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And now, once more, dead silence falls upon the ring, and all eyes turn to where d.i.c.k steps lightly up and meets his man. All mark the laugh in his eye, but the knowing ones like it not.
"Steady," says Birket; "don't be too sure."
But Basil the son of Richard heeds him not, and his eyes laugh still.
This time, not Culver, but he is the pursuer, and the unknowing ones quake for their hero. Yet Culver stands as he stood before and deals his blow. Once more the new boy parries and drives home with his left.
But, alas! Culver is ready for him, while he, unprepared, with his right still up, receives the fist of Culver on his chest. And the echo falls upon the ring like distant thunder.
Where, now, is the laughter in Basil's eyes, or who can see the sunlight on Heathcote's troubled face? Who now nod their heads but the unknowing ones? and who looks grave but Birket?
As when a mountain torrent rushes down its bed with huge uproar until it meet a fiercer, leaping headlong from the cliff, and drowning the lesser din with a greater, so do the shouts for Basil the son of Richard, grow faint beneath the shouts that rise for Culver, the large of bone. Nor when "time" is called, and from the trembling knees of their seconds those two arise and stalk into the ring, does the clamour cease, till Birket, with his eye on the clock, breathes threatenings and demands it.
Then you may hear a pin fall, as Basil, stern of eye and tight of lip, stands fast and waits his man. The knowing ones look anxiously to where the solid Culver squares, and take cheer; for he is flushed and eager, and his lips are open as he walks into the fray. And Heathcote calls loud upon his hero, and Birket bids him straight "go in and win." Gosse yet again bids the solid one "hit low!" and the unknowing ones cry "two to one on Culver."
The heroes meet, and Culver, gathering up his might, makes feint at Basil's head. Up goes the wary arm of Basil, which marking, Culver smites hard and low, a villain thrust hard on the hero's belt. Whereat Gosse cries aloud "bravo!" but Heathcote rages and shouts "belt!" and would himself spring into the fray, but Birket holds him back.
For Basil's eyes flash fire, and on the distant staircase stands already Cresswell, ready to stop the fight. "A minute more," cries Birket, and the ring is still as when Etna, ready to burst, sleeps.
Then does Basil the son of Richard gather himself together and draw breath, while Culver, sure of his man, steps back for a mighty blow.
d.i.c.k sees it coming, and marks with a quick cool eye its fierce descent.
With half a step he avoids it, and as the solid form sways past he greets it right and left with well-aimed blows, which send it headlong to the dust two long yards distant.
Then, as when the swelling torrent breaks with one furious bound into the vale below, does the crowd burst into the ring, and, with mighty shouts, proclaim a victory to the light-footed son of Richard. And, behold, as they do so, the towering form of Cresswell comes in view and bears down upon the scene.
Never did swarm of mice, spying Grimalkin afar, scamper quicker to their holes than do the youths of Templeton vanish before the distant view of Cresswell. Victor and vanquished, knowing and unknowing--all but one, fade to sight, and ere the monitor can stop the fight, the fight is over.
Birket alone remained to meet the senior.
"Well," said the latter, "is it all over?"
"Rather," said the Fifth-form boy. "I'm awfully glad you didn't come sooner."
"Bless you," said Cresswell, "I've been watching it for the last five minutes, so I ought to know when to turn up."
"You have? Then you saw the finish? The youngster made as neat a job of it as I ever saw."
"It was rather pretty," said Cresswell. "He'd something to make up for, though, after making such an a.s.s of himself in the second round. By- the-way, was that last shot of Culver's below the belt?"
"It was precious close to the wind, anyhow. You leave that to me, though. I'll make that all right."
"Thanks," said the monitor. "Something ought to be said about it, or we shall have more of it. Well, I suppose they'll shake hands after a bit.
You might see to that, too. Ponty's sure to ask, and there ought to be an end of it."
When Birket, half an hour later, descended to the Den he found a revolution in active progress. d.i.c.k was the hero of the hour. His valiant stand against solid odds, his last victorious blow, but, most of all, the cowardly blow of his opponent, had suddenly raised him to a pinnacle of glory which took away his breath. Culver, despite his dress-coat, despite his exertions at levee, despite his seniority and long service, had been ignominiously deposed from office, and subjected to the rigour of rule 5 by an indignant and resentful populace. The unknowing ones, who had backed him the loudest, now answered the soonest to Heathcote's demand for retribution, and Gosse himself, who had an hour ago whispered nothing but "hit low," now denounced the coward and proclaimed his deposition.
