournament I
can beat!” This was sheer bravado, however, since in the two or three
contests which the two had waged together Rodney had easily shown his
superiority, in spite of the fact that he seemed to have lost some
of his former dexterity. There were nearly a hundred entrants, and,
since it was a handicap affair, some very good matches were played the
first part of the week. Rodney met and defeated Sanderson, the First
Form president, on Tuesday, while Tad, who had drawn a bye, didn’t
meet his first antagonist until Wednesday. Then he barely scraped
through, losing one set, two games to six, pulling out of the next,
six to four, and finally winning the third, nine to seven. Owing to the
epidemic of mumps, which had ceased to be a joke, since by the middle
of the week fully twenty boys were down with the malady, the original
drawings for the tournament were sadly interfered with, and match after
match had to be postponed. Even the class football teams suffered,
the First Form team being shorn of five of its players and having to
give up practice for the time, and the Second Form team being scarcely
better off. In order to keep the disease from spreading any further the
faculty placed a ban on visiting. But in spite of that precaution new
cases cropped out day by day, and fellows were seen surreptitiously
feeling their necks and testing themselves with pickles and lemons.
Even the school team was not exempt, for Jim Peterson was missing from
practice on Thursday, and investigation showed that James was marooned
in his room in East Hall, his jaws tied up in cotton and gauze.
Westcott’s escaped the malady, although there was an anxious time when
Warren Hoyt had a sore throat, and Pete Greenough moved out of Number
2, bag and baggage, until the doctor allayed his fears. Tad declared
that for his part he’d rather like to have mumps so that he wouldn’t
have to attend recitations for a week or so, but it was noticed that
when Warren was under suspicion Tad gave him a very wide berth.

The tennis tournament dragged along to the middle of the second week.
Tad met his Waterloo on Friday when he was opposed to a Fourth Form
youth named Wallace. Wallace played at scratch, and Tad’s one-half of
fifteen couldn’t save him from a severe drubbing. Rodney lasted until
Tuesday and the semi-final round, and put up a game fight against Jack
Billings. Rodney, like Tad, had a handicap of one-half of fifteen, and
Jack played at scratch. It was the latter’s service that finally won
for him. After getting the first set, 6–4, Jack let down, and Rodney
captured the first three games before Jack recovered. Then, on his
own service, Jack secured the fourth game and the sixth. Rodney got
away with the fifth and seventh, and then broke through Jack’s service
and won the eighth, winning the set 6–2, much to the surprise of the
gallery, which included Tad and the twins, and Jack as well. The third
set see-sawed, Jack winning on his service and Rodney on his, until
the games stood seven all. Then Jack’s age and experience told and he
literally wore his opponent out. Rodney lost the next game 15–40, and
then, on his own service, gave Jack an ace by double faulting, smashed
the next return out of court and was 0–30 before he knew what had
happened. But after that he managed to draw even by two fine serves
that Jack failed to handle, and the game stayed at deuce for fully ten
minutes. When finally Jack sent a swift ball across the court that
Rodney missed by a hair’s breadth and so ended the match, there was
a good round of applause for both players. Jack reached a brown hand
across the net and said, as Rodney shook it:

[Illustration: “Finally, Jack sent a swift ball across the court”]

“Sorry, Rod. You deserved to win. You gave me the hardest tussle I ever
had, I think.”

“Thanks,” replied Rodney. “Glad you won though, Jack. Hope you keep
going, too. Only――――”

“What?” asked Jack, with a smile, as he vaulted the net, towel in hand.

“Only I’m sorry you won’t be here next year,” said Rodney. “I’d like to
try you then.”

“Try me in the spring,” laughed Jack. “I wouldn’t wonder if you could
do it then, Rod!”

Rodney was glad he had secured a cut from football practice that
afternoon, for he was pretty well worn out. However, a shower helped
matters a deal, and after they were dressed he and Jack strolled down
the hill to Doolittle’s and Jack treated to sodas. On Friday, Jack met
Hanford, the school champion. Rodney didn’t see that match, for it was
played during football practice, but most of the other Vests were on
hand to applaud and encourage their leader. In the finals the match was
three sets out of five, and Jack, who started off with a rush, played
Hanford off his feet for two sets and seemed, as Tad put it when he
related the details later to Rodney, to have the title holder “agitated
to an emulsion.” But Hanford wormed out of the third set 7–5, secured
the fourth 9–7, and then ran away with the deciding set, allowing
Jack but three games, and securing his right to the championship for
another year.

On Monday, Matty had announced that Mrs. Binner had consented to the
proposed expedition to Finger Rock, and that Miss Mapes, the piano
teacher, had obligingly transferred the Saturday morning lesson
to Friday afternoon. Consultations between the twins and Tad had
followed at intervals during the week, and at a little before nine
on Saturday morning the five set off on the picnic. The luncheon had
been thoughtfully divided into separate packages and each of the party
carried one. Kitty, for once minus his beloved turtle-neck sweater, led
the way at a business-like pace which soon drew groans of protest from
Tad.

“Look here, Kitty,” he said when they had traversed perhaps a mile of
the way, “this isn’t any cross country race, you know. We aren’t trying
to establish a new record. I love to walk, but I don’t want to overdo
it. I’ve been warned by the doctors not to overtax my strength. Let’s
pause here a minute and admire the beautiful view. Let’s pause several
minutes. I’m in no hurry. In fact I love to pause!”

Rodney and the twins seemed as willing as Tad to seat themselves on a
rock beside the road. Kitty blinked in mild surprise. “I wasn’t walking
fast, was I?” he asked solicitously.

“What do you call it?” panted Tad.

“Why――er――I call that just an amble.”

“An amble! Jumping Jehosophat! I’d like to see you when you were in a
hurry then!”

Kitty smiled leniently.

“You can see the Rock now,” said May to Rodney, and his four companions
obligingly pointed it out to him. As, however, he attempted to follow
each finger and attend to all directions at once, it was several
minutes before he actually discerned the object of their journey.
When he did it looked rather disappointing. From a distance of three
and a half miles Finger Rock was merely a point against the sky, its
base hidden by a belt of woods that intervened. Presently they went
on again, more leisurely now, Kitty looking around every little while
to make certain that the pace was not exhausting his companions. He
held forth for a quarter of a mile on the benefits of walking, and
instructed the others how to hold their bodies, how to move their legs,
and which part of the foot to walk on in order to derive the greatest
good from the exercise. Tad listened with suspiciously profound
attention, but the others soon wearied. When Kitty had concluded, Tad
undertook to walk according to instructions received and the result was
so mirth provoking that Matty had to sit down on a stump beside the
road and recover. Kitty, however, only smiled tolerantly. He was quite
accustomed to having his hobby made sport of. It didn’t hurt him any if
others played the fool.

It had been quite nippy when they had started out, but as the sun
climbed higher the chill gave way to a genial warmth and the frozen
surface of the road began to thaw, making the walking rather slippery
in places. A beech grove was a mass of gold, across a field to the
left, and further inland the edge of the forest showed all shades of
vermillion and scarlet and russet yellow and green. On the river side
of the hill a rocky pasture had grown up in young oaks, and these
supplied a tone of brown-pink, as Matty, who dabbled in paints, called
it, that quite drove that young lady to despair.

“Isn’t it wonderful, May?” she exclaimed. “Did you ever see such a
color? I――I wouldn’t know how to get it at all.”

“I’ll pick a few leaves for you,” volunteered Tad, “and you can take
them home with you.” But the leaves on nearer acquaintance quite failed
to produce the effect of the trees at a distance, and Matty discarded
them and went on with many backward glances, murmuring to herself,
totally absorbed in the problem. At their left the Hudson was in sight
much of the way, winding and twisting, at times broadening out into
small inland seas across which ridiculous ferry boats plodded. Now and
then a white sail broke the intense blue of the surface and once a
river steamer passed down, brave in white and gold. There were several
raids on wayside orchards, and Tad, who constituted himself general
sampler for the expedition, was biting into and discarding apples all
the way along. Unfortunately, by the time he had tasted an apple and
found it satisfactory the tree it had come from had been left several
hundred yards behind them. But Tad, ever hopeful, set his eyes on
the next orchard and tried again. Except that he worked up a slight
stomach ache eventually, their raids were rather unproductive. May, who
looked on trespassing as a crime, held her eyes askance when the others
wandered from the road, and only accepted the fruits of transgression
under protest. She appeared to enjoy what fell to her share, however as
well as any of them.

It was well into the middle of the forenoon when they finally tramped
over a crest of the road and saw Finger Rock rising into the air a
quarter of a mile ahead. A lane, which ran from the main road along
the back of a farmyard, wound uphill to a wooded plateau and from the
summit of the latter Finger Rock stood up for all the world like the
sore thumb of Tad’s description. It looked from that distance like one
huge lump of rusty pink granite set on end, but Kitty explained that
it was in reality a number of ledges heaped up together, and rattled
on quite knowingly about glaciers and moraines. The lower part of the
Rock was scantily clothed with scrub trees, bushes and grass, but the
upper half of it was bare of all vegetation save moss and lichen.

“How big is it on top?” asked Rodney as they turned into the lane to
the excited barking of a dog in the farmer’s yard.

“About twenty feet across,” answered Kitty. “It’s uneven though; lots
of loose rock up there.”

“We couldn’t get up, could we?”

Kitty shrugged. “You and I could; Tad, maybe; the girls couldn’t.”

“I should think not!” said Matty. “I wouldn’t try it for anything.
Would you, May?”

May replied vehemently that she certainly would not. Tad observed Kitty
indignantly.

“You say you and he could, but I couldn’t? Why couldn’t I, I’d like to
know?”

“Didn’t say you couldn’t,” replied Kitty, blinking. “Said you might.
Don’t believe you could though, Tad.”

“Why not?” challenged Tad.

“Takes strength and plenty of wind. You haven’t the lungs, Tad.”

“What’s the matter with my lungs?” inquired Tad irritably.

“Undeveloped,” responded Kitty calmly.

“Undeveloped, your grandmother!” Tad struck himself sharply on the
chest and went into a fit of coughing. “There’s no――nothing the
mat――matter with my――my lungs! And just to prove it I’ll climb that old
Rock and show you!”

“Better wait until after we’ve had lunch though,” Rodney laughed. “If
you fell off you’d miss the eats.”

“Well, I guess that would be wiser. Might as well be sure of my lunch.
Where will we eat it? Ought to have some water, too.”

“There’s a spring over there,” replied Kitty, with a nod toward the
edge of the woods a few hundred feet away. “And there’s a ledge about
fifteen feet up on the other side that we can get to easily. Good view
from there. Plenty of room, too.”

So they followed a path that led around the base of the Rock through
sweetfern and small bushes until Kitty indicated a place where by
following the lower face of the Rock up and around it was not
difficult to climb. Kitty led the way up the well worn trail, Tad
followed, and Rodney went last to give a hand now and then to the
twins. A few minutes of climbing and scrambling brought them to a
jutting ledge about ten feet broad, carpeted with grass and Christmas
ferns, and somewhat littered with the remains of former repasts. A
blackened cranny against the overhanging face of the Rock showed where
a fire had been built at some time.

“They had courage to lug wood up here for a fire,” said Tad. “Wish
they’d left some, though.”

“We haven’t anything to cook,” objected Matty.

“No matter. A fire is always good fun. We might boil water, anyway. Can
you go on up from here, Kitty?”

“Yes. Climb around that corner and then up about twenty feet. After
that you work around to the left on some crumbly rock, and then go up
where there’s a sort of fissure. That brings you pretty nearly to the
top. There’s a bit of hard climbing after that though, about ten feet
or so.”

Tad walked to the further side of the lunching place and cast a
speculative eye up the face of the cliff. Then he looked down at his
rubber soled shoes and nodded.

“Looks easy,” he said carelessly. “I’ll try it after luncheon I guess.”

“You may if you like,” said Rodney, who had followed him to the edge.
“I wouldn’t go up there for fifty dollars!”

“It isn’t so awfully hard,” said Kitty. “Got to keep your head, though.
Mustn’t slip, either. Might have a bad fall.”

Rodney looked down for some fifteen or twenty feet and shuddered. “You
might,” he agreed dryly, “even from here. If you fell further up I
guess you’d never know what struck you.”

The twins were already undoing the parcels and arranging the luncheon,
and Kitty volunteered to go for water. As, however, they had brought
along nothing larger than tin cups it was decided that they should do
without water until they wanted it, and then each one should go for his
own. “We can bring up enough for Matty and May in a cup,” said Rodney.
But Tad instantly declared that if he didn’t have a drink at once he
wouldn’t be able to eat a mouthful, and so presently set off down the
path with four cups to fill.

Kitty and Rodney helped set the viands around on paper napkins and box
covers. There were sandwiches and hard boiled eggs, doughnuts――Tad
had insisted on doughnuts――and cake, a jar of currant jelly, olives,
pickles, and bananas. They were observing the spread approvingly when
the sound of scrambling footsteps reminded them of Tad. He was toiling
up the path, two cups of water in each hand, pausing at intervals to
maintain his equilibrium, and grunting fearsomely. Now and then the
water from the cups splashed out into his shoes or on to his shirt. By
careful management he finally attained to within a few yards of the
ledge, and just as those on top were about to accord congratulations
something happened.

