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The Grammar School Boys in Summer Athletics, a novel by H. Irving Hancock |
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Chapter 19. Dave Darrin Flashes Fire |
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_ CHAPTER XIX. DAVE DARRIN FLASHES FIRE "That was just like you---it was so cowardly and low down!" cried Dick hotly, as he leaped to his feet. He was now near the package containing the book. Doubtless he could have snatched up the book and sprinted to safety. But that was not his way of meeting so great an affront. "Don't you get saucy!" warned Fred, edging in closer. Bert Dodge veered around so that be could attack Dick from one side. "It would be honoring you too much to talk to you in any vein," Dick retorted sarcastically. "You're a pair of the most worthless rowdies in Gridley." "Go for him, Bert!" called Ripley. "Why don't you?" sneered Dick, making a leap forward, straight at Ripley. Dodge swung in from behind, hitting Dick over the head. But Prescott's movement, in the same moment, made the blow only a glancing one. Bump! Dick landed on Fred Ripley's nose with force and weight enough to make the lawyer's son stagger. "Pound his head off, Bert!" howled Ripley putting a hand to his injured nose. But Dick wheeled just in time to avoid a treacherous blow from the rear. With all the fury of the oppressed, Prescott leaped in, planting one foot heavily on some of Bert's toes and striking a blow that landed over that indignant youth's belt-line. Bert fell back, panting. "If you two have enough now," remarked Dick more coolly, "I'll pick up my package and go on about my business." "You can wager you won't get away until we've settled with you!" snarled Dodge. "Rip, never mind your nose. Help me close in on this scamp and show him what we can do to a fellow that we don't like." In another moment Dick was the center of a cyclone, or so it felt to him. Both boys were larger and stronger, even if not quite as quick as he. They rained blows upon him. "Don't try to holler," jeered Fred Ripley. "That won't do you any good. We'll tell you when you've had enough. Take it from us and never mind your own opinions." Dick did not answer. Sore and winded, he fought with all the spirit that was in him. So busy were all three of the boys, that none of them noted the approach of a light express wagon drawn by a single horse. The driver hauled up, a few yards away, then advanced, driving whip in hand. Slash! "O-o-o-h!" yelled Fred Ripley, as he felt the whip land on his legs. Slash! slash! "Quit that, you fiend!" begged Bert Dodge, doubling up and screaming with pain. "I'll quit when I think you've had enough!" hissed Dave Darrin, his face ablaze with anger, his eyes flashing fire. Slash! slash! slash! Dave plied the whip relentlessly until he had inflicted half a dozen more blows on the legs of each High School boy. "If you try to run away," warned Dave, "either of you, I'll run after you and lay on ten times as much as I'm giving you." "Quit, now, Dave," urged Dick, running to his chum and laying a hand on Darrin's active right arm. "They've had lots---plenty. Such things as they, can't stand a man's dose." "I'm not a bit tired," retorted Dave ironically. "Besides, I rather enjoy this exercise." "We'll have you arrested, Dave Darrin!" moaned Ripley. "You will, eh?" Dave demanded, breaking away from Prescott's restraining hold and making for Fred. "No, no, no!" cried Ripley, cowering. "Yes, we will---you can wager we will!" yelled Dodge from a safer distance. "Arrested---for what?" demanded Darrin. "For assaulting us," returned Bert Dodge. "Oh, you'll catch it!" "Have I been guilty of any more of an assault than I found you fellows engaged in", Dave asked coolly. "Don't you think you'd look rather funny in court when it was known why I laid the whip over you?" "We'll get the better of you, just the same," yelled Ripley, who had now retreated to the side of his friend and felt bolder. "My father's a lawyer---the smartest in the town." "And he's also a gentleman," broke in Dick. "I wish his son took after him. As for arrest---and trouble in court---bosh! Try it on!" Prescott now walked coolly to where his little package lay, and found it uninjured. "How did you happen to come along on the wagon?" Dick asked, as Fred and Bert limped away from their Waterloo. "One of the express company's drivers was late coming back from dinner, and there was a package that had to be delivered at once," Darrin answered. "The manager offered me ten cents to make the delivery. I am glad that I took the job. Where are you going?" "In there," Prescott answered, pointing to the house. "I've got to deliver this book collect to a Mrs. Carhart." "Get up on the seat and I'll drive you in there," proposed Dave. "Though I don't believe