Dink returned to his room in a rage against everything and every one,at Slugger Jones for having submitted the question, at Tough McCarty for having looked as though he expected a lie, and at himself for ever having acted as linesman.
If it had not been the last days before the Andover match he would have found some consolation in rushing over to the Woodhull and provoking McCarty to the long-deferred fight.
"He thought I'd lie out of it," he said furiously. "He did; I saw it. I'll settle that with him, too. Now I suppose every one in this house'll be down on me; but they'd better be mighty careful how they express it."
For as he had left the field he had heard only too clearly how the Kennedy eleven, in the unreasoning passion of conflict, had expressed itself. At present, through the open window, the sounds of violent words were borne up to him from below. He approached and looked down upon the furious assembly.
"Damn me up and down, damn me all you want," he said, doubling up his fists. "Keep it up, but don't come up to me with it."
Suddenly, back of him, the door opened and shut and Dennis de Brian de Boru Finnegan stood in the room.
"I say, Dink——"
"Get out," said Stover furiously, seizing a pillow.
Finnegan precipitately retired and, placing the door between him and the danger, opened it slightly and inserted his freckled little nose.
"I say, Dink——"
"Get out, I told you!" The pillow struck the door with a bang. "I won't have any one snooping around here!"
The next instant Dennis, resolved on martyrdom, stepped inside, saying:
"I say, old man, if it'll do you any good, take it out on me."
Stover, thus defied, stopped and said:
"Dennis, I don't want to talk about it."
"All right," said Dennis, sitting down.
"And I want to be alone."
"Correct," said Dennis, who didn't budge.
They sat in moody silence, without lighting the lamp.
"Pretty tough," said Dennis at last.
Stover's answer was a grunt.
"You couldn't see it the way the umpire did, could you?"
"No, I couldn't."
"Pretty tough!"
"I suppose," said Dink finally, "the fellows are wild."
"A little—a little excited," said Dennis carefully. "It was tough—pretty tough!"
"You don't suppose I wanted that gang of muckers to win, do you?" said Stover.
"I know," said Dennis sympathetically.
The Tennessee Shad now returned from the wars, covered with mud and the more visible marks of the combat.
"Hello," he said gruffly.
"Hello," said Stover.
The Tennessee Shad went wearily to his corner and stripped for the bath.
"Well, say it," said Stover, who, in his agitation, had actually picked up a textbook and started to study. "Jump on me, why don't you?"
"I'm not going to jump on you," said the Tennessee Shad, who weakly pulled off the heavy shoes. "Only—well, you couldn't see it as the umpire did, could you?"
"No!"
"What a day—what an awful day!"
Dennis de Brian de Boru Finnegan, with great tact, rose and hesitated:
"I'm going—I—I've got to get ready for supper," he said desperately. Then he went lamelyover to Stover and held out his hand: "I know how you feel old man, but—but—I'm glad you did it!"
Whereupon he disappeared in blushing precipitation.
Stover breathed hard and tried to bring his mind to the printed lesson. The Tennessee Shad, sighing audibly, continued his ablutions, dressed and sat down.
"Dink."
"What?"
"Why did you do it?"
Then Stover, flinging down his book with an access of rage, cried out:
"Why? Because you all, every damn one of you, expected me tolie!"
The next day Stover, who had firmly made up his mind to a sort of modified ostracism, was amazed to find that over night he had become a hero. By the next morning the passion and the bitterness of the struggle having died away, the house looked at the matter in a calmer mood and one by one came to him and gripped his hand with halting, blurted words of apology or explanation.
Utterly unprepared for this development, Stover all at once realized that he had won what neither courage nor wit had been able to bring him, the something he had always longed forwithout being quite able to name it—the respect of his fellows. He felt it in the looks that followed him as he went over to chapel, in the nodded recognition of Fifth Formers, who had never before noticed him, in The Roman himself, who flunked him without satire or aggravation. And not yet knowing himself, his impulses or the strange things that lay dormant beneath the surface of his everyday life, Stover was a little ashamed, as though he did not deserve it all.
That afternoon as Dink was donning his football togs, preparing for practice, a knock came at the door which opened on a very much embarrassed delegation from the Woodhull—the Coffee-colored Angel, Cheyenne Baxter and Tough McCarty.
"I say, is that you, Dink?" said the Coffee-colored Angel.
"It is," said Stover, with as much dignity as the state of his wardrobe would permit.
"I say, we've come over from the Woodhull, you know," continued the Coffee-colored Angel, who stopped after this bit of illuminating news.
"Well, what do you want?"
"I say, that's not just it; we're sent by the Woodhull I meant to say, and we want to say, we want you to know—how white we think it was of you!"
"Old man," said Cheyenne Baxter, "we wantto thank you. What we want to tell you is how white we think it was of you."
"You needn't thank me," said Stover gruffly, pulling his leg through the football trousers. "I didn't want to do it."
The delegation stood confused, wondering how to end the painful scene.
"It was awful white!" said the Coffee-colored Angel, tying knots in his sweater.
"It certainly was," said Cheyenne.
As this brought them no further along the Coffee-colored Angel exclaimed in alarm:
"I say, Dink, will you shake hands?"
Stover gravely extended his right.
Cheyenne next clung to it, blurting out:
"Say, Dink, I wish I could make you understand—just—just how white we think it was!"
The two rushed away leaving Tough McCarty to have his say. Both stood awkwardly, frightened before the possibility of a display of sentiment.
"Look here," said Tough firmly, and then stopped, drew a long breath and continued: "Say, you and I have sort of formed up a sort of vendetta and all that sort of thing, haven't we?"
"We have."
"Now, I'm not going to call that off. I don't suppose you'd want it, either."
"No, I wouldn't!"
"We've got to have a good, old, slam-bang fight sooner or later and then, perhaps, it'll be different. I'm not coming around asking you to be friends, or anything like that sort of rot, you know, but what I want you to know is this—is this—what I want you to understand is just how darnedwhitethat was of you!"
"All right," said Stover frigidly, because he was tremendously moved and in terror of showing it.