I think Tad stumbled over a rock. At all events he waved his arms
wildly, distributing the contents of the tin cups in a shower about
him, strove heroically to recover his balance, failed, and toppled
against the side of the path, while the cups went bounding and
clattering down the rock. Tad’s descent to a sitting posture was
gradual and extraordinarily deliberate. Clutching wildly at the air,
an expression of bewildered surprise and dismay on his face, he sank
slowly down the face of the rock, his feet slipping from under him in
spite of all his efforts to find foothold. When he finally brought up
his feet hung over the edge of the path and he was seated quite cozily
and comfortably with his back to the rock for all the world as though
he had settled there purposely to observe the view. Up above three
faces struggled against the laughter that would not be denied. Only
Kitty remained grave. He blinked with mild surprise. It was Tad who
relieved the situation. Finding his progress down the rock at an end,
he looked about him and then at his bespattered clothes. Finally, with
a grin, he raised his gaze to the quivering faces above him.

“‘Water, water everywhere,’” he quoted pathetically, “‘and not a drop
to drink!’”

Whereupon Rodney and the twins laughed until the tears came, and
Kitty, after consideration, smiled as if in duty bound. Then he went
down and helped Tad to his feet, rescued the tin cups, and set off
himself for the water. Five minutes later, sitting up there in the
sunshine with a mild autumn breeze fluttering the paper napkins about,
they lunched hungrily, enjoyably, laughing and chattering and voting
the picnic a huge success.



CHAPTER XVI

TAD IN DANGER


It was high noon before, satisfied to repletion, they leaned back
against the big Rock and viewed apathetically the scattered remains
of the feast. The remains weren’t many, however. A five mile walk on
a crisp October morning is calculated to produce a very gluttonish
appetite, and even the twins had surpassed themselves. Tad, watching
them alarmedly, had feared that they would become ‘bored!’

“Someone,” he murmured sleepily, “ought to clear up that mess. You’re
nearest to it, Rod.”

“Lazy duffer!” murmured Rod, depositing with an effort a crumpled
wad of napkin and a banana peel in one of the cracker boxes and then
subsiding again.

“Don’t overtax your strength,” warned Tad. The twins giggled. Kitty,
alone of the five, seemed unaffected by the general lassitude. He
sat erect and blinked solemnly at the autumn world as though planning
new feats of pedestrianism. Rodney, watching him lazily, expected any
moment to see him jump up and stride off toward the horizon. Presently
Tad, who had apparently gone to sleep, broke the silence.

    “There was a young fellow named Tad,
     A worthy and excellent lad,
         He went off with a bunch
         And ate too much lunch,
     And the fate of that Tad lad was sad.”

Matty sat up and clapped her hands. “Let’s all do it! Let’s all make
limericks. You make the next one, Rod.”

“Too full for utterance,” muttered Rodney.

“Please try. Then Phineas will and――――”

There was a choking gurgle from Tad. Matty observed him inquiringly.
“Nothing,” he murmured. “I――I was just laughing at something funny.”

“Now,” continued Matty, wrinkling her forehead, “we’ll be very quiet
while everyone composes.”

“I,” remarked Tad, “shall compose myself to slumber.”

“Here’s mine,” announced Rodney. “There was――――”

“Oh, wait a minute,” exclaimed May. “Let’s give a prize for the best
one! Shall we?”

“What’s the prize?” asked Tad. May looked about in search of it.

“Banana skin,” suggested Rodney.

“No, a beautiful silver cup,” replied May, “engraved with the winner’s
name.”

“Where do we get the cup?”

“Right here.” May picked up one of the tin cups and flourished it.

“How beautiful!” murmured Tad, seeking a more comfortable position for
his head. “I’ll take it now, please.”

“Indeed you won’t!” said Matty. “You wait until we’ve said our verses.
Now go ahead, Rod, please.”

“I guess I’ve forgotten it now,” replied Rodney, wrinkling his brow.
“No, I haven’t. Here it is:

    “There was a young fellow named Mudge
     Who tried up a steep hill to trudge,
         He fell on his back
         With a horrible _crack_,
     And was heard to exclaim, ‘Oh fudge!’”

The twins clapped loudly, but Tad said it was a perfectly rotten
limerick.

“Better than yours, though,” laughed Rodney.

“Nothing of the sort! Mine was an exceptionally fine example of the
art of――ah――composition. Mine had――had poetic qualities. Hand over the
prize, _if_ you please!”

“I’ve got one,” announced Kitty somberly. “It isn’t very good, though.”
He blinked about the circle, and Matty murmured that she was sure it
would be a very nice one indeed.

    “There was a boy named Merrill
     Who climbed up a rock like a squirrel――――”

Kitty paused there, whether to receive applause for the ingenuity of
the rhyme or to grope for the rest of the verse they didn’t know. The
twins, however, encouraged him with expressions of delight, and after a
moment he continued:

       “And when he was on top
        Of the very big rock
    He shouted aloud in his peril!”

Kitty finished with a flourish and beamed self-approval. The applause
was deafening. Tad said it was magnificent.

“Now it’s up to you girls,” said Rodney.

“I’m ready,” replied May. “Are you, Matty?”

“Yes, but you go ahead, May.”

“Well.” May took a long breath, fixed her eyes on the edge of the
horizon and began:

    “There was a young lady named Matty
     Who left home looking very natty――――”

“May Binner!” interrupted the subject of her poetic effusion, “if you
use ‘fatty’ I――I’ll――――”

“Not going to,” replied May triumphantly.

       “But when she got back
        She had torn her new sack,
    And her mother said, ‘My, you look ratty!’”

“Clever but inelegant,” remarked Tad.

“I don’t think ‘ratty’ is a very nice word to use,” objected Matty.
“Besides, I don’t wear a sack!”

“That’s just a metaphor,” returned May serenely. “I couldn’t very well
make ‘dress’ rhyme with ‘back,’ could I?”

“It’s a perfectly good limerick,” laughed Rodney. “And I think it’s the
best yet.”

“Wait!” cried Matty. “I’ve got a new one. Listen:

    “There was a young lady named May,
     Who didn’t know just what to say,
         So the words of her verse
         From bad grew to worse,
     And her friends from her side turned away.”

“Too pathetic,” decided Tad. “A limerick should be cheerful, I think.
That last line brought tears to my eyes, Matty.” But for some reason
Kitty approved enthusiastically of the latest attempt and clapped
loudly.

“We’ll have to vote to see who gets the prize, I guess,” said Rodney.
“Who do you say, Tad?”

“It isn’t over yet,” announced Tad, pulling himself to a sitting
posture. “I have another one.”

“But you’ve had your turn,” protested Matty.

“No, that was before the contest started. Shove the prize this way and
lend me your ears. All set? Go!”

    “There were two twins named Binner,
     You couldn’t tell which was the thinner,
         With one accord
         They said, ‘We feel bored,
     We had apple dumplings for dinner!’”

“Here you are!” laughed Rodney as he tossed the tin cup across. “Catch!
You win!”

Tad caught the prize deftly and bowed, hand on heart. “I thank you
all,” he said. “Words fail me with which to express my――my appreciation
of this honor you have done me. Perhaps the intrinsic value of this
beautiful prize is not great, but as a――a recognition of poetic genius,
as you might say――――”

“Wouldn’t think of saying it,” interrupted Rodney.

Tad cast a reproachful glance at him. “You have caused me to lose the
thread of my discourse. I think I’ll climb the Rock now.” He pulled
himself to his feet with a sigh and looked contemplatively at the crag
which towered above him.

“Don’t be a chump,” advised Rodney. “You’re too full of food to climb
anything. Besides, we’d hate to have to carry you all the way home.
It’s a longish way, Tad.”

“Please don’t try it,” begged Matty. “We’d so much rather you didn’t,
Tad.”

“My ability as a mountain climber has been assailed,” responded Tad
firmly. “Old Leather Lungs over there thinks he’s the only one who can
pull off a little stunt like this. Now you fellows just watch your
Uncle Theodore!”

Tad took a pull at his belt, groaning over the operation, and stepped
jauntily toward the place where an ill-defined track crept away over
the face of the Rock. Kitty watched him blinkingly.

“Think you can do it?” he asked.

“One more insult from you, Kitty, and I’ll hurl you into yon bottomless
depths! If I couldn’t climb to the top of this twopenny old Rock, I’d
resign my presidency of the Alpine Club. You fellows are evidently not
aware that I am the original monkey when it comes to climbing!”

“We didn’t know just what _kind_ you were,” murmured Rodney, “but we
knew you were.”

“Please don’t try it, Tad,” said Matty. “We’ll be just worried to
death, won’t we, May?”

“Worried to death,” echoed May.

“Shucks! Don’t be silly. This isn’t any kind of a trick. Anyone else
coming along? You, Kitty?”

Kitty shook his head. “Guess not. I’ve done it twice. Don’t believe in
exercise too soon after eating. Be careful near the top, Tad. It’s hard
going. If you want help, sing out.”

“What’ll you do? Come up and boost me?” Tad laughed as he laid aside
his coat. “Here goes, then!”

He swung off from the ledge, found a footing on the narrow trail that
led steeply away around the corner of the Rock, and in a moment was out
of sight.

“He’s a silly ass,” grumbled Rodney. “What did you let him do it for,
Kitty?”

Kitty looked surprised. “Me? Didn’t tell him to do it, did I?”

“No, but you could have stopped him. If he falls and hurts himself――――”

“I just know he will!” sighed May. “I――I feel it.”

“If he does, _he_ will feel it,” muttered Rodney, trying from the edge
of the jutting ledge to catch a glimpse of the climber. But Tad was
out of sight, and Rodney sat down again to wait his return. “We ought
to be starting back pretty soon, too,” he grumbled, studying his watch.
“It’s almost twenty to one.”

“Won’t take him long――if he does it,” said Kitty. “Don’t believe he
will, though. He’s eaten too much lunch. It follows.”

“If we went down on the ground we could see him,” suggested Rodney. But
Matty, who was clearing up the débris of the feast, demurred.

“I couldn’t watch him, Rodney. I――I’d scream!”

“I do wish he’d come back,” sighed May.

“Ten minutes,” prophesied Kitty calmly.

“Well, we’ll get ready to start along,” said Rodney, “so we won’t waste
time when he does get down. It would be a funny note though if he got
up there and couldn’t climb down again!”

“I don’t think it would be funny at all,” responded Matty severely. “It
would be perfectly horrible.”

“Anyway, it would sort of delay the game,” agreed Rodney. “Listen! Did
you hear anything?”

The twins shook their heads.

“Did you, Kitty?”

“Not sure. Maybe he called to let us know he’s on top.” Kitty filled
his lungs and let out a bellow that might have been heard half way to
Greenridge. “_O Tad! Tad Mudge!_” Then they listened. A faint hail came
back to them around the elbow of the Rock.

“Are you on top?” shouted Rodney.

“No-o-o!” was the faint response.

“Are you all right?” bellowed Kitty.

There was no reply for a moment, and then,

“No-o-o!” came the reply.

The four on the ledge looked at each other apprehensively.

“Perhaps he didn’t understand what we asked him,” said Rodney nervously.

“Maybe――maybe,” whispered May, “he’s fallen! Maybe he’s lying down
there on the ground all broken to pieces.”

“May!” said her sister sharply. “Don’t be silly! Ask him again,
Phineas.”

“Tad, are you all right?” shouted Kitty.

“No-o-o! Stuck!”

Kitty pulled his cap on firmly, threw off his coat and kicked his feet
out of the heavy shoes he wore. “You go down and see where he is,” he
said to Rodney. “I’ll climb up.”



CHAPTER XVII

KITTY CLIMBS TO THE RESCUE


In a flash Kitty was off the ledge and worming his way with hands and
feet up the side of the Rock. Rodney, followed by the twins, hurried
down the path to the ground below and then around to the other side.
The first thing they saw was Kitty, scrambling fast about fifty feet
up the ledge, and then their gaze found Tad. He was flattened against
the face of the Rock at what looked a fearsome distance from the earth.
Both hands were clutched desperately at the stone, and one foot was
thrust into a crevice. But the other foot hung in the air. Evidently he
could find no support for it. The summit of the Rock seemed to be about
ten or twelve feet above his head. The twins gazed upward with white
and horrified faces. Rodney put his hands to his mouth and called:

“Can you hold on, Tad? Kitty is coming up!”

Very slowly Tad turned his face over his shoulder, but made no attempt
to look down at them.

[Illustration: “Very slowly Tad turned his face over his shoulder”]

“Guess I’ve got to!” he called rather faintly. “Tell Kitty to hurry up!”

“He’s almost to you now,” shouted Rodney encouragingly. Then he moved
around and hailed Kitty. “He’s all right so far, but he wants you to
hurry, Kitty!” There was no response from Kitty, but the latter went
on steadily, his stockinged feet finding incredible footholds, and his
hands seeming to glue themselves to the sheer surface of the granite.
A jutting elbow of rock still hid Tad from his sight as, reaching
the shallow fissure, he used knees as well as feet and found himself
presently but a scant four yards from the summit. Then it was plain to
be seen why Tad had come to grief. After emerging from the fissure,
instead of keeping straight up he had worked to the left, taking
advantage of a crack into which he could thrust his toes, evidently
in the expectation of reaching a projecting point of rock some twelve
feet beyond. Had he gained the boulder he could easily have pulled
himself to the top and so gained the final summit. But, unfortunately,
the crack had narrowed speedily and at last, having set his right foot
on the last foothold, he could go no further. Nor, since his grip of
the rock above him was none too secure, did he dare remove the weight
of his body from that right foot to work back the way he had come. All
this Kitty saw, as, panting with the rapidity of his ascent, he paused
at the top of the fissure. Tad was about level with him, but separated
by some eight feet of rock.