there's any one living in the house. All the front doors and windows are boarded up." After five minutes of doorbell ringing Dick concluded that he would find no Mrs. Carhart there. "I guess I understand," nodded Prescott. "Either Dodge or Ripley must have sent that 'phone message. That was their way to get me alone where they could both handle me without much danger of interference." "It turned out finely---for them," chuckled Dave, as both boys climbed back to the seat of the wagon. "But say, do you think they could really make any trouble for me for using the whip over them?" "I don't know. I don't believe they'll try, anyway," Dick answered thoughtfully. "It wouldn't be very nice for Fred to have his father find out how his son spends his time and pocket money." Dave drove back to Main Street, letting Dick off at his corner. Down the side street a few doors and into the bookshop he hurried. "Back again?" was Mr. Prescott's greeting. "What was the matter---the volume not satisfactory!" "No such party at the address," his son answered. "But I think I can explain why the order was 'phoned in." Dick then proceeded to narrate what had happened. His father listened with growing anger. "What a low, worthless trick that was to play," he cried. "Dick, if you'll stay here and attend the store I'll step around to Mr. Ripley's office and speak to him about it. Then I'll go over to the bank and see Bert's father." "Don't, dad; please don't," begged the boy. "It seems to me that such action is highly necessary," maintained Mr. Prescott. "I hope you won't do it, dad. The best way to treat boys' rows is to let them settle among themselves. If you interfere in this matter, dad, I shall get a name among other boys for running to my father for protection. That will turn the laugh on me all over town. I'd much rather fight my own battles and take an occasional pounding." "Well, perhaps you're right about it," admitted his father thoughtfully. "At all events, I'm glad to see that your disposition is to take care of your own troubles. I won't interfere, though I am certain that Mr. Ripley would like to know something about this affair." "I already do know something about it," gravely announced a voice behind them. There stood Lawyer Ripley, who had dropped in to buy a magazine. "I shall be glad if you will tell me more about this," the lawyer went on solemnly. Gladly would Dick have gotten out of it. He was inclined to say very little, though what he did say was added to by his father. "Is this the book, in this package?" inquired Mr. Ripley, as be picked up the parcel. "Yes," nodded Mr. Prescott. "And the price?" "Four dollars." "Mr. Prescott, kindly charge this book to my account, unless I return it by Monday morning," the lawyer went on. "I shall try to see young Darrin this afternoon. Then I shall question my son when I return home. I don't consider it fair to condemn him unheard, but if I find that he had such a part in this afternoon's affair as has been described, then I shall tell him that he is bound to take goods that he has any part in ordering. In that connection, when I hand him his next allowance of pocket money, I shall keep out four dollars and hand him the book in place thereof. That ought to make him rather careful about ordering goods in which he is not really interested." "But, as I now recall the voice over the telephone," urged Mr. Prescott, "I am inclined to think that it was young Dodge's voice, disguised, that I heard." "If my son had any share in the transaction, it will make no difference," replied Lawyer Ripley very gravely. "This book will then become a part of his small library, and at his own personal expense. I thank you both. Good afternoon." "Well, of all the queer turn-overs, that's the best!" grinned Dick appreciatively, after the lawyer had gone. "Wouldn't I like to see Rip when he gets that book of ballads handed him as the larger part of his pocket allowance!" "It's certainly a clever way for his father to handle the affair," smiled Mr. Prescott. "However, in making the charge for the book I shall deduct the profit. Like yourself, son, I don't want to profit by tale-bearing. And now, why not run out and see if you can find your young friends? I don't believe I shall need you further this afternoon." Inwardly Dave Darrin was a good bit disturbed when, a few minutes later, Lawyer Ripley walked into the express office and inquired for him. Fred's father asked a good many questions, which Dave answered truthfully though reluctantly. "Assuming that the affair was as you describe, Darrin," stated the legal man at last, "I wish to thank you for teaching the young man what must have been a needed lesson." When Dave learned from Dick, a little later, the story of Fred's unintentional purchase of a four-dollar book, there was a big laugh. _ |