"That's not what I wanted to say," said Tough, frowning terrifically and kicking the floor. "I mean—I say, you know what I mean, don't you?"
"All right," said Stover gruffly.
"And I say," said Tough, remembering only one line of all he had come prepared to say, "if you'll let me, Stover, I should consider it an honor to shake your hand."
Dink gave his hand, trembling a little.
"Of course you understand," said Tough who thought he comprehended Stover's silence, "of course we fight it out some day."
"All right," said Stover gruffly.
Tough McCarty went away. Dink, left alone, clad in his voluminous football trousers, sat staring at the door, clasping his hands tensely between his knees, and something inside of himwelled up, dangerously threatening his eyes—something feminine, to be choked instantly down.
He rose angrily, flung back his hair and filled his lungs. Then he stopped.
"What the deuce are they all making such a fuss for?" he said. "I only told the truth."
He struggled into his jersey, still trying to answer the problem. In his abstraction he drew a neat part in his hair before perceiving thefaux pas, he hurriedly obliterated the effete mark.
"I guess," he said, standing at the window still pondering over the new attitude toward himself—"I guess, after all, I don't know it all. Tough McCarty—well, I'll be damned!"
Saturday came all too soon and with it the arrival of the stocky Andover eleven. Dink dressed and went slowly across the campus—every step seemed an effort. Everywhere was an air of seriousness and apprehension, strangely contrasted to the gay ferment that usually announced a big game. He felt a hundred eyes on him as he went and knew what was in every one's mind. What would happen when Ned Banks would have to retire and he, little Dink Stover, weighing one hundred and thirty-eight, would have to go forth to stand at the end of the line. And because Stover had learned thelesson of football, the sacrifice for an idea, he too felt not fear but a sort of despair that the hopes of the great school would have to rest upon him, little Dink Stover, who weighed only one hundred and thirty-eight pounds.
He went quietly to the Upper, his eyes on the ground like a guilty man, picking his way through the crowds of Fifth Formers, who watched him pass with critical looks, and up the heavy stairs to Garry Cockrell's room, where the team sat quietly listening to the final instructions. He took his seat silently in an obscure corner, studying the stern faces about him, hearing nothing of Mr. Ware's staccato periods, his eyes irresistibly drawn to his captain, wondering how suddenly older he looked and grave.
By his side Ned Banks was listening stolidly and Charlie DeSoto, twisting a paper-weight in his nervous fingers, fidgeting on his chair with the longing for the fray.
"That's all," said the low voice of Garry Cockrell. "You know what you have to do. Go down to Charlie's room; I want a few words with Stover."
They went sternly and quickly, Mr. Ware with them. Dink was alone, standing stiff and straight, his heart thumping violently, waiting for his captain to speak.
"How do you feel?"
"I'm ready, sir."
"I don't know when you'll get in the game—probably before the first half is over," said Cockrell slowly. "We're going to put up to you a pretty hard proposition, youngster." He came nearer, laying his hand on Stover's shoulder. "I'm not going to talk nerve to you, young bulldog, I don't need to. I've watched you and I know the stuff that's in you."
"Thank you, sir."
"Not but what you'll need it—more than you've ever needed it before. You've no right in this game."
"I know it, sir."
"Tough McCarty won't be able to help you out much. He's got the toughest man in the line. Everything's coming at you, my boy, and you've got to stand it off, somehow. Now, listen once more. It's a game for the long head, for the cool head. You've got to think quicker, you've got to out-think every man on the field and you can do it. And remember this: No matter what happens never let up—get your man back of the line if you can, get him twenty-five yards beyond you, get him on the one-yard line,—but get him!"
"Yes, sir."
"And now one thing more. There's all sorts of ways you can play the game. You can chargein like a bull and kill yourself off in ten minutes, but that won't do. You can go in and make grandstand plays and get carried off the field, but that won't do. My boy, you've got to last out the game."
"I see, sir."
"Remember there's a bigger thing than yourself you're fighting for, Stover—it's the school, the old school. Now, when you're on the side-lines don't lose any time; watch your men, find out their tricks, see if they look up or change their footing when they start for an end run. Everything is going to count. Now, come on."
They joined the eleven below and presently, in a compact body, went out and through Memorial and the chapel, where suddenly the field appeared and a great roar went up from the school.
"All ready," said the captain.
They broke into a trot and swept up to the cheering mass. Dink remembered seeing the Tennessee Shad, in his shirt sleeves, frantically leading the school and thinking how funny he looked. Then some one pulled a blanket over him and he was camped among the substitutes, peering out at the gridiron where already the two elevens were sweeping back and forth in vigorous signal drill.
He looked eagerly at the Andover eleven.They were big, rangy fellows and their team worked with a precision and machine-like rush that the red and black team did not have.
"Trouble with us is," said the voice of Fatty Harris, at his elbow, "our team's never gotten together. The fellows would rather slug each other than the enemy."
"Gee, that fellow at tackle is a monster," said Dink, picking out McCarty's opponent.
"Look at Turkey Reiter and the Waladoo Bird," continued Fatty Harris. "Bad blood! And there's Tough McCarty and King Lentz. We're not together, I tell you! We're hanging apart!"
"Lord, will they ever begin!" said Dink, blowing on his hands that had suddenly gone limp and clammy.
"We've won the toss," said another voice. "There's a big wind, we'll take sides."
"Andover's kick-off," said Fatty Harris.
Stover sunk his head in his blanket, waiting for the awful moment to end. Then a whistle piped and he raised his head again. The ball had landed short, into the arms of Butcher Stevens, who plunged ahead for a slight gain and went down under a shock of blue jerseys.
Stover felt the warm blood return, the sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach left him,he felt, amazed, a great calm settling over him, as though he had jumped from out his own body.
"If Flash Condit can once get loose," he said quietly, "he'll score. They ought to try a dash through tackle before the others warm up. Good!"
As if in obedience to his thought Flash Condit came rushing through the line, between end and tackle, but the Andover left half-back, who was alert, caught him and brought him to the ground after a gain of ten yards.