“Keep your head,” he said shortly. “Be there in a minute.”

“Hello, Kitty!” Tad tried to speak lightly, but the strain of sticking
there like a limpet to the almost straight up and down face of the
ledge was beginning to tell, and his voice shook a little. “I’m in a
fix,” he added. “Can’t get one way or t’other. See any place I can
stick this left foot, old man?”

“No. Stay where you are a minute. Can you hold on?”

“Got to, haven’t I?” responded Tad grimly. “If you can do anything,
Kitty, do it quick, though. My fingers are numb, and this right foot
of mine is about all in.”

“All right.” But Kitty, frowning and blinking, studying the situation
with sharp, quick glances, was stumped. To reach Tad from above seemed
the most feasible plan, but in that case he would have to lower a rope
or something to the other, and Kitty much doubted whether Tad would
be able to grasp it, or, having grasped it, be able to hold on to it
long enough to be pulled over the edge. Kitty knew from experience just
how a fellow’s muscles felt after clinging to one position for many
minutes. To reach Tad by following in his footsteps across the rock was
easy, but what help could Kitty lend him when he was there? Kitty’s
gaze fell finally to the ledge below Tad’s precarious perch, and at
that moment Tad spoke again.

“You there, Kitty?” he asked. Evidently he was afraid to turn his head
to look for fear the movement would dislodge one of the straining hands.

“Yes,” replied Kitty.

“Can’t you――do anything?” panted Tad anxiously.

“Yes. Hold on a minute more, Tad.”

“I will――if I can,” answered Tad in a weak voice.

“You’ve got to,” said Kitty. He was already scrambling back down
the fissure. Rodney, watching below with a thumping heart, groaned.
It looked as though Kitty had given up. But at the bottom of the
fissure Kitty paused, gripped the rock with both hands, and sent one
gray-stockinged foot searching to the left for a projection. At last he
found it, tested it, paused an instant, and then wormed his body from
the fissure and out against the blank wall of rock. The granite was
loose and crumbly thereabouts and a little shower of gravel trickled
down. Kitty studied the rock beyond. Here and there small inequalities
gave faint promise of affording hold for feet and hands, but from
where Rodney stood below the journey across that steep face of rock
looked hopeless and foolhardy. Matty and May had ceased watching. At a
little distance under the shadow of the Rock they stood white faced and
miserable.

“Kitty’s trying to get across to him lower down,” announced Rodney
to them. “I don’t see how he can do it though. It doesn’t look as
if――” Rodney’s voice broke off short and a gasp escaped him. Kitty,
in taking his weight from one foot, had placed too much reliance on a
tiny projection above him and a nodule of granite had broken off in
his hand. For an instant he had swayed dangerously before, summoning
his strength, he had thrown his body against the rock. Then during a
heartbreaking moment he clung there while his disengaged hand travelled
here and there above him, the clutching fingers seeking a new hold.
They found it at last and Rodney’s fast beating heart leaped with
relief. How Kitty ever made the journey across that seemingly smooth
face of granite will always remain a mystery to the others. Afterwards
Kitty himself acknowledged that he didn’t believe he could do it again,
adding with conviction, “Sure I don’t want to try!” But across it he
went, at a snail’s pace to be sure, but steadily. And at last he was
directly under Tad, and by reaching one hand upward could touch that
youth’s heel.

“I’m under you, Tad,” panted Kitty.

“I know,” answered Tad.

“Hold on a second longer while I get my breath,” instructed the
rescuer. There was no reply to this. Tad had no energy to waste in
talk. Kitty remained very still while one might have counted fifty.
Then, flattened against the wall of rock, his stockinged feet set on
tiny roughened angles and the fingers of his left hand clutching a
point of rock above his head, he reached his right hand upward until it
was under Tad’s hanging foot.

“My hand is under your left foot, Tad,” he said quietly. “Find it.”

Very gingerly Tad moved the dangling rubber soled “sneaker” to and fro,
until at last it settled into the palm of the upstretched hand.

“All right,” instructed Kitty. “Put your weight on it slowly.”

“Can you hold it?” asked Tad anxiously.

“Yes. All ready? Now!” He braced himself as the weight of Tad’s body
came against him. His toes were cutting cruelly against the rough
granite, and his left hand strained about its precarious hold.

“Now move your other foot further to your right and get a new grip
with it. Straight along, Tad.”

There was a groan from above. “It’s numb,” said Tad. “I can’t feel
anything.”

“Do as I say,” said Kitty gruffly. “Find the crevice with it. Got it?”

“I――I think so.”

“Put your weight on it carefully and see. I can’t look up.”

There was an instant of silence. Then,

“It’s all right,” sighed Tad. “I’m going to get a new hold with my
hands, Kitty.”

“One at a time,” said Kitty. “Go slow. I can hold you for awhile.”

“I’ve moved one,” said Tad presently. “It――it’s sort of weak though, I
guess――――”

“Work the fingers and get the blood back. Better?”

“Y-yes.”

“Now get your other over.”

The weight on Kitty’s hand increased for an instant. Then Tad announced
that he had moved his left hand over. “I guess I can get that foot into
the crack now,” he said nervously.

“All right. Go easy though. Try your weight on the other first. How is
it?”

“All right. Here goes, Kitty.”

There was a moment of hesitation. Then the weight on Kitty’s hand was
gone, there was a gasp from Tad, and Kitty, finding a hold with the
released hand, dared to look up. Tad’s feet were both thrust into the
crevice, and Kitty gave a sigh of relief. Tad’s legs were trembling and
Kitty could hear his quick breathing above him.

“Stay where you are now until I tell you to go on,” said Kitty. “You’re
perfectly safe, but you’d better rest a bit.”

“I――know,” replied Tad faintly.

There was a hail from the ground. “Are you all right, Kitty?” shouted
Rodney anxiously.

“Yes! Be down in a minute or two. Get my shoes and the coats from the
ledge, Rod! Now then, Tad, start along to the big crack in the rock.
Make sure of your holds, though, before you put all your weight on
them. I’ll follow below, and if you want help, sing out.”

Tad made slow work of it, but at that it was all Kitty could do to make
similar progress. Tad had easy going compared with Kitty, and it was
only the fact that his nerves were pretty well unstrung and his muscles
quivering that allowed his rescuer to reach the fissure at the same
moment. Once there Tad braced his knees against the sides of the cavity
and looked for a moment very much as though he was going to faint away.

Kitty, seeing the danger, shouted a warning from below.

“None of that, you idiot!” he called sharply. “Brace up or you’ll fall!
Here, put a foot on my shoulder for a minute. Now take a dozen good
long breaths.”

“I――can’t!” muttered Tad.

“You can! When I count now! One――two――three―― Doing it?”

“Yes, but――it makes me dizzy.”

“Stop, then, and close your eyes a minute. If you’d take decent care of
your lungs,” went on Kitty grumblingly, “they wouldn’t mind a little
pure air!”

“Old――Leather Lungs!” murmured Tad with a very wan smile. Kitty grunted.

“Come on down now. Feel pretty good?”

“I guess so. Yes, I’m all right. Go ahead, Kitty.”

Tad followed to the end of the slanting fissure and then began the
scramble down and around the corner. When they were near the ledge
Kitty called, “Don’t try getting to the ledge. Come straight down.
There’s good going. Watch me.”

Tad watched and followed and in another minute the two boys dropped
into a bed of sweet fern, Kitty on his feet and Tad on his back. “Don’t
mind――me,” muttered Tad, closing his eyes. “I――I’m sort of done up, I
guess.” Then his white face suddenly went whiter still and Matty, who,
closely followed by May, had run up in Rodney’s wake, exclaimed, “Oh,
Rod, he’s fainted!”



CHAPTER XVIII

LUDLOW SCORES A SAFETY


“Won’t hurt him,” said Kitty. “Get some water, someone.” May and Matty
dashed helter skelter in the direction of the spring before they
realized that they had nothing to bring water back in. Rodney, however,
who had brought the cups from the ledge when he had gone for the coats,
tumbled them out of a box and sped after the girls. When they got back
Tad’s eyelids were already fluttering, and when Matty had applied her
handkerchief, dipped in water from a cup, to Tad’s forehead the latter
heaved a deep sigh and looked about him.

“Where the dickens――” he began. Then recollection returned and he
frowned. “Gee, I went and fainted, didn’t I?” he asked disgustedly.
“Ain’t I the fine little hero? Say, let’s go home!”

“Don’t get up yet,” begged Matty. “You’d better rest awhile. Hadn’t he,
Phineas?”

“Yes. Got a long walk ahead. Better have a good rest.”

“Put your head in my lap, Tad,” said Matty, seating herself on the
ground. “You’ll be more comfortable.”

“Oh, thunder!” said Tad, with a sheepish grin. But he allowed Rodney to
hitch his shoulders up, and Matty squirmed nearer, and Tad’s head went
back with a sigh.

“I say, Kitty,” he said after a moment, during which the color began to
creep back into his cheeks.

“What?”

“Thanks.”

“That’s all right,” answered Kitty gruffly. “It wasn’t anything.”

“Oh, Kitty!” said May.

“Yes, it’s all right now,” responded Tad gravely, “but there was a time
when I thought it wasn’t going to be. I――I’m sorry I made such an ass
of myself, fellows――and ladies. I hadn’t any business trying it. I’d
never done any climbing before.”

“Yes, you certainly were an ass,” agreed Rodney severely. He as
onlooker had perhaps felt the nervous strain more than Kitty himself,
and was inclined to be a bit cross. “We told you not to do it.”

Matty gazed at him reproachfully, and May murmured, “Don’t, Rod!” But
Tad smiled. “That’s so. I own up. You may kick me when I get up.”

“I don’t want to kick you,” responded Rodney grudgingly, “but I do
think――” However Matty’s imploring gaze moved him to silence. Kitty,
blinking at Tad, said,

“Foolish thing to try if you’ve never done it. Thought from what you
said you had. Otherwise I wouldn’t have let you try. It follows.”

“You were certainly a brick, Kitty,” said Tad feelingly. “And I don’t
know how to thank you. I guess if you hadn’t got along about when you
did――” Tad paused, shuddered and then smiled. “I guess Stacey would
have had to find a new roommate, what?”

“Oh, Tad!” murmured May.

“Shut up!” growled Rodney.

“All right. Say, you fellows, what time is it?” Tad sat up suddenly and
stared anxiously while Kitty pulled leisurely at his fob. “What? ’Most
one? Say, you fellows will be late for practice!”

“Can’t be helped, I guess,” answered Kitty. “Besides, there isn’t any
practice today. We play Ludlow. Won’t need us anyhow.”

“I tell you what,” said Tad. “The rest of you start along. I――I’m a
bit weak on my pins yet, but I’ll follow in a little while. Maybe I’ll
catch you up.” He winked at Rodney. Kitty shook his head.

“Better keep together, I guess,” he said. “No hurry. Plenty of time.
Think so, Rod?”

“Yes, Cotting won’t mind for once if we don’t report on time.”

They rested there fully a half-hour. Then Kitty, who had taken command
of the situation the instant he had shed his shoes to begin his climb
to the rescue, gave permission to start homeward. By that time Tad
seemed quite himself again, and the first thing he did was to walk
around the Rock and follow with his eyes the course of his climb and
of Kitty’s. It looked pretty high up from down there, and the wall of
granite seemed even more perpendicular than it really was. Tad shook
his head.

“I don’t see how I got as far as I did,” he said.

“Neither do I,” returned Kitty. “You got off the track after you
left the fissure. Ought to have gone almost straight up. See that
three-cornered rock sticking out at the left? That’s the way. Instead
you went off across that face. Risky. Might have fallen. Next time――――”

“Huh?” demanded Tad.

“Next time,” repeated Kitty, blinking.

“There isn’t going to be any next time,” replied Tad with emphasis. “I
don’t believe I was cut out for a mountain climber.”

“Next time,” continued Kitty as though he had not heard, “pull yourself
until you get your knee over that three cornered rock. After that the
ledge slopes more and you can crawl up. Not very hard.”

Tad observed the rock in question thoughtfully, darted a look at
Kitty and nodded. “All right. If I ever do try it again, Kitty, I’ll
remember.”

“You will,” said Kitty. “Sooner or later. They always do.”

“If you ever do, Tad,” said Matty severely, “I――I’ll never, never
forgive you!”

Tad made no answer, but a few moments later when they were descending
the hill, he paused and looked back at Finger Rock. “It doesn’t look so
hard from here, does it?” he asked Rodney, who had stopped beside him.
“And I hate to be beaten, Rod. I wouldn’t wonder if Kitty is right.”

“About what?”

“He says they always try again sooner or later. Somehow, I think I’d
like to have another go at it some day.”

“If you do you’re a silly ass,” replied Rodney. “Come on.”

The journey back seemed twice the length of the morning trip, and all
save Kitty were thoroughly weary when the turret of the gymnasium
showed at last over the bare branches of the trees. Kitty seemed as
fresh as ever, and Tad, who had naturally felt the walk more than any
of the others, observed him disgustedly.

“Kitty,” he said, “you make me tired. Anyone, to look at you, would
think you’d just walked around the block! Don’t you ever get enough?”