By a single vote Culver was dethroned, and d.i.c.k, amid frantic cheers, elected president in his stead. Nor did popular clamour cease there, for Gosse was stripped of his office, too, and Heathcote unanimously chosen secretary; and, for the first time in history, the Den did homage to two week-old new boys, and called them its leaders.
It was scarcely possible that d.i.c.k, in the midst of all this glory, should remain unmoved. He tried to look modest, he tried to bear himself as though he had done nothing out of the common, he even tried to persuade himself he would rather not accept the office thrust upon him. But his heart swelled with pride, and his head grew light in its lofty atmosphere.
Nor did Birket's visit tend to sober him.
"Well, youngster," said the Fifth-form boy, "you managed it at last, then?"
"Oh, yes," said d.i.c.k, grandly, "he's not very good with his parries."
"Isn't he? He's good at coming in on your chest, my boy. Don't you be too c.o.c.ky. You're not a Tom Sayers yet."
"The last blow was below the belt, though," said d.i.c.k.
"I know. I've come to see about that."
"You needn't bother. He's been licked for it. I didn't touch him, of course, but the other fellows did."
"Kind of you. Has he apologised?"
"Oh, never mind," said d.i.c.k, forgivingly, "it doesn't matter."
"Tut! do you suppose he's got to apologise to you? I was there to see fair play, and he's to do it to me."
At any other time d.i.c.k might have felt snubbed; but now he failed to see the rebuke, and gave order grandly that Culver should be brought.
"There he is," said he, as the unhappy ex-president of the Den was conducted into his presence.
"Culver," said Birket, "you are a cad; you hit below the belt."
"No, I didn't, it was an accident," pleaded the culprit. "Please, Birket, I've been licked already."
"Stand up on that form, and tell all the fellows you apologise for doing a cowardly action and disgracing Templeton."
Culver promptly obeyed, and repeated the apology word for word.
There were loud cries for Gosse at this point, and Birket yielded to the popular demand, and ordered the ex-secretary to go through the same ceremony. Which the ex-secretary cheerfully did.
"Now then," said the Fifth-form boy, turning again to Culver, "shake hands with Richardson and make it up. You've been licked, so there's nothing left to settle."
Culver may have secretly differed from Birket on this point, but he kept his secret to himself and held out his hand. d.i.c.k took it, and gave it an honest shake. It is one of the luxuries victors enjoy, to shake the proffered hand of the vanquished, and d.i.c.k enjoyed it greatly.
"It's all made up now," said Birket, addressing the Den, "and there'd better be no more row about it, or you'll have one of the Sixth down on you, and he won't let you off as easy as I have, I can tell you."
But although the fight was over, and the breach of the peace was healed, the consequences of the fray were of much longer duration.
Their effect on d.i.c.k was not, on the whole, beneficial to that doughty young warrior. Prosperity went harder with him than adversity. As long as he had his hill to climb, his foe to vanquish, his peril to brave, d.i.c.k had the makings of a hero. But when fortune smoothed his path, when the foe lay at his feet, when the peril had pa.s.sed behind, then d.i.c.k's troubles began. Popularity turned his head, and laid him open to dangers twice as bad as those he had cleared. The more fellows cheered him, the more he craved their cheers; the more he craved their cheers, the more willing a slave he became.
"It strikes me, youngster," said Cresswell one day, when the term had turned the corner, and the Grandcourt match was beginning to loom very near in the future, "it strikes me you're not doing much good up here.
You're always fooling about with those precious juniors of yours, instead of sticking to cricket and tennis and your books. Here's young Aspinall here, ahead of you, by long chalks, in cla.s.sics, and getting a break on at tennis that'll puzzle you to pick up unless you wake up.
You can do as you like; only don't blame me if you get stuck among the louts."
For a time, this friendly advice pulled d.i.c.k up in his profitless career. The dread of being considered a "lout" by your senior is a motive which appeals forcibly to most boys; and for a week or so d.i.c.k made a feverish show of returning to his outdoor sports, and doing himself justice.
But the effort died away under the claims of the Den. Den suppers, Den concerts, Den debates, and Den conclaves always somehow managed to clash with Templeton work and play; and even Heathcote found it next to impossible to keep up his batting and his secretarial duties to the honourable fraternity.