"Pretty fast, that chap," thought Dink. "Too bad, Flash was almost clear."
"Who tackled him?" asked Fatty Harris.
"Goodhue," came the answer from somewhere. "They say he runs the hundred in ten and a fifth."
The next try was not so fortunate, the blue line charged quicker and stopped Cheyenne Baxter without a gain. Charlie DeSoto tried a quarter-back run and some one broke through between the Waladoo Bird and Turkey Reiter.
"Not together—not together," said the dismal voice of Fatty Harris.
The signal was given for a punt and the ball lifted in the air went soaring down the field on the force of the wind. It was too long a punt for the ends to cover, and the Andover back with a good start came twisting through theterritory of Ned Banks who had been blocked off by his opponent.
"Watch that Andover end, Stover," said Mr. Ware. "Study out his methods."
"All right, sir," said Dink, who had watched no one else.
He waited breathless for the first shock of the Andover attack. It came with a rush, compact and solid, and swept back the Lawrenceville left side for a good eight yards.
"Good-by!" said Harris in a whisper.
Dink began to whistle, moving down the field, watching the backs. Another machine-like advance and another big gain succeeded.
"They'll wake up," said Dink solemnly to himself. "They'll stop 'em in a minute."
But they did not stop. Rush by rush, irresistibly the blue left their own territory and passed the forty-five yard line of Lawrenceville. Then a fumble occurred and the ball went again with the gale far out of danger, over the heads of the Andover backs who had misjudged its treacherous course.
"Lucky we've got the wind," said Dink, calm amid the roaring cheers about him. "Gee, that Andover attack's going to be hard to stop. Banks is beginning to limp."
The blue, after a few quick advances, formed and swept out toward Garry Cockrell's end.
"Three yards lost," said Dink grimly. "They won't try him often. Funny they're not onto Banks. Lord, how they can gain through the center of the line. First down again." Substitute and coach, the frantic school, alumni over from Princeton, kept up a constant storm of shouts and entreaties:
"Oh, get together!"
"Throw 'em back!"
"Hold 'em!"
"First down again!"
"Hold 'em, Lawrenceville!"
"Don't let them carry it seventy yards!"
"Get the jump!"
"There they go again!"
"Ten yards around Banks!"
Stover alone, squatting opposite the line of play, moving as it moved, coldly critical, studied each individuality.
"Funny nervous little tricks that Goodhue's got—blows on his hands—does that mean he takes the ball? No, all a bluff. What's he do when he does take it? Quiet and looks at the ground. When he doesn't take it he tries to pretend he does. I'll tuck that away. He's my man. Seems to switch in just as the interference strikes the end about ten feet beyond tackle, running low—Banks is playing too high; better, perhaps, to run in on 'em now and then beforethey get started. There's going to be trouble there in a minute. The fellows aren't up on their toes yet—what is the matter, anyhow? Tough's getting boxed right along, he ought to play out further, I should think. Hello, some one fumbled again. Who's got it? Looks like Garry. No, they recovered it themselves—no, they didn't. Lord, what a butter-fingered lot—why doesn't he get it? He has—Charlie DeSoto—clear field—can he make it?—he ought to—where's that Goodhue?—looks like a safe lead; he'll make the twenty-yard line at least—yes, fully that, if he doesn't stumble—there's that Goodhue now—some one ought to block him off, good work—that's it—that makes the touchdown—lucky—very lucky!"
Some one hit him a terrific clap on the shoulder. He looked up in surprise to behold Fatty Harris dancing about like a crazed man. The air seemed all arms, hats were rising like startled coveys of birds. Some one flung his arms around him and hugged him. He flung him off almost indignantly. What were they thinking of—that was only one touchdown—four points—what was that against that blue team and the wind at their backs, too. One touchdown wasn't going to win the game.
"Why do they get so excited?" said Dink Stover to John Stover, watching deliberatelythe ball soaring between the goalposts; "6 to 0—they think it's all over. Now's the rub."
Mr. Ware passed near him. He was quiet, too, seeing far ahead.
"Better keep warmed up, Stover," he said.
"Biting his nails, that's a funny trick for a master," thought Dink. "He oughtn't to be nervous. That doesn't do any good."
The shouts of exultation were soon hushed; with the advantage of the wind the game quickly assumed a different complexion. Andover had found the weak end and sent play after play at Banks, driving him back for long advances.
"Take off your sweater," said Mr. Ware.
Dink flung it off, running up and down the side-lines, springing from his toes.
"Why don't they take him out?" he thought angrily, with almost a hatred of the fellow who was fighting it out in vain. "Can't they see it? Ten yards more, oh, Lord! This ends it."
With a final rush the Andover interference swung at Banks, brushed him aside and swept over the remaining fifteen yards for the touchdown. A minute later the goal was kicked and the elevens again changed sides. The suddenness with which the score had been tied impressed every one—the school team seemed to have no defense against the well-massed attacks of the opponents.
"Holes as big as a house," said Fatty Harris. "Asleep! They're all asleep!"
Dink, pacing up and down, waited the word from Mr. Ware, rebelling because it did not come.
Again the scrimmage began, a short advance from the loosely-knit school eleven, a long punt with the wind and then a quick, business-like line-up of the blue team and another rush at the vulnerable end.
"Ten yards more; oh, it's giving it away!" said Fatty Harris.
Stover knelt and tried his shoelaces and rising, tightened his belt.
"I'll be out there in a moment," he said to himself.
Another gain at Banks' end and suddenly from the elevens across the field the figure of the captain rose and waved a signal.
"Go in, Stover," said Mr. Ware.
He ran out across the long stretch to where the players were moving restlessly, their clothes flinging out clouds of steam. Back of him something was roaring, cheering for him, perhaps, hoping against hope.
Then he was in the midst of the contestants, Garry Cockrell's arm about his shoulders, whispering something in his ear about keeping cool, breaking up the interference if he couldn't gethis man, following up the play. He went to his position, noticing the sullen expressions of his teammates, angry with the consciousness that they were not doing their best. Then taking his stand beyond Tough McCarty, he saw the Andover quarter and the backs turn and study him curiously. He noticed the half-back nearest him, a stocky, close-cropped, red-haired fellow, with brawny arms under his rolled-up jersey, whose duty it would be to send him rolling on the first rush.