Kitty blinked gravely. Then he nodded uncertainly. “Y-yes, sometimes.
When I do twelve miles at a good clip I――I get quite fatigued.”

“Fatigued!” Tad groaned. “What do you know about that? If he walks
twelve miles he gets fatigued, Rod! Honest, Kitty, you ought to see a
doctor about it. You need building up!”

Kitty actually smiled. The idea of his going to a doctor was really
funny.

The game with Ludlow Academy had started when they reached the corner
of Larch Street; they could hear the piping of the whistle and the
cries of the players, and once a half-hearted cheer from the Maple
Hill supporters. The twins declined an invitation to see the contest,
declaring that they must hurry home for fear that Mrs. Binner was
worrying about them, and Tad volunteered to go along as escort. Kitty
and Rodney turned into Larch Street and hurried toward the field. They
had not gone far, however, when Tad shouted to Kitty and they stopped
and waited for him.

“I don’t believe I half thanked you, Kitty,” he said earnestly and
embarrassedly. “I do though, awfully. What you did was terribly plucky,
and――and I certainly do appreciate it. I guess――I guess you saved my
life, old man.”

Kitty, to his horror, found himself shaking hands.

“You’re welcome,” he muttered. “Nothing at all, really. Glad I could
help. I――er――we’d better get along, Rod. Cotting will be mad. See you
later, Tad.”

And Kitty hurried away with evident relief, leaving Rodney to smile at
Tad and then follow. Rodney caught Kitty at the gate.

“Seems to me,” said Kitty, “we’d better not say anything about what
happened, eh? Might――might make a rumpus. Faculty might stop fellows
going to the Rock. Better keep mum, eh?”

Rodney laughed as they entered the field. “Much you care about that,
Kitty. All you’re afraid of is that fellows might find out what a
blooming hero you are.” Then he added teasingly, “I’m going to tell
all about everything, Kitty.”

“If you do,” said Kitty earnestly and convincingly, “I――I’ll lick you!”

Their explanation to Mr. Cotting, which made no mention of the real
cause for tardiness, passed muster, although the coach didn’t hesitate
to assure them that if it occurred again they’d lose their places.
Today, as it happened, their services were not in demand until late in
the last period of the contest. They watched the game until the first
half ended and then followed the team to the gymnasium and got into
their togs. Maple Hill had piled up twenty-one points against Ludlow
in those first two ten-minute periods, while Ludlow, with a very weak
line, had proved even weaker on attack than defence and had failed to
score. But in the third period a miserable fumble by Fuller, who had
taken Wynant’s place at right half, gave Ludlow her chance. One of her
forwards fell on the ball on Maple Hill’s twenty-two yard line. Two
attacks on the ends of the Green-and-Gray line failed of results, and
a forward pass struck the ground. On the fourth down Ludlow sent back
her quarter to try a field goal. It was an easy task, but the quarter
was slow, and the ball was partly blocked and came to earth near the
five yard line. Stacey Trowbridge got it on the bound, but before he
could run it back he was tackled by a Ludlow end and thrown across the
goal line for a safety. Maple Hill was disgusted and Ludlow jubilant.
Her two or three dozen rooters on the further side of the field managed
to make a deal of noise in celebration of those two points.

But that was the last of the visitors’ success. From then on Maple
Hill, peeved by the mischance that had allowed such a weak team
to score upon her, literally ripped the Ludlow line to pieces and
scored almost at will. Thirteen points in the third period and six
in the fourth――Cotting sent in seven substitutes in that last ten
minutes――piled up a grand total of forty, against which Ludlow’s two
looked less objectionable. Kitty and Rodney each had a few minutes of
work in the final period, but neither was in the lineup long enough
to distinguish himself. After the game was finished Stacey was very
glum over that safety, and refused to be comforted although Kitty and
Rodney on the way back to Westcott’s ventured consolation.

“If you hadn’t grabbed the ball one of the Ludlow chaps would have got
it and scored a touchdown,” said Rodney. “Better to let them have a
safety than that.”

“I ought to have seen how near the line I was,” replied Stacey
gloomily. “I ought never to have let him throw me over it.”

“Shucks! What’s two points, Stacey?”

“A whole lot when they shouldn’t have scored, Rod! It was a piece of
bonehead work, that’s what it was.”

“Don’t think,” observed Kitty, “that I’d worry much about it; not if
I’d played the way you played today. Silly, I call it!”

“Do, eh?” Stacey smiled for the first time since the occurrence. “What
do you know about football anyway, Kitty?”

Kitty blinked several times before he answered. Then, “Not much, maybe.
Learning though. Still, fellow doesn’t have to know a heap of football
to know that it’s no use troubling over spilled milk. Doesn’t get you
anything. Waste of energy. Bad for you.”



CHAPTER XIX

NEARING THE GOAL


But life wasn’t all football, nor all play, nor all thrilling rescues
from danger. They believed in hard work at Maple Hill, and shirking
study was a thing severely frowned upon. Since the system followed
showed at the end of each week the class standing of every student, it
wasn’t possible to get very far in arrears with lessons. More than one
football aspirant was forced to retire from practice, temporarily at
least, during the season. Rodney was not one of these, however, for in
spite of the demands made on his time by gridiron work he managed to
keep well up with his studies. But it meant bending over his books lots
of times when the other Vests were at play, and it wasn’t long before
the word went around that Ginger Merrill’s brother was a good deal
more of a noser than a football player. Not, though, that the school
in general thought less of him for that reason, for Maple Hill fellows
held studiousness in respect and honored the student who stood high in
class. But I think they were a little bit disappointed, nevertheless.
Perhaps they reasoned that there were plenty of fellows to maintain the
school’s prestige for brains, while Ginger Merrills were few and far
between.

But Rodney got on. He made new friends day by day and when, toward the
last of October, a boy named White, who had been elected secretary and
treasurer of the entering class, was forced to leave school because
of illness, Rodney was the unanimous choice of his classmates for the
vacant office. As the position was largely honorary and entailed very
little labor, Rodney accepted. More than one boy told him that had it
been known prior to the class election that he was Ginger Merrill’s
brother he would have been made president. Whereupon Rodney smilingly
declared that in that case he was glad it hadn’t been known. And meant
it, too.

October sped quickly. Maple Hill met rival after rival on succeeding
Saturday afternoons, marked up three victories and one defeat, and
fixed her gaze on the final contest of the season, the game with
Bursley, now only a matter of three weeks away. Rodney found time to
play a little tennis, sometimes with Tad alone on the school courts
and sometimes with the twins, joined in several diversions of the
Vests, and so did not want for recreation. For, to be quite truthful,
being a member of the football team, even if only a substitute on the
second, is not by any means all recreation. There’s pleasure in it, but
the hard work outweighs the fun. There were discouraging moments when
even Rodney _almost_ wished he were out of it. _Almost_, but never,
I think, quite. At such times it was Matty who bolstered his failing
hopes and supplied encouragement. Both the twins were determined that
Rodney should win glory on the gridiron, and enjoyed in anticipation
the prestige to be theirs when, having snatched his team from defeat
by some brilliant run through a tangled field or some mighty plunge
through a close defense――you see the twins read their football
stories――they might proudly lay claim to his friendship. The twins
were properly romantic, in spite of a big leaven of practicality, and
hero worshippers of the most enthusiastic sort.

Meanwhile Rodney tried very hard. There was no one on either team more
willing to learn, more anxious to listen to instruction and profit by
it. And there was no one who seemed to fail as sadly. Cotting still
had hopes of him, and gave him plenty of opportunities to show that he
had the making of a football player. Sometimes Rodney did things that
almost justified the coach’s belief in him. More often, however, he
stopped just short of fulfillment.

“If he’d only think for himself!” grumbled Mr. Cotting.

“If he’d only _fight_!” responded Terry Doyle.

“It isn’t that. He can fight. But he doesn’t seem to know when it’s
time to.” Cotting shook his head for the twentieth time over Rodney’s
shortcomings, and then, as always, added leniently, “Well, we’ll give
him a little more time. He may find himself yet.”

But if Rodney had his times of discouragement, not so Phineas Kittson.
Kitty went serenely ahead, overcoming all obstacles in much the same
way as a strong-headed bull might walk through a fence by the simple
expedient of putting his head down and not thinking of splinters. Kitty
put his head down and kept going. In the middle of the month he ousted
Farnham from his place at left guard on the second, and the school,
which had begun by laughing, now regarded him with awed delight. He
made a good guard. His weight, and there was lots of it, was set low,
and an opponent could no more put Kitty off his feet than he could
upset one of the pyramids. And Kitty developed what Cotting had called
football sense. He played his own position nicely, was as firm as a
rock on defense and as relentless as a freight engine on attack, and he
helped his center wonderfully. Slow he was, and the coach despaired of
his ever being otherwise, but it was the slowness of one who performs
thoroughly. Kitty as a football player was no longer a joke.

And he took it all with a lack of either modesty or conceit that was
delightful. To Kitty it was a matter of course. To sum up the situation
in his own words, Cotting was sensible, what? The word serene best
describes Kitty’s course and Kitty’s attitude, and only two things
disturbed that serenity in the least. One was the fact that he could
not wear his spectacles when playing――he had tried it with disastrous
results――and the other that practice seriously interfered with his
walks. The fact that football was proving a very good lung developer,
though, partly reconciled him to the latter objection. But having to
go without his spectacles was a more serious matter, for Kitty was
lamentably near sighted and for a while felt quite helpless. Tad’s
suggestion that he wear automobile goggles that strapped around his
head was not accepted seriously.

Maple Hill played Dudley Academy to a standstill the last Saturday in
October, and as Dudley had a strong team that had proved hitherto well
nigh impregnable the Green-and-Gray was well pleased. After battling
for three ten-minute periods and struggling through six minutes of the
final quarter, holding her opponent scoreless during that time, Maple
Hill at last worked her way down to Dudley’s eight yard line, and then
sent Gordon plunging through the much-boasted Dudley line for the only
touchdown of the game. The fact that Tyson, who was called on to kick
goal, failed miserably in the attempt, took away none of the glory of
the hardest fought contest of the season. So Maple Hill saw November
come in and the Bursley game approach with confidence.

But Fortune is always playing tricks, and football teams are seldom
exempt from them. Four days after Dudley turned homeward with trailing
banners, Wynant, right halfback on the first team, developed a fine
case of water on the knee. That meant the substitution of Fuller and
the withdrawal of Anson from the second team to the first. It also
meant the promotion of Rodney from substitute to regular on the second.
As Fuller was almost as good a back as Wynant, save in the matter of
punting, the first team had not suffered a great deal by the latter’s
loss. But it would be idle to say that Rodney acceptably filled the
place left vacant by Anson. He had the weight and the strength, in
short all the physical attributes necessary for his position, and
he was fast on his feet, dodged cleverly, seldom fumbled a pass and
possessed about everything he should have possessed for the making of
a good halfback. But he lacked one thing, and even Cotting couldn’t put
a name to it. The second team quarterback railed and stormed, begged
and pleaded, and Rodney tried his level best. But his level best didn’t
carry him far enough, and soon it was a settled custom to give the ball
to the other half or to the fullback, or to draw one of the tackles
back, when it was a case of, “Fourth down, Second! You’ve got to do it!”

But Fortune, presumably giggling to herself, wasn’t through even yet.
After the Meadowdale game, which was lost by Maple Hill, strictly
according to precedent and prophecy, Terry Doyle neglected his studies
just once too often――he had an excuse if any boy did――and Nemesis in
the shape of an outraged faculty reached out and seized upon him. Terry
was off the team pending faculty consideration of his case.

The school received the news with consternation. Terry received it
with, or so some said at least, bitter tears. But he did the only
sensible thing. He handed over the temporary captaincy to Guy Watson,
retired from the scene, and tried his best to get square again
with his studies and the faculty. It was not believed that Terry’s
banishment would be for long, but meanwhile it took another player from
the second team and that player was Phineas Kittson. Kitty’s advance to
the position of first substitute on the school team had been predicted
weeks before. So there was nothing startling about it. But his
withdrawal left the second badly off for players, and after struggling
along for several days with six men in the line the team was dissolved
a whole week earlier than usual, to be exact, on the eve of the game
with St. Matthew’s, the next to the last contest of the season. Several
of the second team were retained by Coach Cotting for the first, and
among the several was Rodney. Perhaps Cotting still had hopes of the
boy, or perhaps he felt it best to be prepared for future whims of
Fortune by having plenty of backfield players. In any case, Rodney, who
had never dared hope to reach the first team that year, now suddenly
found himself a second substitute on it.



CHAPTER XX

RODNEY HESITATES


The St. Matthew’s game was played in a drizzle of rain on a field
already slippery and sodden. St. Matthew’s sent a husky bunch of some
twenty odd players, who, stripping off their blue and white sweaters,
romped on to the field for their warming up. Beside them Maple Hill’s
warriors looked frail and delicate. Tad, who with Pete Greenough had
good-naturedly escorted the twins to the game, confided to Matty that
for his part he didn’t see any use in playing the game, that it could
be settled on the gymnasium scales.

“I think,” returned Matty loyally, “that our boys are very much nicer
looking. Don’t you, May?”

“Ever so much,” replied her sister unhesitatingly.

“Looks don’t count though,” said Pete.

“No, if they did we’d have them licked to a finish right now. Why,
Kitty alone would settle ’em. We’d just march Kitty out into the middle
of the field and the enemy would fade away!”

