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"End of the second period," he said, striding toward the board. "Score 11 to 0."
Groans, loud and prolonged.
The wind whistled through the Archway. The boys stuck their hands in their pockets and danced, s.h.i.+vering, but not one deserted the bulletin board. They stared at the dismal figures and a dozen versions of How It Must Have Happened were launched by imaginative spectators, attacked ruthlessly and torpedoed as improbable. The trouble with the whole matter of explaining Chancellor's Hill's two touchdowns was that the very fact of the touchdowns would, an hour ago, have seemed the last word in improbabilities. They talked and s.h.i.+vered and bantered and sang and cheered (just to keep warm) for a solid hour. Mr. Tuttle reappeared at last.
The boys surged out of the Archway into the Quadrangle to meet him.
"Score! What's the score?"
"Get back, you wild Indians!" cried the studious secretary to some importunate First Formers who were tugging at his arms. "There is no news, and I can't get Chancellor's Hill on the telephone."
There were murmurs of bewilderment. The Senior Master, tall, genial, and conspicuous for his good sense, came out of the Main Building, and suggested a run for health's sake. He tagged Runt Woods lightly and was off. With a shout the crowd followed him at a jog-trot past the Music House, past the Cottage out on to the cinder track. They jogged a quarter-mile.
As they reached the Cottage on the return trip, they saw Mr. Tuttle dancing toward them, wildly waving his arms.
The Senior Master halted his band.
"Fifteen to eleven!" shouted Mr. Tuttle ecstatically. "We win!"
The roar that followed was memorable. Eppie, the confectionery man, picking his teeth in his empty shop at the foot of the hill, threw away his toothpick and went to the kitchen to tell his wife that The Towers had won, and business for the rest of the afternoon would be brisk.
Two minutes later the jubilant invasion began. d.i.c.k Harrington was not one of the crowd that rushed, cheering down the hill. He was on probation, and Eppie's was out of bounds.
He stood in the Archway, lonely and miserable.
_Why hadn't he lied?_
The team was due back at Hainesburg, the railroad station for The Towers, at eight-thirty. One or two Sixth Formers, flushed and almost incoherent with excitement, had asked the Senior Master for permission to organize a torchlight parade.
"Sure enough! Good idea!" exclaimed the Senior Master. "Go to it! Don't burn yourselves up, don't get lost, don't get in the way of the train and don't all have apoplectic fits as my friend Andrew here is promising to do shortly if some one doesn't put an ice compress on his enthusiasm.
But go on. Give 'em a good time."
"Thank you ever so much, sir!" cried Andrew, "and I'll promise to cool off."
"Go 'way!" cried the Senior Master cheerfully. "You don't know how.
You're a perpetual human Roman candle."
"I'll hold him down, sir," said the other boy.
"Pshaw!" cried the Senior Master. "You're a Whiz-bang yourself--go 'long! Shoo!"
The boys went.
At eight, d.i.c.k Harrington made his way to the Study to ask the Senior Master whether boys "on probe" could join the triumphal procession. The Senior Master was kindly, but firm.
"Sorry, old man," he said. "Probe rules hold."
That was all. But d.i.c.k Harrington without a word went to his room on the third floor of the East Wing, stumbling on the stairs, because of the tears.
_Why_, he asked himself bitterly again and again--_why hadn't he lied?_
He crept out of his room an hour later, hearing the cheers of the returning revelers. His hallway was utterly deserted, the school was deserted. If he needed any further evidence that virtue did not pay, here it was. "_Be good and you'll be lonesome._" There was one aphorism proved, at least.
Suddenly, standing in the Quadrangle, he heard singing. Then through the bare branches he saw the glow of many torches. It was all magical and mysterious, for the wild cheering which had brought him down from his room had given way to a solemn exaltation of triumph. If he had had a hat on his head, he would have pulled it off, hearing the school song sung that way. He felt a tug at his heart and again the dimness covered his eyes because he should be fated to have no active part in that thrilling chorus of victory.
He stood quite still, swallowing hard. At the end of the first stanza, there was a "regular yell" for The Towers, as the procession turned sharply, with torches flaring, up the steep drive. He could see now that they were dragging a hay-wagon with ropes. The team was on the hay-wagon. The second stanza of the school song floated up to him, it seemed a chant drifting over from fairyland.
The procession came nearer now. The hill and the hay-wagon together proved too much for the singers and the song died off in breathless laughter and another cheer. Then somebody started to call off the score: "One--two--three--four--" to a climactic burst--"Fifteen!" The procession disappeared behind the Main Building only to reappear a minute or two later around the corner of the Office, on the other side of the Archway. d.i.c.k Harrington wished that he had enough manly pride to scorn it all and go back to his room. But he didn't, so he rushed to where the crowd was gathered and listened in rapture to the cheers and the speeches and the songs and all the wonderful stories of a wonderful game.
"Colonel" Burton was there, smiling embarra.s.sed appreciation. _He_ had won the game for The Towers, when it seemed hopelessly lost. Every one agreed to that. He made a speech, thanking everybody for everything.
_Why, oh, why_, d.i.c.k cried to himself, as he climbed three flights after "creams" a half-hour later--_Why hadn't he had the sense to lie?_
d.i.c.k Harrington crept into bed, and his roommate crept into bed. The roommate slept and d.i.c.k Harrington tried to sleep, but sleep eluded him--it seemed for hours. Perhaps it was only for fifteen or twenty minutes. Then he too slept, dreaming of torchlit chariots.
He woke and gave a low cry. Some one was sitting on his bed. He started to jump up, scared through; but a strong hand touched his shoulder and a friendly voice whispered--"It's all right, Harrie; don't be scared."
[Ill.u.s.tration: HE WOKE AND GAVE A LOW CRY. SOME ONE WAS SITTING ON HIS BED]
d.i.c.k was still half asleep and dazed. "Who are you?" he cried in an unnatural voice.
"It's Bill Burton."
"Who?" he asked, amazed.
"Bill Burton."
"You're somebody trying to fool me," d.i.c.k whispered after a pause.
"No, I'm not, Harrie," said the other's deep, rich voice. "I wanted to talk to you. I couldn't wait until to-morrow, so I got permission from Prof, and here I am."
"What makes you want to see me?" asked d.i.c.k softly. "I guess I don't understand at all. I didn't think you knew me."
"You remember yesterday in the Algebra cla.s.s?"
"You bet I remember," whispered d.i.c.k emphatically.
There was a moment's utter quiet. From away over in the direction of Chicken Hill came the sound of a rumpus in the Black Belt of Hainesburg.
Then again quiet.
Burton spoke at last, slowly and rather more softly than before. "Beaver asked you and me the same question, you remember?"
"Yes," murmured d.i.c.k, breathlessly.