"All ready?" cried the voice of the umpire. "First down."
The whistle blew, the two lines strained opposite each other. Stover knew what the play would be—there was no question of that. Fortunately the last two rushes had carried the play well over to his side—the boundary was only fifteen yards away. Dink had thought out quickly what he would do. He crept in closer than an end usually plays and at the snap of the ball rushed straight into the starting interference before it could gather dangerous momentum. The back, seeing him thus drawn in, instinctively swerved wide around his interference, forced slightly back. Before he could turn forward his own speed and the necessity of distancing Stover and Condit drove him out of bounds for a four-yard loss.
"Second down, nine yards to go!" came the verdict.
"Rather risky going in like that," said Flash Condit, who backed up his side.
"Wanted to force him out of bounds," said Stover.
"Oh—look out for something between tackle and guard now."
"No—they'll try the other side now to get a clean sweep at me," said Stover.
The red-haired half-back disappeared in the opposite side and, well protected, kept his feet for five yards.
"Third down, four to gain."
"Now for a kick," said Stover, as the Andover end came out opposite him. "What the deuce am I going to do to this coot to mix him up. He looks more as though he'd like to tackle me than to get past." He looked over and caught a glance from the Andover quarter. "I wonder. Why not a fake kick? They've sized me up for green. I'll play it carefully."
At the play, instead of blocking, he jumped back and to one side, escaping the end who dove at his knees. Then, rushing ahead, he stalled off the half and caught the fullback with a tackle that brought him to his feet, rubbing his side.
"Lawrenceville's ball. Time up for first half."
Dink had not thought of the time. Amazed, he scrambled to his feet, half angry at the interruption, and following the team went over to the room to be talked to by the captain and the coach.
It was a hang-dog crowd that gathered there, quailing under the scornful lashing of Garry Cockrell. He spared no one, he omitted no names. Dink, listening, lowered his eyes, ashamed to look upon the face of the team. One or two cried out:
"Oh, I say, Garry!"
"That's too much!"
"Too much, too much, is it?" cried their captain, walking up and down, striking the flat of his hand with the clenched fist. "By heavens, it's nothing to what they're saying of us out there. They're ashamed of us, one and all! Listen to the cheering if you don't believe it! They'll cheer a losing team, a team that is being driven back foot by foot. There's something glorious in that, but a team that stands up to be pushed over, a team that lies down and quits, a team that hasn't one bit of red fighting blood in it, they won't cheer; they're ashamed of you! Now, I'll tell you what's going to happen to you. You're going to be run down the field for just about four touchdowns. Here's Lentz being tossed around by a fellow that weighs forty pounds less. Why, he's the joke of the game.McCarty hasn't stopped a play, not one! Waladoo's so easy that they rest up walking through him. But that's not the worst, you're playing wide apart as though there wasn't a man within ten miles of you; not one of you is helping out the other. The only time you've taken the ball from them is when a little shaver comes in and uses his head. Now, you're not going to win this game, but by the Almighty you're going out there and going to hold that Andover team! You've got the wind against you; you've got everything against you; you've got to fight on your own goal line, not once, but twenty times. But you've got to hold 'em; you're going to make good; you're going to wipe out that disgraceful, cowardly first half! You're going out there to stand those fellows off! You're going to make the school cheer for you again as though they believed in you, as though they were proud of you! You're going to do a bigger thing than beat a weaker team! You're going to fight off defeat and show that, if you can't win, you can't be beaten!"
Mr. Ware, in a professional way, passed from one to another with a word of advice: "Play lower, get the jump—don't be drawn in by a fake plunge—watch Goodhue."
But Dink heard nothing; he sat in his corner, clasping and unclasping his hands, sufferingwith the moments that separated him from the fray. Then all at once he was back on the field, catching the force of the wind that blew the hair about his temples, hearing the half-hearted welcome that went up from the school.
"Hear that cheer!" said Garry Cockrell bitterly.
From Butcher Stevens' boot the ball went twisting and veering down the field. Stover went down, dodging instinctively, hardly knowing what he did. Then as he started to spring at the runner an interferer from behind flung himself on him and sent him sprawling, but not until one arm had caught and checked his man.
McCarty had stopped the runner, when Dink sprang to his feet, wild with the rage of having missed his tackle.
"Steady!" cried the voice of his captain.
He lined up hurriedly, seeing red. The interference started for him, he flung himself at it blindly and was buried under the body of the red-haired half. Powerless to move, humiliatingly held under the sturdy body, the passion of fighting rose in him again. He tried to throw him off, doubling up his fist, waiting until his arm was free.
"Why, you're easy, kid," said a mocking voice. "We'll come again."
The taunt suddenly chilled him. Without knowing how it happened, he laughed.
"That's the last time you get me, old rooster," he said, in a voice that did not belong to him.
He glanced back. Andover had gained fifteen yards.
"That comes from losing my head," he said quietly. "That's over."
It had come, the cold consciousness of which Cockrell had spoken, strange as the second wind that surprises the distressed runner.
"I've got to teach that red-haired coot a lesson," he said. "He's a little too confident. I'll shake him up a bit."
The opportunity came on the third play, with another attack on his end. He ran forward a few steps and stood still, leaning a little forward, waiting for the red-haired back who came plunging at him. Suddenly Dink dropped to his knees, the interferer went violently over his back, something struck Stover in the shoulder and his arms closed with the fierce thrill of holding his man.
"Second down, seven yards to gain," came the welcome sound.
Time was taken out for the red-haired half-back, who had had the wind knocked out of him.
"Now he'll be more respectful," said Dink, and as soon as he caught his eye he grinned. "Red hair—I'll see if I can't get his temper."
Thus checked and to use the advantage of the wind Andover elected to kick. The ball went twisting, and, changing its course in the strengthening wind, escaped the clutches of Macnooder and went bounding toward the goal where Charlie DeSoto saved it on the twenty-five-yard line. In an instant the overwhelming disparity of the sides was apparent.