St. Matthew’s was a new opponent on the schedule, and Maple Hill knew
very little of her ability. But it wasn’t long before it became evident
that the Blue-and-White would take a lot of beating. Wet grounds
militated sorely against the home team, for quick starting was out of
the question, and by the time the Maple Hill attack reached the line it
was still going so slowly, had so little punch to it, that it usually
crumpled up against the St. Matthew’s defense like a paper kite against
a stone wall. On the other hand, the heavier and slower opponents
managed to keep their feet well, and crashed into the Green-and-Gray
for short gains. The first period ended without a score and without
either team having got near enough to its opponent’s goal to attempt
one. Each seemed to be trying the other out, and each stuck pretty
closely to line plunging, punting only when forced to.

But in the second period Maple Hill altered her game. On attack the
wide formation was used, and for a time Tyson and Gordon were fortunate
in slicing off good gains. Stacey Trowbridge brought the spectators to
their feet once by getting away with the ball for a wide end run that
might have netted a touchdown had he been able to keep his feet, and
did gain nearly thirty yards. When he was picked out of a mud puddle
with the pigskin still firmly clasped to his breast the teams lined up
on the St. Matthew’s twenty-eight yards. A forward pass failed to work,
Gordon made four through center, Kitty, who had been put in a moment
before, opening a fine wide hole for him, and with six to go Tracey
tried a drop kick for goal on third down. But the ball went low, was
partly blocked and recovered by the visitors. After that it was all
St. Matthew’s until the middle of the field had been passed. Here the
Green-and-Gray braced, and St. Matthew’s kicked. Gordon returned the
punt immediately and gained ten yards on the exchange. St. Matthew’s
tried a forward pass and netted twelve yards, failed on two plunges
at the left of the line, made three through Pounder and from kick
formation sent her fullback on an end run. This ended disastrously,
however, for Peterson brought the big blue-stockinged warrior to earth
for a five yard loss, and the pigskin again changed hands. From then
until the end of the half the ball progressed back and forth in the
middle of the field with little advantage to either side.

In the intermission Maple Hill, clad in raincoats and slickers,
got together and tried a few songs and did some cheering, the rain
drizzling down upon them steadily and depressingly. The twins, snuggled
under a huge umbrella, were much pleased when Rodney, trailing a wet
and bedraggled blanket behind him, climbed the stand to them.

“It’s a perfectly grand game!” declared Matty. “I’ve been so excited I
couldn’t sit still! Isn’t Kitty lovely, Rodney?”

“Old Kitty is playing a great little game,” Rodney agreed warmly.
“I heard Cotting say that he was putting it all over that big St.
Matthew’s guard.”

“Are we going to win?” asked May.

“I don’t know.” Rodney shook his head. “They’re a lot heavier than we
are. We can’t do much with their line. And it’s hard to make any trick
plays work, the ground’s so slippery. I guess we’ll be satisfied enough
to keep them from scoring.”

“Are you going to play?” Matty asked.

“Me? Oh, I don’t think so. Maybe I’ll get in for a few minutes at the
last. Cotting will probably try to save the first string fellows as
much as he can for next Saturday. Isn’t it a brute of a day?”

“We like it,” said Matty. “Don’t we, May?”

“We always like rain,” May agreed. “Mama says we make her think of a
pair of water spaniels. Just as soon as ever it begins to rain Matty
and I grab our raincoats and get out of doors. We like snow, too, don’t
we, Matty?”

Matty nodded. “I wish you might have seen the snowman we made last
winter, Rodney. It was twice as high as I am, and we put a pipe in his
mouth and an old hat on his head and called him ‘Chawles,’ for Mr.
Cooper.”

“And when we were laughing about it, Mrs. Westcott heard us from her
window and called up mama on the telephone and told her that we were
insulting Mr. Cooper!”

“And then,” added Matty complacently, “we changed him to a woman and
called her Mrs. Westcott.”

“The boys said it looked just like her,” murmured May reminiscently.

Tad and Pete, who had gone to join the cheerers below, returned to
their seats, and presently Rodney returned to the substitutes’ bench
just as the teams trotted back on the field, the water spouting under
their feet.

It was evident soon after the third period began that Coach Cotting had
decided to play a defensive game and take as few risks of injury to his
players as possible. Gordon punted as soon as the ball went into Maple
Hill’s possession, and after that Stacey invariably called for a kick
on second or third down. The punting game was not ill advised, either,
for with a wet ball and a slippery field fumbles by the opposing backs
might well be looked for. They came, too, but good luck attended St.
Matthew’s that day and her fumbles were always recovered before the
Maple Hill ends could get to the ball. Toward the last of the third
period the Green-and-Gray partisans were treated to an anxious
three minutes. Using a shift formation that was hard to meet, St.
Matthew’s took the ball from her own forty-five yard line by successive
rushes down to Maple Hill’s twenty-seven. There, with the stands
imploring Maple Hill to, “Hold them!” and Watson begging the team to
get together, a fumble by the St. Matthew’s quarter lost two yards,
although the ball was recovered by a back, and another try netted but
a fraction of a yard, Kitty and Pounder refusing to be budged and the
entire Green-and-Gray backfield, solving the play, piling in behind
them. There was a conference then by the St. Matthew’s quarter and the
captain, and after one or two false starts the right tackle was sent
back to try a place kick at goal. Maple Hill, however, broke through
desperately and the ball bounded away from some charging defender, and,
although a St. Matthew’s player fell upon it some ten yards up the
field, it went to Maple Hill a moment later when Peterson intercepted
a forward pass. A plunge at left tackle gained two yards, and Gordon
punted and Maple Hill’s goal was once more out of danger. The period
ended after the visitors had gained a first down with the ball near
the middle of the field in St. Matthew’s territory.

It had been a gruelling game, and more than one of Coach Cotting’s
players showed the pace. With the big game only seven days distant
it would not do to overtax his best men, and so during the short
intermission the Maple Hill lineup was considerably changed. Of the
forwards only Pounder, Kittson, and Peterson remained when the fourth
period began, while, with the exception of Gordon, an entirely new
backfield was presented. St. Matthew’s went desperately to work for a
score, and her heavy charges at the Green-and-Gray line soon began to
tell. The right side of it was weak, and most of the gains were made
there. St. Matthew’s went down to her opponent’s thirty-four yards
without losing the ball. Then there was a slip up on signals, and Kitty
wormed through and fell on the pigskin. In Maple Hill’s first play,
a double pass behind the line, Anson, who had substituted Fuller,
wrenched his knee when tackled, and when, a moment later, he tried to
run up the field under Gordon’s long punt and had to subside in a pool
of water, Cotting called him out and sent in Rodney. There remained
only some six minutes of playing time. St. Matthew’s, who had made
several changes in her line already, now put in a new backfield entire,
perhaps concluding that her chance of winning had gone by and that the
best to be had was a no score tie.

She started back with the ball, but much of her aggressiveness had
departed, and the new backfield was slow and uncertain. In spite of
that, however, she managed to keep the ball until she had gained two
first downs. Then she was set back for holding and presently punted.
The kick was poor, and Gordon, playing back, raced in with upraised
hand and made a fair catch on the forty-four yards. The Maple Hill
supporters arose and loudly demanded a touchdown and for a minute
or two it looked as though their demand might be satisfied, for two
gains outside of tackles brought a first down with the pigskin on the
thirty-two yard line. Gordon gained three straight through center,
Rodney made two on a skin tackle plunge at the left, and Gordon again
took the ball, but was stopped for no gain. It was then fourth down
with five to go, and after a conference Gordon fell back to kicking
position. But the signals told a different story and Rodney sprinted
across the field, Peterson close behind him.

“Forward pass!” cried the opposing quarter. “Look out!”

Peterson, slackening his pace, turned for the throw. Rodney met the
first of the enemy and sent him staggering aside. The ball came arching
across the field. But Gordon had thrown too far and Rodney saw that the
flying oval would pass over Peterson’s head. He stepped back, dodging a
blue stockinged enemy, heard Peterson’s warning cry as his upstretched
hands failed to grasp the ball, and got it himself, head high. In front
of him at the instant stretched an open path to the goal line. From the
stands came frenzied cries of delight, from the enemy hoarse shouts of
warning. Had Rodney started on the instant and made straight for the
goal line he would have scored, and Maple Hill would have won another
hard fought battle. But for just the instant that it took to turn the
opponent’s confusion into action Rodney hesitated. The ball should
have been Peterson’s, he realized, and by some chance it had come to
him. For an infinitesimal instant of time that thought crowded back
all others. Then he saw what was to be done and bounded off, throwing
aside a pair of clutching arms. But the hesitation cost him success.
The stretch of sod that had been empty a second before was now guarded,
and eager hands reached for him. Peterson did his best, but the enemy
was too many and Rodney was pulled to earth on the twelve yard line,
ignominiously defeated by his own inaction, by the lack of that one
factor that Terry Doyle called football instinct and Coach Cotting
termed football sense.

The game ended 0 to 0 and the teams cheered each other dispiritedly,
each feeling, doubtless, that by rights the contest should have been
its own. Not a soul spoke to Rodney of his failure. In fact, it seemed
to him that every fellow looked more kindly upon him than usual. But
he knew what had happened, knew that by just a fraction of a moment he
had lost the game for his team, and between the sounding of the final
whistle and the reaching of the gymnasium door he came to a decision.
He would resign from the team.



CHAPTER XXI

COTTING TELLS A STORY


“Stood there like a silly dummy and let St. Matthew’s jump on him,
that’s what he did!”

“Lost his head completely, Teddy! Worst case of stage fright I ever saw
on a football field!”

“Had a clear field ahead of him if he’d started on the jump. Gee, it’s
enough to sour your disposition!”

“I always said he’d never make another Ginger. Anyone can see that by
looking at him. Don’t see what the dickens Cotting kept him on for!”

“Well, he’s played a pretty fair game at times, Bill, you’ve got to say
that for him. I suppose every fellow is likely to make mistakes――――”

“Mistakes! He didn’t make any mistake; he just didn’t do
anything――until it was too late. Of course, the St. Matthew’s game
doesn’t mean much to us, although they looked such a cocky lot I’d
liked to have seen them beaten, but, if he does things like that in an
unimportant game, he’s likely to do them when we’re playing Bursley, I
guess. Best thing Cotting can do is drop him.”

This is the conversation Rodney overheard that evening in the corridor
of West Hall. He had hurried through his own supper in order to catch
Mr. Cotting before the latter left the school dining-hall, and arriving
there early, had perched himself on top of a radiator in a dim angle
of the corridor to wait. The three boys who had emerged from supper
a minute later either didn’t see him or failed to recognize him, and
their remarks lasted from the doorway to the entrance, a few yards
distant, where they stood a few moments before going their separate
ways. Rodney’s thoughts had not been pleasant before, but this
exposition of what Rodney believed to be the popular judgment left him
tingling and miserable. As little inclined as he was to be seen just
now, he left his corner and stood in the light for fear that others
might come out, and, not noticing him, give further expression of
public opinion. He was glad when Mr. Cotting emerged presently. A boy
who followed him out started toward the coach, but Rodney got ahead of
him.

“Mr. Cotting, may I speak to you, please, sir?”

The coach, slipping into his raincoat, turned.

“Hello, Merrill! Why, yes, certainly.” He put his cap on and led the
way to the entrance. Rodney was relieved to find that the three critics
had taken their departure. “Will you walk along with me toward my
place, or shall we drop into the library?”

“I’ll walk, sir. It isn’t much, what I want to say. I――――”

“Stopped raining, I guess. How do you feel after your game, Merrill?”

“All right, thanks.”

The coach took the circling path that led around Main Hall and Rodney
ranged alongside.

“I just wanted to say, sir, that――that I’ve decided to resign from the
team.”

“Have, eh?” Mr. Cotting seemed neither surprised nor disturbed.
“Decided to give up football, have you?”

“Yes, sir, for this year, anyway.”

“Think you’d like to try again next fall?”

“Yes, sir, I think so.”

“It doesn’t occur to you, does it, that I might hesitate to take you
back and give you another trial if you had run away on the eve of
battle, so to speak?”

Rodney glanced up in surprise and found the coach smiling.

“Why, sir, I thought――it seemed the best way out of it!”

“Best way out of what, Merrill?”

“Out of――out of the mess I made to-day. I lost the game, you know, sir!”

“Hardly that, Merrill. You failed to win it, but you can’t be said to
have lost it. Even if you had, though, what’s that got to do with it?
Seems to me if you made a mess of things you’d want to stick around and
see what you could do another time. Sort of weak, isn’t it, to cut and
run?”

“But――I thought――” Rodney stopped, trying to get the coach’s surprising
point of view.

“I know what you thought, Merrill.” Mr. Cotting laid a hand on the
boy’s shoulder. “You thought everyone had it in for you, that we
blamed you for the loss of the game, and that we wouldn’t want you any
longer, eh?”

“Yes, sir, about that.”