A return kick at best could gain but twenty-five or thirty yards. From now on they would be on the defensive.
Dink came in to support his traditional enemy, Tough McCarty. The quick, nervous voice of Charlie DeSoto rose in a shriek: "Now, Lawrenceville, get into this, 7—52—3."
Dink swept around for a smash on the opposite tackle, head down, eyes fastened on the back before him, feeling the shock of resistance and the yielding response as he thrust forward, pushing, heaving on, until everything piled up before him. Four yards gained.
A second time they repeated the play, making the first down.
"Time to spring a quick one through us," he thought.
But again DeSoto elected the same play.
"What's he trying to do?" said Dink. "Why don't he vary it?"
Some one hauled him out of the tangled pile. It was Tough McCarty.
"Say, our tackle's a stiff one," he said, with his mouth to Stover's ear. "You take his knees; I'll take him above this time."
Their signal came at last. Dink dove, trying to meet the shifting knees and throw him off his balance. The next moment a powerful arm caught him as he left the ground and swept him aside.
"Any gain?" he asked anxiously as he came up.
"Only a yard," said McCarty. "He got through and smeered the play."
"I know how to get him next time," said Dink.
The play was repeated. This time Stover made a feint and then dove successfully after the big arm had swept fruitlessly past. Flash Condit, darting through the line, was tackled by Goodhue and fell forward for a gain.
"How much?" said Stover, rising joyfully.
"They're measuring."
The distance was tried and found to be two feet short of the necessary five yards. The risk was too great, a kick was signaled and the ball was Andover's, just inside the center of the field.
"Now, Lawrenceville," cried the captain, "show what you're made of."
The test came quickly, a plunge between McCartyand Lentz yielded three yards, a second four. The Andover attack, with the same precision as before, struck anywhere between the tackles and found holes. Dink, at the bottom of almost every pile, raged at Tough McCarty.
"He's doing nothing, he isn't fighting," he said angrily. "He doesn't know what it is to fight. Why doesn't he break up that interference for me?"
When the attack struck his end now it turned in, slicing off tackle, the runner well screened by close interference that held him up when Stover tackled, dragging him on for the precious yards. Three and four yards at a time, the blue advance rolled its way irresistibly toward the red and black goal. They were inside the twenty-yard line now.
Cockrell was pleading with them. Little Charlie DeSoto was running along the line, slapping their backs, calling frantically on them to throw the blue back.
And gradually the line did stiffen, slowly but perceptibly the advance was cut down. Enmities were forgotten with the shadow of the goal-posts looming at their backs. Waladoo and Turkey Reiter were fighting side by side, calling to each other. Tough McCarty was hauling Stover out of desperate scrimmages, patting him on the back and calling him "good old Dink." Thefighting blood that Garry Cockrell had called upon was at last there—the line had closed and fought together.
And yet they were borne back to their fifteen-yard line, two yards at a time, just losing the fourth down.
Stover at end was trembling like a blooded terrier, on edge for each play, shrieking:
"Oh, Tough, get through—you must get through!"
He was playing by intuition now, no time to plan. He knew just who had the ball and where it was going. Out or in, the attack was concentrating on his end—only McCarty and he could stop it. He was getting his man, but they were dragging him on, fighting now for inches.
"Third down, one yard to gain!"
"Watch my end," he shouted to Flash Condit, and hurling himself forward at the starting backs dove under the knees, and grabbing the legs about him went down buried under the mass he had upset.
It seemed hours before the crushing bodies were pulled off and some one's arm brought him to his feet and some one hugged him, shouting in his ear:
"You saved it, Dink, you saved it!"
Some one rushed up with a sponge and began dabbing his face.
"What the deuce are they doing that for?" he said angrily.
Then he noticed that an arm was under his and he turned curiously to the face near him. It was Tough McCarty's.
"Whose ball is it?" he said.
"Ours."
He looked to the other side. Garry Cockrell was supporting him.
"What's the matter?" he said, trying to draw his head away from the sponge that was dripping water down his throat.
"Just a little wind knocked out, youngster—coming to?"
"I'm all right."
He walked a few steps alone and then took his place. Things were in a daze on the horizon, but not there in the field. Everything else was shut out except his duty there.
Charlie DeSoto's voice rose shrill:
"Now, Lawrenceville, up the field with it. This team's just begun to play. We've got together, boys. Let her rip!"
No longer scattered, but a unit, all differences forgot, fighting for the same idea, the team rose up and crashed through the Andover line, every man in the play, ten—fifteen yards ahead.
"Again!" came the strident cry.
Without a pause the line sprang into place,formed and swept forward. It was a privilege to be in such a game, to feel the common frenzy, the awakened glance of battle that showed down the line. Dink, side by side with Tough McCarty, thrilled with the same thrill, plunging ahead with the same motion, fighting the same fight; no longer alone and desperate, but nerved with the consciousness of a partner whose gameness matched his own.
For thirty yards they carried the ball down the field, before the stronger Andover team, thrown off its feet by the unexpected frenzy, could rally and stand them off. Then an exchange of punts once more drove them back to their twenty-five-yard line.
A second time the Andover advance set out from the fifty-yard line and slowly fought its way to surrender the ball in the shadow of the goalposts.
Stover played on in a daze, remembering nothing of the confused shock of bodies that had gone before, wondering how much longer he could hold out—to last out the game as the captain had told him. He was groggy, from time to time he felt the sponge's cold touch on his face or heard the voice of Tough McCarty in his ear.
"Good old Dink, die game!"
How he loved McCarty fighting there by his side, whispering to him:
"You and I, Dink! What if he is an old elephant, we'll put him out the play."
Still, flesh and blood could not last forever. The half must be nearly up.
"Two minutes more time."
"What was that?" he said groggily to Flash Condit.
"Two minutes more. Hold 'em now!"
It was Andover's ball. He glanced around. They were down near the twenty-five-yard line somewhere. He looked at McCarty, whose frantic head showed against the sky.
"Break it up, Tough," he said, and struggled toward him.
A cry went up, the play was halted.
"He's groggy," he heard voices say, and then came the welcome splash of the sponge.
Slowly his vision cleared to the anxious faces around him.
"Can you last?" said the captain.
"I'm all right," he said gruffly.
"Things cleared up now?"
"Fine!"
McCarty put his arm about him and walked with him.
"Oh, Dink, you will last, won't you?"
"You bet I will, Tough!"
"It's the last stand, old boy!"
"The last."
"Only two minutes more we've got to hold 'em! The last ditch, Dink."
"I'll last."
He looked up and saw the school crouching along the line—tense drawn faces. For the first time he realized they were there, calling on him to stand steadfast.
He went back, meeting the rush that came his way, half-knocked aside, half-getting his man, dragged again until assistance came. DeSoto's stinging hand slapped his back and the sting was good, clearing his brain.
Things came into clear outline once more. He saw down the line and to the end where Garry Cockrell stood.
"Good old captain," he said. "They'll not get by me, not now."
He was in every play it seemed to him, wondering why Andover was always keeping the ball, always coming at his end. Suddenly he had a shock. Over his shoulder were the goalposts, the line he stood on was the line of his own goal.
He gave a hoarse cry and went forward like a madman, parting the interference. Some one else was through; Tough was through; the whole line was through flinging back the runner. He went down clinging to Goodhue, buried undera mass of his own tacklers. Then, through the frenzy, he heard the shrill call of time.
He struggled to his feet. The ball lay scarcely four yards away from the glorious goalposts. Then, before the school could sweep them up; panting, exhausted, they gathered in a circle with incredulous, delirious faces, and leaning heavily, wearily on one another gave the cheer for Andover. And the touch of Stover's arm on McCarty's shoulder was like an embrace.
At nine o'clock that night Stover eluded Dennis de Brian de BoruFinnegan and the Tennessee Shad and went across the dusky campus, faintly lit by the low-hanging moon. Past him hundreds of gnomelike figures were scurrying, carrying shadowy planks and barrels, while gleeful voices crossed and recrossed.
"There's a whole pile back of Appleby's."
"We've got an oil barrel."
"Burn every fence in the county!"
"Who cares!"
"Where did you get that plank?"
"Up by the Rouse."
"Gee, we'll have a bonfire bigger'n the chapel!"
"More wood, Freshmen!"
"Rotten lot, those Freshmen!"
"Hold up your end, Skinny. Do you think I'm a pack mule?"
Dink pulled the brim of his hat over his eyes and slunk away, not to be recognized. He went in a roundabout way past the chapel. He had just one desire, to stand under the goalposts they had defended and to feel again the thrill.
"Who's that?" The voice was Tough McCarty's.
"It's me. It's Dink," said Stover.
"I came down here," said McCarty, appearing from under the goalposts and hesitating a little, "well, just to feel how it felt again."
"So did I."
Dink stood by the posts, taking one affectionately in his hand, and said curiously: "They tell me, Tough, we held 'em four times inside the ten-yard line."
"Four times, old boy."
"Funny I don't remember but two. Guess I was groggy."
"You didn't show it."
"It was you pulled me through, Tough."
"Rats!"
"It was. There at the last, I remember when you gripped me." As this was perilously near sentiment he stopped. "I say, how many of us tackled that fellow the last time?"
"The whole bunch. I say, Dink."
"Yes?"
"Stand out here—that's it, knee to knee. Can't you just feel it behind you?"
"Yes," said Dink, surprised that in the big body there was an imagination akin to his own. Then he said abruptly:
"Tough, I guess there won't be any fight."
"No—not after this."
"What the deuce did we get a grudge for, anyway?"
"I always liked you, Dink, but you wouldn't have it."
"I was a mean little varmint!"
"Rats! I say, Dink, we've got two years more on the old team. There's nothing going to get around our end, is there, old boy?"
"You bet there isn't!"
All at once a flame ran up the towering bonfire and belched toward the sky.
"Are you going to let them get you?" said McCarty.
"Me? Oh, Lord, no—I can't make a speech!"
"Neither can I!" said Tough mendaciously. "I wouldn't go back there for the world!"
The thin posts stood out against the sheet of flame, gaunt, rigid, imbued with a certain grandeur.
"I say, Dink," said McCarty.
"Yes?"
"I say, we're going to have some great old fights together. But, do you know, I sort of feel after all, this will be the best."
Then a chorus of thin shrieks rose about them. They started half-heartedly to run, pretending fury. A swarm of determined boyhood rushedover them and flung them kicking, struggling into the air.
"Tough McCarty and Dink Stover!"
"We've got 'em!"
"On to the bonfire!"
"They're ours!"
"Hurray!"
"Help!"
"Help! We've got McCarty and Stover!"
Boys by the score came tearing out. The little knot under Dink became a thick, black shadow, rushing forward with hilarious, triumphant shouts. Then all at once he landed all-fours on a cart before the flaming stack, greeted by fishhorns and rattles, his name shrieked out in a wild acclaim.
"Three cheers for good old Dink!"
"Three cheers for honest John Stover!"
"Three cheers for the little cuss!"
He drew himself up, fumbling at his cap, terrified at the multiplied faces that danced before his eyes.
"I say, fellows——"
"Hurray!"
"Good boy!"
"Orator!"
"I say, fellows, I don't see why you've got me up here."
"You don't!"
"We'll show you!"
"Dink, you're the finest ever!"
"You're the stuff!"
"Three cheers for good old Rinky Dink!"
"Fellows, I'm no silver-tongued orator——"
"Don't believe it!"
"You are!"
"Fellows, I haven't got anything to say——"
"That's the stuff!"
"Hurray!"
"Keep it up!"
"Oh, you bulldog!"
"Fellows, they were good——"
A derisive shout went up.
"Fellows, they were very good——"
"Yes, they were!"
"Fellows, they were re-markably good—butthey didn't beat the old school team! That's all."
He dove headlong into the crowd, unaware that he had repeated for the sixth time the stock oration of the evening.