“Yes. Well, let me tell you something that happened to me, Merrill,
when I was here, and that’s a good many years ago now. I made the team
in my second year. Our game was a good deal different then from what
it is now, but we took it pretty nearly as seriously. I was rather a
clever end for a youngster, and so when we played Bursley I got in at
the beginning of the second half. In those days an end had less to do
than he has now, but he was supposed to get down under punts no matter
what else he did or didn’t do, and that was rather a specialty of mine.
I had a neat way of fooling my opponent and getting off quickly, and
once off I was hard to stop. Bursley had us six to four when the second
half began and we needed a touchdown to win. Half way through that half
we punted and I streaked down under the ball. I remember that Stallings
was our punter――he played with Princeton afterwards――and he was a
wonder. Used to get fifty yards often. This time he outdid himself,
and the Bursley quarter saw that the ball was going over his head and
started back toward his goal for it. I was after him hard and the ball
struck beyond both of us and bounded away at a funny angle toward the
side of the field. We each got to it at about the same instant. I stood
as good a chance of getting it as he did, better, I’ve always thought,
because I was rather a clever kid with a rolling ball; and if I had got
it I could have romped over the line for an easy score. Well, what do
you suppose I did, Merrill?”

Rodney shook his head.

“I tackled that quarter! I brought him down good and hard when we were
both a couple of yards from the ball, and I wound my arms around him
and held him tight. I can still remember the surprised grunt he gave
when I crashed into him. Don’t ask me why I did it! Heaven only knows,
Merrill! Call it mental aberration, that’s as good a name for it as I
know of. I did it, though. And I thought I knew football!”

“And――and what happened to the ball, sir?”

The coach shrugged his shoulders. “A Bursley man came along and picked
it up and romped back a few dozen yards with it before anyone got to
him. That ended our chance and we lost the game.”

“That was too bad,” said Rodney sympathetically.

“I thought so then. I didn’t dare look anyone in the face the rest of
that day. The coach called me all the kinds of a fool he could think
of. I didn’t mind that half as much as I minded what the fellows didn’t
say but thought! A week after I was surprised to discover that I was
holding my head up again, that the world was still turning around, and
that from a tragedy the thing had become a joke. It was a pretty sore
joke for me, but I took it many and many a time, and gritted my teeth
and smiled. Well, it took me two years to even up. The next season I
was so afraid I’d do some other fool trick that I didn’t play half the
game I could have. Every time we got into a tight place I was haunted
with the fear that I’d make another costly mistake. As a result I
played everything safe, and was probably one of the worst ends the
team ever had. I don’t know now why they kept me on. But the next year
I got together again and――I made good.”

“How, sir?”

“Oh, it’s ancient history now, Merrill. I had my chance in the Bursley
game and took it, that’s all. They said I won the game, but I didn’t
win it any more than you lost to-day’s. I’ve told you all this just
to show you, Merrill, that the world doesn’t bust up and blow away
because you make a mistake or let a chance slip in a game of football.
If it comes to that, every game that is lost can be traced to someone’s
failure at some moment in the contest, Merrill. If there were no
mistakes the game would be pretty uninteresting. We’re all human and
all likely to fall down at a critical moment some time or other. My
advice to you is, forget it, Merrill. Have you got time to come in for
a minute?”

They had reached the steps of the house in which the coach had his
rooms.

“Yes, sir, if you want me to,” replied Rodney.

He followed the other into the house, and waited at the door of the
room while Mr. Cotting found the gas jet and lighted it.

“Sit down, Merrill. Throw your coat off first. Put it anywhere. Now
then, let’s talk this thing over. Your brother and I were good friends,
my boy, and we’ve had some fine old chats in this room. You may have
wondered sometimes why I kept you on the squad when you weren’t showing
very much in the way of football, Merrill. I’m speaking quite frankly,
you see. I did it because, in spite of appearances, I had it in my head
that you could be taught the game, taught to play it――well, perhaps not
quite the way your brother did, but well enough to make it worth the
trouble. I still think so, Merrill. But there’s something wrong yet.
You haven’t found yourself. Perhaps you don’t put your whole soul into
it. Now tell me about to-day. You had the ball, the way was clear. What
went wrong?”

“I hardly know, sir. I――I wasn’t supposed to take the pass, and when
it came I――somehow I didn’t seem to know what to do for a second. And
then――it was too late.”

Mr. Cotting nodded. “I see. Mind didn’t work quick enough. Well,
that’s something that will remedy itself, I think. After all, the best
way to learn football is to play it. What you need is, I fancy, only
experience, after all. So, Merrill, I guess we won’t say anything more
about resigning.”

“Then, sir, you think――――”

“I think you’d much better stick it out. Watch the way other fellows
play the game, do the best you can when you get your chance and, above
all, don’t imagine that because your wits failed you to-day they’re
bound to do it again. I made that mistake, as I’ve told you, and wasted
a year. Perhaps you won’t get into the game next week, it’s likely your
turn won’t come; but keep on watching and learning, Merrill. We may
need you badly next year.”

Rodney tramped back toward school through the dim, leaf strewn streets
comforted and encouraged. And he made up his mind that when the next
chance came, if ever it did come, he’d be ready for it.



CHAPTER XXII

THE EVE OF BATTLE


It was surprising how nice the other Vests were to him the next few
days, Rodney thought. Old Kitty seemed to be trying, awkwardly enough,
to make him understand that nothing that had happened or that might
happen would make any difference. Jack Billings went out of the way
to be nice to him, and even Warren Hoyt, whom Rodney liked less than
any of the other Vests, showed unusual friendliness. Tad, of course,
was eagerly sympathetic and tried not to show it too much lest Rodney
resent it. Any of the fellows would have gladly discussed the incident
in Saturday’s game had Rodney introduced the subject, and would have
told him to “Forget it!” and “Buck up!” but Rodney kept silence.

But the attitude of his friends was not the attitude of the school in
general. The consensus of opinion was that Ginger Merrill’s brother
was a failure at football. “He’s a wonder in class,” said one youth,
“but he’s no good on the gridiron. It all comes of jumping to the
conclusion that because you’ve got a brother who has done wonders you
can do them yourself. What the dickens did Cotting keep Merrill on the
team for? I could show as much football as he has!”

The school did not feel unkindly toward Rodney, save perhaps for a
brief hour or two after the game was over, but it seemed to think that
Rodney had been trading on the reputation of his famous brother. Some
charged him with having worked a sort of confidence game on the usually
astute coach. And most all agreed that his usefulness to the team was
over. Consequently when they found him back at practice on Monday they
were surprised and somewhat inclined to criticism.

“He’s got Cotting hypnotized, I guess,” grumbled one fellow. “Thought
he had more sense.”

His companion shrugged his shoulders. “What’s the difference? I suppose
it’s so near the end of the season that Cotting thinks he might as
well let him stay. He can’t do any harm just practicing.”

Coach Cotting felt the loss of the second team during the first three
days of that final week of preparation. And he also doubtless felt the
absence of Terry Doyle. Doyle’s fate was still undecided, although
it was generally believed that he would be reinstated in time for
Saturday’s game. Mr. Cotting had enough candidates on hand to make two
teams for scrimmage purposes, but as each team used the same signals,
and as the players on one side were continually being shifted to the
other, the scrimmages were not especially valuable. Rodney played in
various positions on the substitute teams; left half, right half and,
on one occasion, fullback. He had no chance to distinguish himself
but played a steady game and showed a lot more fight than at any time
previously.

In the meantime disturbing accounts of Bursley’s prowess reached the
school. Bursley had played through a most successful season without a
serious upset, losing but one game of the seven, and at Maple Hill it
was conceded that she would bring over a stronger team than she had
presented for several years. The last hard work came on Wednesday. On
Thursday there was a long signal practice on the field, and on Friday
evening the fellows walked through the plays to be used against Bursley
on the morrow. This final preparation took place in the gymnasium and
after it was over Coach Cotting, according to custom, made a short
speech to the players.

“My position to-night, fellows,” he said earnestly, “is that of a
general who has marched and manoeuvered his army to its position for
the battle. To-morrow I shall be on hand to watch the fray and to
direct it to some extent, but from a distance. After the first shot is
fired it is up to you. The outcome of the battle will show whether I
have done my part well or ill, and if a defeat awaits us I shall accept
my share of the blame. But from now on, fellows, it depends on you,
individually and collectively. I’ve watched my army pretty closely for
two months, and I think I know pretty well what it is capable of. It
is weak in some places, as all armies are, but it is strong in others,
and I am firmly convinced that its strength exceeds its weakness and
that as a whole it is mighty enough to command victory. But an army is
made up of fighting units and success depends on each unit doing his
level best, fighting hard from the first gun fire to the end of the
combat. I want you to remember that.

“But, leaving out metaphors, fellows, we’ve got a hard game ahead of
us. Bursley has a good team and she’s coming across the river to-morrow
to win――that is, she’s coming to _try_ to win. Whether she does or does
not depends now on you. You may start handicapped by the absence of
your captain, although that is not certain. If you do, you’ll just have
to work all the harder. My experience has shown me that the competitor
who enters with a handicap against him is generally the one who wins.
Let’s have it that way to-morrow. Now, in spite of all my talk about
armies and battles, we both know that what we are going to do to-morrow
is play a game. There’s no harm in playing it earnestly, no harm in
doing all you can to win. Playing a game is like anything else. That
is, if it’s worth doing it’s worth doing well. But let’s remember that
it _is_ a game, fellows. Let’s play it cleanly and like gentlemen. And
if we lose, let’s lose like gentlemen. But, and I say this convincedly,
if you play as you _can_ play you won’t lose!”

Then there were cheers, sturdy, confident cheers, for the coach, and
for the second team that wasn’t there to hear, and finally for the
school. And then, a little serious, as befits the warriors on the eve
of battle, they went out and sought their rooms just as nine o’clock
was striking.

Stacey, Kitty, and Rodney walked home together through the starlighted
night. There was a sharp breath in the air that promised a brisk day
for the game. They went in silence until the lights of West Hall
greeted them through the branches of the leafless trees. Then it was
Stacey who spoke.

“Funny,” he said thoughtfully, “the feeling you always have the night
before a big game. You don’t get it any other time. At least, I never
do.”

“What sort of a feeling?” asked Kitty curiously.

Stacey laughed. “I guess I can’t tell you if you haven’t got it, Kitty.
I suppose, though, it’s a case of nerves.”

“Probably,” agreed Kitty. “That comes of poor circulation due to weak
respiration. If you developed your lungs――――”

“Help!” laughed Stacey. “Stop him, Rodney!”

“You can’t when he gets started,” replied Rodney. “I guess, though,
I know the sort of feeling you mean, even if old Leather Lungs here
doesn’t. It makes me kind of glad I’m not going to play. If I was I’d
be in a blue funk!”

“Hm,” said Stacey. “You never can tell.”

What it was you never could tell Rodney didn’t find out, for they
reached the cottage just then. Mrs. Westcott came out of her room to
inform them that she had made some cocoa for them. “You’ll find it on
the stove, Stacey. And the cups and everything are on the dining room
table. You know there’s nothing better than cocoa to give you a good
night’s sleep.”

They thanked her a trifle doubtfully, since none felt inclined for the
beverage, and, rather than disappoint her, went out to the kitchen
and bore the steaming pot of cocoa back to the dining room. It didn’t
taste so bad, after all, nor did the crackers she had provided. Stacey
explained softly that once some ten years before one of Mrs. Westcott’s
boys who was a football player had asked for a cup of cocoa the night
before a game, and that ever since she had provided it religiously.
“And,” concluded Stacey, “if you don’t drink it she feels terribly
hurt.”

“Tastes very good,” commented Kitty, “but it’s fattening. One shouldn’t
drink much of it. I’m sleepy. Good night.”

Stacey watched Kitty depart with an envious smile. “Hasn’t a nerve in
his whole body,” he said to Rodney. “I suppose he will sleep eight
solid hours to-night!”

“And snore all the time,” laughed Rodney.

Stacey sighed. “Wish I could,” he said. “Good night, Rodney.”



CHAPTER XXIII

BURSLEY ARRIVES


The Bursley game was to be started at two o’clock. At half past ten
that morning it became known that Terry Doyle, who had been missing
from his usual haunts for ten days, had caught up with his studies
and that the faculty had reinstated him. The tidings brought vast
relief and satisfaction to Maple Hill. Without Terry Doyle defeat was
possible; with him victory was assured. So argued the school. The twins
heard the news over the hedge from Tad, who, having nothing better to
do that morning, was trying to kill time by manufacturing a bow from a
section of barrel stave.

“I’m so glad!” exclaimed Matty, clapping her hands and smiling
radiantly over the hedge.

“So glad,” echoed May, equally delighted of countenance.

“Now we’ll surely win, won’t we, Tad?” continued Matty.

Tad chose to be pessimistic. “Can’t say. Maybe. They’ve got a corking
team over there at Bursley this year. You girls going?”

“Yes.” This from Matty. After a pause, “I suppose you’ll be with the
cheerers, Tad,” she added.

Tad nodded. “Have to. Sorry. I’ll take you over, though, if you’ll be
ready by one-thirty.”

“Will you? Then we’ll be ready, won’t we, May?”

“We’ll be ready,” agreed May with decision.

“Will Rod play to-day?” asked Matty, after a moment of silence spent
in watching Tad’s manipulation of his knife. Tad looked cautiously at
Rodney’s window. Then, lowering his voice:

“Not a chance,” he answered, “after what happened last Saturday. At
least, that’s what all the fellows say. Poor old Rod made an awful mess
of it, didn’t he?”

“I don’t think they ought to hold that against him,” said Matty
stoutly. “Lots of other boys have done things just as bad. Besides, he
might――might redeem himself to-day if they’d let him play.”

“Suppose he might. Then again he mightn’t. As far as I’m concerned I
wish they’d give him another show. Anyway, Cotting kept him on the
squad, and that was pretty fair.”

“What are you going to do with that?” asked May, nodding at the
implement Tad was concerned with.