"Good old Dink! Good old Rinky Dink!"
The cry stuck in his memory all through the jubilant night and long after, when in his delicious bed he tossed and worried over the tackles he had missed.
"It's a bully nickname—bully!" he repeated drowsily, again and again. "It sounds asthough they liked you! And Tough McCarty, what a bully chap—bully! We're going to be friends—pals—what a bully fellow! Everything is bully—everything!"
With the close of the football season and the advent of December, with its scurries of snow and sleet, what might be termed the open season for masters began.
A school of four hundred fellows is a good deal like a shaky monarchy: the football and baseball seasons akin to foreign wars; so long as they last the tranquillity of the state is secure, but with the return of peace a state of fermentation and unrest is due.
The three weeks that lead to the Christmas vacation are too filled with anticipation to be dangerous. It is the long reaches after January fifth, the period of arctic night that settles down until the passing of the muddy month of March, that tries the souls of the keepers of these caged menageries.
Since those days a humane direction has built a gymnasium to lighten the condition of servitude, preserve the health and prolong the lives of the Faculty. But at this time, with the shutting of the door on the treadmills of exercise, the young assistant master arranged his warmwrapper and slippers at the side of his bed and went to sleep with one ear raised.
Dink Stover entered this season of mischief with all the ardor and intensity of his nature, the more so because, owing to his weeks of strict training and his virtual isolation of the year before, it was all strange to him. And at that period what is forbidden, dangerous and, above all, untried, must be attempted at least once.
Now, owing to the foresight of a wise father, Dink had never been forbidden to smoke. Of a consequence when, at an early age, he practiced upon an old corncob pipe and found it violently disagreed with him, the desire abruptly ceased and, as the athletic ardor came, he consecrated his years to the duty of growing, with not the slightest regret.
But between smoking under permission and squeezing close to a cold-air ventilator, stealthily, in the pin-drop silences of the night, with frightful risks of detection, was all the difference in the world. One was a disagreeable, thoroughly unsympathetic exercise; the other was a romantic, mediæval adventure.
So when Slops Barnett, who roomed below and was the proprietor of a model air flue with direct, perpendicular draught, said to him with an air of mannishinsouciance:
"I say, old man, I've got a fat box of 'Gyptians.Glad to have you drop in to-night if you like the weed."
Dink answered with blasé familiarity:
"Why, thankee, I've been aching for just a good old coffin-nail."
He slipped down the creaking, nervous stairs, and found Slops luxuriously reclining before the ventilator, on a mattress re-enforced by yellow and green sofa pillows, that gave the whole somewhat of the devilishly dissipated effect of the scenes from Oriental lands that fascinated him on the covers of cigarette boxes.
Slops made him a sign in the deaf-and-dumb language to extinguish the light and creep to his side.
"Comfy?" said Slops, whispering from the darkness.
"Out of sight!"
"Here's the filthy weed."
"Thanks."
"Always keep the cig in front of the ventilator," said Slops, applying his lips to Dink's ear. "Get a light from mine. Talk in whispers."
Stover filled his cheeks cautiously and blew out after a sufficient period.
"You inhale?"
"Sure."
"Inhale a cigar?"
"Always."
"It's awful the way I inhale," said Slops with a melancholy sigh. "I'm undermining my constitution. Ever see my hand? Shakes worse'n jelly. Can't help it, though; can't live without the weed. I'm a regular cig fiend!"
Stover, holding his cigarette gingerly, keeping the sickly smoke at the end of his tongue, looked over at Slops' stupid little face, flashing out of the darkness at each puff. He was no longer the useless Slops Barnett, good only to fetch and carry the sweaters of the team, but Barnett, man of the world, versed in deadly practices.
"I say, Slops——"
"Hist—lower."
"I say, Slops, what would they do if they caught us?"
"Bounce us."
"For good?"
"Sure! P. D. Q."
The cigarette suddenly had a new delight to Dink. He was even tempted to inhale a small, very small puff, but immediately conquered this enthusiastic impulse.
"Isn't this the gay life, though?" said Slops carelessly.
"You bet," said Dink.
From down the flue came three distinct taps.
"That's the Gutter Pup signaling," said Slops,putting his finger over Dink's mouth. "Bundy is snooping around. Mum's the word."
Presently, as Dink sat there in the darkness, trying desperately to breathe noiselessly, the sound of slipping footsteps was heard in the hall. Slops' hand closed over his. The steps stopped directly outside their door, waited a long moment and went on.
"Bundy?" said Dink in a whisper.
"Yes."
"Why did he stop?"
"He's got me spotted. He's seen the nicotine on my finger," said Slops, showing a finger under a sudden glow of his cigarette.
A half-hour later when Dink crept up the stairs, homeward bound, he swelled with a new sensation. Yesterday was months away; then he was a boy, now that he had smoked up a cold-air ventilator, with Bundy outwitted by the door, he had aged with a jump—he must be at last a man.
The next week he added to his stature by going to P. Lentz's room for a midnight session of the national game, where, after a titanic struggle of three hours, he won the colossal sum of forty-eight cents.
Having sunk to these depths he began to listen to the Sunday sermons with a thrill of personal delight—there being not the slightestdoubt that they were directly launched at him. Sometimes he wondered how the Doctor and The Roman could remain ignorant of the extent of his debauches, his transgressions were so daring and so complete. He stood shivering up the Trenton road, under the shadow of an icy trunk, of Sunday mornings, and met Blinky, the one-eyed purveyor of illicit cigarettes and the forbidden Sunday newspapers, which had to be wrapped around his body and smuggled under a sweater.
Secretly he rubbed iodine on his fingers to simulate the vicious stain of nicotine that was such a precious ornament to Slops' squat fingers. Only one thing distressed him, and that was his invincible dislike for the cigarette itself.
Being now a celebrity, many doors were thrown invitingly open to him, invitations that flattered him, without his making a distinction. He went over to the Upper at times and into rooms where he had no business, immensely proud that he was called in to share the delights and liberties of the lords of the school.