“Shoot tigers,” replied the boy. “Saw a beauty last night near your
summer-house. Must have been twelve feet long from tip to tip.”

“Twelve inches, you mean,” answered Matty scathingly. “That was the
Thurston’s black and yellow cat. He comes over here to catch birds, the
old rascal. We’ll be ready at half past one, Tad. Don’t forget.”

“All right. See you later.”

The twins’ faces disappeared from above the hedge and Tad, snapping his
knife shut, went off in search of a cord.

Shortly after one o’clock Bursley came. As she had only to journey by
train or carriage down the river to Milon, a distance of something
under two miles from the school, and then cross in the ferry to
Greenridge, the trip was brief and inexpensive, and as a result
practically the entire enrollment of Bursley School, over two hundred
all told, invaded the stronghold of the enemy that morning. As the tiny
ferryboat was unable to accommodate them all on one voyage, it landed
its first contingent and then hurried back across the river, puffing
and panting importantly, and brought the rest, the first hundred or
so waiting at the landing and raiding the popcorn and peanut stands.
Finally, when they had formed into a long procession two abreast to
make more of a showing, they started off up the hill. Every boy was
armed with a small red megaphone adorned with a blue B, and through it
as he kept step, or tried to, for marching up the steep ascent of River
Street is no light task, he proclaimed over and over:

    “B, U, R, S, L, E, Y, Rah, rah, rah!
     B, U, R, S, L, E, Y, Rah, rah, rah!”

Chanting their refrain and keeping time with aching legs, they stormed
the hill. Greenridge, from the sidewalks, looked on smilingly and
occasionally waved a defiant Green-and-Gray banner in the face of the
invader. At the head of the procession two cheer leaders held a six
foot banner of red silk on which “Bursley” was blazoned in big blue
letters. Long before they reached the Y at the top of the hill their
deep, sonorous slogan had penetrated to the campus, and Maple Hill
emptied itself from dormitory and boarding-house and assembled along
the road. Bursley always turned into Academy Street and marched through
the campus on her way to the field, and always, where the driveway
separated in front of Main Hall, she paused and cheered her rival. And
to-day she made no exception. Still chanting, although with failing
voices, her “B, U, R, S, L, E, Y, Rah, rah, rah!” she followed the head
cheer leader as, waving his yard-long megaphone, he swung through the
big gate between rows of smilingly hostile faces. They were a good,
sturdy looking lot of fellows, those Bursleyans, and Jack Billings said
as much to Warren Hoyt as the two, having raced across from Westcott’s,
watched them file past.

“Not so worse,” replied Warren in his rather affected manner. “Sort of
lack class, though, it seems to me.”

Jack laughed. “You’re a beast of a snob, Warren,” he said; “or you want
fellows to think you are. You know perfectly well that those chaps are
every bit as good as we are. Now, don’t you?”

Warren raised his eyebrows languidly. “Er――theoretically,” he said.

“Theoretically! What the dickens do you mean by theoretically?”
demanded Jack. “Come on. They’re getting ready to cheer.”

Over in front of Main Hall the procession had stopped and the cheer
leaders were hurrying to positions along the line. Then:

“All ready, Bursley!” announced the chief marshal of the parade, his
big megaphone high in air. “Regular cheer for Maple Hill! One! Two!
Three!”

“_Rah, rah, rah! Rah, rah, rah! Rah, rah, rah! Maple Hill!_” shouted
two hundred voices, and a responsive “A-a-ay!” swelled from the throats
of the enemy. Then Borden, Fourth Form President and Crew Captain,
sprang to the steps and waved his arms and Maple Hill returned the
compliment. More “A-a-ays!” from both contingents, and Bursley took
up her march again, and, having in a measure recovered her breath,
started once more her reiterative chorus as she went _tramp, tramp,
tramp_ along the gravel driveway and around the end of Main Hall on
her way to the field. Maple Hill watched with grudging admiration.
Bursley made a brave showing, there was no gainsaying that. There
was a fine nonchalance in the way in which the veriest junior at the
tag-end of the procession carried himself and a sturdy self-possession
and equanimity in the faces of all. They were proud to be Burslians,
and, incongruous as that might seem at first thought, Maple Hill on
reflection felt a thrill of sympathy and understanding. Certainly those
shouting Red-and-Blue partisans had made a frightful mistake in the
choice of a school, but, having committed themselves, they were right
to stand up for it, to be proud of it and to fight for it! Many Maple
Hill hearts warmed toward the paraders as they disappeared from sight,
still chanting their “B, U, R, S, L, E, Y, Rah, rah, rah!” around the
corner of the building. There had been a few jeers from youngsters who
knew no better, and some smiles of derision as Bursley had passed, but
on the whole Maple Hill had been polite, respectful, even friendly in
a distant way. Why not? They could well afford to let Bursley have
their fun now since in two hours they would send her home defeated and
disappointed. At least, so most of Maple Hill argued.

Meanwhile Bursley went on her way, quite as convinced of a coming
victory as the enemy, and debouched onto the field and took possession
of the cheering section reserved for her on the further stand. There
many fellows, who had been unable or disinclined to attend the early
dinner at school, produced packets of sandwiches and fruit and, with
much skylarking and laughter, fortified the inner man.

At one-thirty Maple Hill assembled in front of Main Hall. They were
far fewer in numbers than Bursley, but they had the Greenridge Silver
Cornet Band to lead them, and that more than equalized matters. The
band, more enthusiastic than skilled, more vociferous than tuneful,
numbered but eight, though you’d scarcely have guessed its quota as
less than twenty had you heard it blare out a Sousa march. While the
boys hurried from all directions to form in line the band played
“Everybody’s Doing It” so inspiritingly that dignified Fourth Form
fellows clasped each other and danced hilariously over gravel and lawn
to the astonishment of First Formers and the laughter of others. At
last they were in line, four abreast, arranged by forms, Borden, armed
with a big green megaphone bearing a gray “M. H.,” in command. In front
went the Silver Cornet Band, gay in blue and gold uniforms, almost as
excited as the students, struggling hard to find the step. Then the
bass-drum sounded “Attention!” and the strains of “See Who’s Marching”
burst forth as the procession passed through the gate and straightened
itself out on Academy Street. Feet tramp-tramped in unison, the drums
thumped, the wind instruments blared and four score voices took up the
refrain:

    “See who’s marching now this way!
     You can hear the music play;
     Maple Hill is out to-day;
         See the colors flying!
     Here they come, an hundred strong,
     Cheering as they march along!
     Ev’ry voice is raised in song,
         Ev’ry voice is crying:

    “‘March, march on to victory!
     We’re the men to do or die!
     We’ve the courage and the will!
     Rah! Rah! Rah! Maple Hill!’

    “Hear the tramp of many feet
     As they march along the street,
     Keeping time to ev’ry beat
         Of the music playing!
     Hail the flag of Green-and-Gray!
     Cheer the victor of the fray!
     Maple Hill will win to-day!
         You can hear them saying:

    “‘March, march on to victory!
     We’re the men to do or die!
     We’ve the courage and the will!
     Rah! Rah! Rah! Maple Hill!’”

Into Bow Street they swung, into Arrow and, finally, into Larch,
where, opposite the gymnasium, they stopped and cheered the team,
the coach, the trainer and everyone else they could think of. Then
the drum thumped and they went on, Borden swinging his big megaphone
like a giant baton, and turned into the field. Bursley welcomed them
with long-drawn “A-a-ays!” of approval as they came in singing and
found their seats. Already the stands were well-filled with spectators
from Greenridge and Milon and nearby towns, with Old Boys back for
the game and with parents and relatives and friends. All the morning
automobiles decorated with green and gray or red and blue, had chugged
into Greenridge, and now they were honking along the road outside,
seeking the parking space at the far end of the big field. The four
cheer leaders, each armed with a big green megaphone, took up their
stations along the foot of the sloping stand and the cheering began.
Maple Hill cheered Bursley and Bursley responded through its red and
blue megaphones that lent a fine dash of color to the opposite sections.

Then the Bursley team dashed on like a lot of young colts and the
Bursley sections went wild. Blankets were thrown aside and the invading
warriors, brave in red jerseys and red and blue stockings jumped into
the field, formed into squads and tore up and down in signal practice.
A minute later the Maple Hill trainer appeared and the local partisans
cheered loudly. More cheers from the Green-and-Gray broke forth when
Tim, the rubber, appeared propelling a wheelbarrow containing a
carboy of water, a bag of footballs and a miscellaneous collection
of paraphernalia. Then there was a commotion at the gate, the cheer
leaders froze into attention with upraised hands and the Maple Hill
team burst through the crowd at the entrance. The big megaphones were
tossed aside and the four leaders, green-sweatered and bare-headed,
waved and leaped as the stand broke forth into a measured cheer that
might have been heard down at the river――and doubtless was!

Soon the gridiron was busy with the trotting squads and alive with
flying pigskins. Gordon and Tyson evoked applause by their punting, as
did also the Bursley crack. Stacey tried a few goals from placement
and at one minute past two the teams trotted back to the side lines. A
small and immaculate referee and a large and imposing umpire appeared
and the rival captains walked into the middle of the field, shook
hands and conversed a moment with the officials. Then a coin glinted
as it was tossed in air and fell to the ground. A cheer from the
further side of the field proclaimed that Bursley had won the toss. The
captains retired and the cheers began again. The linesman with his two
assistants, a green-sweatered youth and a red-sweatered one, appeared
with the chain. Maple Hill started one of the songs in her repertoire,
with the band, at the foot of the cheering section, doing its best to
follow the tune.

    “As we go marching and the band begins to p, l, a, y,
     You can hear the people shouting: ‘Maple Hill will win to-day!’
             Rah! Rah! Rah! Maple Hill!”

Doctor and Mrs. Farron, accompanied by two submasters, came on the
field just as the opposing teams scattered to their positions. A burst
of hand-clapping welcomed them. It was a well-known fact that the Head
Master wasn’t able to tell the difference between a touchdown and a
fair catch, but he attended the games when it was possible, and the
fellows appreciated it.

Bursley had chosen to receive the kick-off. As there was practically no
wind to render one goal more desirable than the other the winning of
the toss had not counted for much. The sky to-day was almost cloudless
and the thermometer in front of Main Hall had registered forty-seven at
noon. In short it was, from the point of view of player and spectator
alike, an ideal day for football. As the teams awaited the sound of
the whistle a hush fell over the stands. The Bursley players looked
fast and extremely well-conditioned, and were rangy rather than heavy.
Their center, who was to oppose the big Pounder, was a smallish youth
who looked as though he would tip the scales at not over a hundred and
forty. In spite of Tad’s disparaging criticism, the Bursley uniform
of red jerseys and red-and-blue-ringed stockings looked bright and
attractive, rather paling the quieter colors of Maple Hill. Borden,
whose green sweater held on its breast crossed oars under the gray “M.
H.,” summoned one last cheer, and as it died away on the Autumn air the
whistle shrilled and the Big Game was on!



CHAPTER XXIV

THE BATTLE IS ON


It was just 2 to 6 as the Bursley left guard stepped forward and,
swinging a long leg, sent the yellow pigskin soaring high and far down
the field. For Maple Hill Terry Doyle was back at the left of Pounder,
and Guy Watson was on the other side of the center. In the backfield
Stacey Trowbridge, doubtless secretly resolved to allow no safeties to
be made through him on this all-important occasion, was at quarter,
Tyson at left half, Fuller at right half and Gordon at full. The other
players were the same that had played the positions all season. But
the first time the Green-and-Gray ranged themselves for the attack it
was seen that Cotting had sprung a new formation. Fuller went into
the line between left guard and tackle, leaving only three players in
the backfield. To meet this extension of the line Bursley was forced
to stretch her own line thinner, with the result that Tyson on the
first play got through center without hindrance for twelve yards and
brought the cheering section on the south stand to its feet in wild
joy. But after that Bursley watched the ball more closely and, while
the new formation worked well, it did not result in any more such gains
through the center. Bursley made end runs hazardous from the first by
playing her tackles well out on defense, with her ends close to her
tackles, and these two players, one man taking the interference and the
other the runner, upset many Maple Hill attempts to skirt the wings.
The first fifteen minutes went by without a score, each team playing
desperately but experimentally. Over-eagerness brought four penalties
to Bursley and two to Maple Hill. On punting Gordon so far had excelled
his opponent, but punts had been called for only in extremities.
Neither team had shown anything really new in attack, although the
Bursley offense looked as if it might have some deceptive plays up its
sleeve.

In the second period Maple Hill tried its first forward pass, made
a twenty yard gain and immediately followed it up with another. The
second attempt went wrong, however, and Bursley got the ball. It was
from there that Bursley began to show its ability. Her attack suddenly
became fast and shifty and her backs made gain after gain through the
Green-and-Gray line, mostly on the right side. Losing the ball once on
downs, she quickly regained it on a fumble by Fuller, who had played
back, with Tyson in the line, and again began her advance. But once
beyond Maple Hill’s thirty yards it was all she could do to get her
distance in four downs and at last she was forced to try a placement
kick for goal. Luckily this went wide, and Maple Hill punted to her
adversary’s forty-five yard line. Gordon was hurt on the next play
and was taken out, Hunter replacing him for the rest of the period.
Bursley’s wide run from punt formation lost her five yards and she
was presently forced to kick. Stacey, who caught the ball on his
thirty-four yards, ran in twenty-odd before he was caught. Tyson and
Fuller taking the pigskin, Maple Hill worked her way to the center of
the field where she was held with half a yard to go on the fourth
down. Bursley began her advance once more but the whistle sounded when
the ball was near Maple Hill’s forty-five yards.