At the Kennedy he was in constant rebellion against established precedent, constantly called below to be lectured by The Roman. In revenge for which at night he made the life of Mr. Bundy one of constant insomnia, and, by soaping the stairs or strewing tacks in the hall, seriously interferedwith that inexperienced young gentleman's nightly exercises.
The deeper he went the deeper he was determined to go; doggedly imagining that the whole Faculty, led by The Roman, were bending every effort to bring him down and convict him.
The Tennessee Shad had no inclinations toward sporting life—greatly to Stover's surprise. When Dink urged him to join the clandestine parties he only yawned in a bored way.
"Come on now, Shad, be a sport," said Dink, repeating the stock phrase.
"You're not sports," said the Tennessee Shad in languid derision, "you're bluffs. Besides, I've been all through it, two years ago. Hurry up with your dead-game sporting phase, if you've got to, but get through it; 'cause now you're nothing but a nuisance."
Dink felt considerably grieved at his roommate's flippant attitude toward his career of vice. Secretly, he felt that a word of kindly remonstrance, some friendly effort to pull him back from the frightful abyss into which he was sinking, would have been more like a friend and a roommate.
This same callous indifference to the fate of his roommate's soul so incensed Stover that, to bring before the Shad's eyes the really desperate state of his morals, he appointed a Welsh-rabbitparty in their room for the following night.
"Don't mind, do you?" he said carelessly.
"Not if I don't have to eat it!"
"It's going to be a real one," said Stover, making a distinction."
"Come off!"
"Fact. It is not going to be flavored with rootbeer, toothwash, condensed milk or russet polish; it is going to be the genuine, satisfaction guaranteed, or you get your money back."
"With beer?"
"Exactly."
"Yes, it is!"
"It is."
"Where'll you get it?"
"I have ways."
"Oh," said the Tennessee Shad sarcastically, "this is one of your real, sporting-life parties, is it?"
Stover disdained to answer.
"Is that bunch of slums going to be here?"
"Are you referring to my friends?" said Stover.
"I am," said the Tennessee Shad, "and all I ask while this feast of bacchanalian orgies is going on, is thatIbe allowed to sleep."
At eleven o'clock Stover, holding his shoes in his hand, went down the stairs to meet Slops inFatty Harris' room and thence into the outlawed night. They stole over the crinkling snow, burying their noses in their sweaters, until, having climbed several fences, they arrived behind a shed of particularly cavernous appearance.
"Make the signal," said Slops, sheltering himself behind Stover.
Blinky appeared like a monster of the night.
"Hist, Blinky, O. K.?" said Slops, who, having his shoulder to Dink's recovered his sporting manner. "Got the booze?"
"I got it," said Blinky in husky accents, with his hand behind his back. "What's youse got?"
"The cash is here all right. How many bots did you bring?"
Blinky slowly brought forward one bottle.
"What, only one?" said Slops the bacchanalian, in dismay.
"All's left," said Blinky, with a double meaning.
"How much?"
"One dollar."
"What! You robber!"
"Take it or leave it—don't care," said Blinky, who sat down and hugged the bottle to him like a baby.
They paid the extortion and slunk back.
"We'll have to cook up a story," said Dink.
"Sure!"
"Still, it's beer."
"It certainly is!"
"It's expulsion if we're caught."
"And a penal offense, don't forget that!"
Somewhat consoled by this delightful thought they cautiously tapped on Fatty Harris' window and, removing their boots, tiptoed upstairs like anarchists with a price on their heads.
In Stover's room three more desperate characters were waiting about the chafing dish, Fatty Harris, Slush Randolph and Pee-wee Norris, all determined on a life of crime—but all slightly nervous.
The Tennessee Shad, rolled into a ball on his bed, was venting his scorn with an occasional snore.
Stover held up the lonely bottle.
"Is that all?" exclaimed the three in indignant whispers.
"All, and mighty lucky to get that," said Dink valiantly. "We were chased by the constable, terrific time, pounced on us, desperate struggle, just got away with our skins."
At this a distinct snort was heard from the direction of the Tennessee Shad's bed.
"I say, isn't it rather—rather dangerous?" said Pee-wee Norris, with his ears horribly strained.
"What of it?"
"Suppose he goes to the Doctor?"
"We'll have to take the risk."
"I say, though, let's be quick about it."
An uncongenial chill began to pervade the room. Fatty Harris, as master cook, visibly hastened the operations.
The Tennessee Shad was now heard to say in a mumbled jumble:
"Hurrah for crime! Never say die, boys—dead game sports—give us a drink, bartender!"
The revelers stood at the bed looking wrathfully down at the cynic, who snored heavily and said drowsily:
"Talks in his sleep, he talks in his sleep, poor old Pol!"
"Don't pay any attention to him," said Stover angrily. "He's a cheap wit. What are you doing at the door, Pee-wee?"
"I'm listening," said Norris, turning guiltily.
"You're afraid!"
"I'm not; only let's hurry it up."
Fatty Harris, watching the swirling yellow depths of the rabbit with evident anxiety, emptied a third of the beer into it and held out the bottle, saying:
"Here, sports, fill up the glasses with the good old liquor."
When the three glasses and two toothmugs had received their exact portion of the bitterstuff, which had been allowed to foam copiously in order to eke out, the five desperadoes solemnly touched glasses and Slops Barnett, who had visited in Princeton, led them in that whispered toast that is the acme of devilment:
"Then stand by your glasses steady,This world is a world full of lies.Then here's to the dead already dead,And here's to the next man who dies!"
It was terrific. Stover, quite moved, looked about the circle, thought that Pee-wee looked the nearest to the earthworm and repeated solemnly:
"To the next man who dies."
At this moment the Tennessee Shad was heard derisively intoning:
"Ring around a rosie,Pocket full of posie.Oats, peas, beans and barley grows.Open the ring and take her inAnd kiss her when you get her in!"
They paid no heed. They felt too acutely the solemnity of life and the fleeting hour of pleasure to be deterred by even the lathery aspect of their own faces, which emerged from the suds of the beer ready for the barber.