It was still anybody’s game. Bursley and Maple Hill were each confident
of ultimate victory and so the cheering and singing that began anew
when the teams had trotted, blanketed, from sight of the spectators was
as loud and hearty as ever. Bursley, with her two hundred supporters
massed along the middle of the north stand, put the local cheering
section on its merits. Their cheerfully reiterated refrain of “Bursley!
Bursley! Hi! Hi! Hi!” sung over and over to an old tune, brought
laughter and applause from across the empty gridiron. Maple Hill came
back with:

    “Cheer for the Green-and-Gray!
     Ours the victory to-day!
         Fight hard and grin, boys,
         At them and win, boys,
     Win for the Green-and-Gray!”

But the honors didn’t rest long on the south side of the field, for
Bursley had brought along a new song that captured the gathering at
once. It was a tuneful, rollicking effusion that set heels to tapping
time against the planks.

    “We’ve enjoyed our visit to you, Maple Hill;
     We’ve enjoyed your little party to the fill;
         We’ve listened to your singing
         And heard your cheers aringing,
     And we’ve liked it very much, Maple Hill.

    “You have entertained us finely, Maple Hill,
     And, though we’d love to linger with you, still,
         While we do not want to grieve you,
         It is time for us to leave you
     And to take the football home, Maple Hill!”

Maple Hill greeted the song with laughter and derisive applause,
promptly bursting into song herself and proclaiming loudly that “No
matter what you do you can’t break through the line of Green-and-Gray!”
To this challenge Bursley responded flippantly as follows: “Who are we?
We’re the team that put the ‘ill’ in Maple Hill!”

Tad and Tom Trainor went visiting during the intermission and wormed
their way up a neighboring section of the south stand to where the
twins were seated with sparkling eyes and flushed and excited faces.
Everyone talked at once without waiting for replies, criticising
the playing of the two teams, predicting victory for Maple Hill,
praising the efforts of the Westcott representatives on the eleven
and commenting on the size of the assemblage, which, according to
the twins, was easily the largest that had ever attended a Maple
Hill-Bursley contest. May wanted to know if Tad didn’t think that Jack
Billings led the cheering better than any of the other leaders and if
Tom didn’t think he looked awfully handsome. Neither youth paid the
slightest attention to the inquiries and May seemed not to expect any.
Besides, just at that instant Matty was tragically explaining what
she would do if by any unthought of, not-to-be-considered possibility
Maple Hill _didn’t_ win! And the fate she mapped out for herself was
so breath-taking that Tom found himself almost hoping for a Bursley
victory. Then the teams trotted back to the field and the boys
scampered.

Gordon was back when the third period commenced and it was Gordon
who, five minutes later, got away around the Bursley left and reeled
off thirty-eight yards and planted the pigskin almost under the
Red-and-Blue’s goal. Cotting had improved his time between halves,
it seemed, for the Bursley tackle and end had been as nicely boxed
as you please, leaving a two-yard opening for the nimble Gordon. On
Bursley’s twenty-two yards Maple Hill tried the opposing line twice for
a total gain of four yards and then sent Tyson plunging at the right
end. But this time there was no gain and a try for goal was ordered.
Stacey fell back, the ball was passed nicely and the two lines crashed
together. The quarter back dropped the pigskin, met it with his toe as
it bounded from the turf and then, staggering aside under the impact of
a Red-and-Blue player, watched it arch slowly over the bar.

Maple Hill went wild over that first score and cheered and shouted
crazily until the ball was again in flight. Bursley came back hard
and for the next ten minutes almost rushed Maple Hill off her feet.
When the whistle blew the ball was well down in Maple Hill territory,
between the thirty and thirty-five yard lines, in Bursley’s possession.

Bursley made three changes in her line up then and Maple Hill two.
For the latter a new left end and a new left tackle were substituted
and Hunter again went in at full. Gordon was pretty well played out.
When the fourth period began it was very evident that Bursley meant
to score. Twice it was only Maple Hill’s secondary defense that kept
a Bursley runner from getting clean away, while once the Red-and-Blue
captain, with the ball clutched to his breast, made a nine yard gain
around Maple Hill’s right wing.

Down near the twelve yard line, with two to go on fourth down, the
visitor’s chance of scoring looked slim, and her excited supporters
implored a field goal. But a field goal would only tie the score and
not win, and Bursley was out for everything or nothing. She didn’t even
fake a kick, but concentrated her entire attack on Watson, the fullback
carrying the ball. There was one frenzied, doubtful moment and then the
Green-and-Gray line yielded, the attack staggered and toppled ahead and
the whistle blew. It was necessary to use the tape then, but when the
measurement was made Bursley had won her distance and a first down by
several inches. The referee waved his hand to the linesmen and Bursley
broke into a cheer. Again the two teams faced each other, panting,
wearied, desperate. Again a back caught the ball to his stomach, put
down his head and plunged forward. Chaos for a moment, and then the
whistle and――――

“Second! Eight to go!” cried the referee.

A half darted past left tackle but was brought down with only a yard of
gain. “Third down; seven to go!” Then Maple Hill blundered. The Bursley
quarter took the ball, stepped back and hurled it ten yards to the
left. An end caught it and tore straight ahead for the goal line. Tyson
tried a tackle, but the end squirmed free, and when Stacey locked his
arms desperately about the runner’s body and brought him to earth only
a short foot lay between the extended pigskin and that last white line.



CHAPTER XXV

RODNEY FINDS HIMSELF


Over near the twenty-yard line, on the side of the field, Coach Cotting
squatted on one knee and watched with expressionless face. But a
pebble, picked from the turf, flew back and forth incessantly from one
hand to the other. Further along a line of blanket-draped substitutes
crouched low, their faces anxious and intent. One of these was Rodney
and one was Phineas Kittson. Kitty had twice expressed mild surprise
that his services had not been called for. I think he had almost begun
to doubt Cotting’s intelligence. But the coach redeemed himself then
and there. As the whistle shrilled he sprang alertly to his feet.

“Kittson!” he cried.

Kitty, dropping his blanket, hurried across. The coach clapped him on
the shoulder.

“Go in for Captain Doyle,” he said quietly. “And stop them where they
are, Kittson!”

Doyle, after an instant of bewildered rebellion, handed the captaincy
to Stacey Trowbridge, yielded his head-guard to Kitty and walked off,
none too steadily, to a loyal cheer from the south stand. Then a hush
fell on the field and the quarter-back’s signals sounded clearly and
ominously.

“41――21――64!” A pause, and then: “41――21――――”

There was a mad plunge, a confusion of striving bodies and then the
fateful sound of the whistle. Slowly the tangled players found their
feet. There was an instant of suspense for the watchers on the stands.
Then Bursley, jumping and waving, started back up the field and Maple
Hill ranged herself behind the posts. The ball lay squarely on the line
and the Red-and-Blue had scored a touchdown!

Two minutes later another point had been added to Bursley’s score and
the game stood 7 to 3. There was six minutes remaining when the ball
was recovered after the goal had been kicked and the teams again ranged
themselves on the field. Captain Doyle, blanketed, white of face and
dismayed, paced slowly back toward the center of the field at the
coach’s side. The ball arched up and away and the players raced toward
it. Beyond the further end of the trampled field the sun was setting in
a blaze of golden glory.

“There’s Merrill,” the coach was saying.

Terry Doyle shook his head hopelessly.

“They’ll play on the defense now,” went on Mr. Cotting. “It’s a time to
try everything we have, Terry. We can’t lose any more and we may win
something. We might put in Burnham, too.”

“All right, sir. You know best. But Tyson still looks good.”

“I know, but――Who’s got that ball? He’s down! Fumbled! Good work,
Hunter! He’s played a good game, Hunter. Well, we’ll try Merrill, I
guess. I’ll send him in after this play. Merrill!”

Rodney ran up, trailing his blanket behind him. The coach took his arm
and led him along with them as they walked. “Merrill,” he said, never
taking his eyes from the play for more than a fleeting instant, and
speaking easily and untroubledly, “do you want to go in and have a try
at it?”

“Yes, sir!” Rodney’s heart jumped into his throat.

“Well, go ahead after this play. You know you slipped up the other day,
Merrill. Maybe this is a good time to get square. What do you think?”

“Yes, sir! I’ll try, Mr. Cotting.”

The coach nodded. “I would. Tell Trowbridge I said he was to use you
and that from now on everything goes. He will understand. Get it?”

“He’s to use me and from now on everything goes,” repeated Rodney.

“Right. There’s the whistle. Go in for Tyson.”

Rodney dropped his blanket and raced on with upraised head. The teams
were on Maple Hill’s forty-five yards and already Stacey was taking his
position behind Pounder.

“Substitute for left half, sir!” cried Rodney to the referee.

Stacey rose and nodded. “You’re off, Roger,” he said. He drew back
with Rodney. “Any instructions?”

“Cotting says you’re to use me and that from now on everything goes,”
whispered Rodney.

“All right. Watch close! Got your signals pat, Rodney? Don’t miss ’em!
All right, fellows! Make this go now! Here’s where we start something!”

Rodney, pulling his head guard on, jumped to his place between guard
and tackle.

Then came the signals and he dropped back, the other half taking his
position on the opposite side. Then the ball was in play and Rodney was
snuggling it to his stomach and plunging straight ahead through a hole
that Kitty and Pounder had opened. But the Bursley backs smothered him
after a two-yard gain and he struggled to his feet again before the
whistle had ceased its shrill command. Once more he took the ball and
slid off at a tangent, by the left guard, and once more he was stopped
for a short gain. Then Hunter found a hole and went through and, with
three to go, Stacey called for kick formation and then himself took
the ball and made the distance straight through center. Maple Hill
cheered loudly.

“Line up, fellows! Quick!” shouted Stacey. “Here we go!”

And go they did. One white line after another passed under foot.
Bursley hurried in substitute after substitute, delaying the game
as much as they could. Two times out of every three the ball went
to Rodney and only once in that long advance did he fail to make a
gain. Past the enemy’s forty-five yards went the Green-and-Gray,
Stacey trying every trick in his budget and making most of them tell
against a team now largely made up of second-string players. Not that
Bursley gave way easily, for she didn’t. She fought hard, and, once
behind her forty yards, showed renewed resistance and on three plays
the Green-and-Gray made but five yards. A forward pass got the rest,
though, with an added yard for good measure and Maple Hill scented
victory.

But time was going fast. On the thirty-one yards Fortune frowned. There
was a mix-up of signals and Rodney, carrying the ball, found himself
without interference. Before he could make headway he was pinned by
relentless arms and borne back, fighting, for a three-yard loss. With
seven to go on the third down Stacey again tried a forward pass and,
although the left end received it, he was downed in his tracks for no
gain. It seemed then to be a case of kick or nothing, but a try at
goal, even if it succeeded, would still leave Maple Hill defeated.
Stacey, hesitating a minute, called for kick formation, and Hunter, who
was only an indifferent kicker, dropped back up the field. Stacey fell
to one knee to take the pass and hold the ball for a placement. But
when the pass came it was not to Stacey but to Rodney, a yard away on
his left.

“Fake! Fake!” shrieked Bursley.

But Rodney, with the entire left wing of the Maple Hill team trailing
along between him and the enemy, was racing across the gridiron. His
chance came at last, some fifteen yards from the side of the field,
and he turned squarely and shot in. There was no hesitation this time.
For an instant it seemed that he was racing straight into the arms of
the enemy, but Kitty hurled himself forward, there was a confused
mass of falling bodies and Rodney sprang across and was free for the
instant. But the Bursley quarter was awaiting him and Bursley foemen
were in pursuit. His interference now had been outstripped and he was
alone. The quarter feinted to the right, Rodney countered to the left,
a hand grasped at his jacket and fell away as he spun the quarter, and
then, with two red-stockinged players groping for holds, he tore across
the last white line, stumbled, picked himself up and went on and,
finally with two Bursley men dragging him down, subsided behind the
nearer post!

When they pulled him to his feet, a little limp, but quite unhurt and
quite ready to try it all over again, it was Guy Watson who threw his
arms about him and hugged him, Watson with a face one great grin and
eyes with tears in them!

“Kid, you’re a wonder!” said Watson. “You――you’re _all right_!”

After that it was all very confused. Rodney trotted back up the field
and someone, he never remembered who, tried for goal and missed it
badly. And then the teams lined up again and, after the first play,
the final whistle blew and he was trying to make his way through the
crowd that suddenly flooded the field. Hands seized him and arms lifted
him aloft and he went swaying uncertainly about on the shoulders of
three shrieking, happy youths whom he didn’t even know by sight. Once,
as they passed the almost deserted south stand he caught sight of the
twins, waving, laughing. One of them――he never knew whether it was
Matty or May――blew him a kiss. Then he lost sight of them again. Cheers
filled the air. Swaying unsteadily, following a line of other captured
players, Rodney smiled happily. At last, he told himself, he was
something more than just the Brother of a Hero!

[Illustration: “Hands seized him and arms lifted him aloft”]


THE END



 Transcriber’s Notes:

 ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).

 ――Except for the frontispiece, illustrations have been moved to
   follow the text that they illustrate.

 ――Printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently
   corrected.

 ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.

 ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Brother of a Hero" ***

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