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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chums of Scranton High at Ice Hockey
+by Donald Ferguson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Chums of Scranton High at Ice Hockey
+
+Author: Donald Ferguson
+
+Release Date: August 22, 2004 [EBook #13250]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHUMS OF SCRANTON HIGH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CHUMS OF SCRANTON HIGH
+
+At Ice Hockey
+
+
+
+BY
+
+DONALD FERGUSON
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD SYNDICATE PUBLISHING CO.
+
+CLEVELAND, O. NEW YORK, N.Y.
+
+
+
+
+Copyright, MCMXIX
+
+by
+
+THE WORLD SYNDICATE PUBLISHING CO.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Printed in the United States of America
+
+by
+
+THE COMMERCIAL BOOKBINDING CO.
+
+CLEVELAND, O.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I. GOOD TIMES COMING
+ II. A BULL IN THE CHINA SHOP
+ III. GIVING NICK A CHANCE
+ IV. THE HOCKEY MATCH WITH A SCRATCH SEVEN
+ V. THAD BRINGS SOME STARTLING NEWS
+ VI. NOT GUILTY
+ VII. TURNING A PAGE OF THE PAST
+ VIII. OWEN DUGDALE'S ANNOUNCEMENT
+ IX. AN ADVENTURE ON THE ROAD
+ X. THE MYSTERY DEEPENS
+ XI. A MOTHER'S SACRIFICE
+ XII. TIP SATISFIES HIS CRAVING--AND LOSES
+ XIII. THE LIVELY GAME WITH KEYPORT'S SEVEN
+ XIV. ENCOURAGING NICK
+ XV. WHERE THE SPARKS FLEW
+ XVI. AT THE DEACON'S FIRESIDE
+ XVII. A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY
+ XVIII. IN A SAFE HARBOR AT LAST
+ XIX. MEETING BELLEVILLE'S STRONG TEAM
+ XX. NICK MAKES GOOD--CONCLUSION
+
+
+
+
+THE CHUMS OF SCRANTON HIGH AT ICE HOCKEY
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+GOOD TIMES COMING
+
+Hugh looked at the big thermometer alongside the Juggins' front door
+as he came out, and the mercury was still falling steadily.
+
+"It's certainly a whole lot sharper than it was early this morning,
+Thad. Feels to me as if the first cold wave of the winter had struck
+Scranton."
+
+"The ice on our flooded baseball field, and that out at Hobson's
+mill-pond ought to be in great shape after a hard freeze to-night,
+Hugh."
+
+"We're in luck this time, chum Thad. Look at that sky, will you?
+Never a cloud in sight, and the sun going down yellow. Deacon
+Winslow, our reliable old weather prophet blacksmith, who always
+keeps a goose-bone hanging up in his smithy, to tell what sort of a
+winter we're going to get, says such a sign stands for cold and clear
+to-morrow after that kind of a sunset. Red means warmer, you know."
+
+"I only hope it keeps on for forty-eight hours more, that's all I can
+say, Hugh. This being Thursday, it would fetch us to Saturday. I
+understand they're not meaning to let a single pair of steel runners
+on the baseball park, to mark the smooth surface of the new ice,
+until Saturday morning."
+
+"Which will be a fine thing for our hockey try-out with the scratch
+Seven, eh, Thad?"
+
+"We want to test our team play before going up against the boys of
+Keyport High, that's a fact; and Scranton can put up a hard fighting
+bunch of irregulars. There are some mighty clever hockey players in
+and out of the high school, who are not on our Seven. I guess there
+ought to be a pretty lively game on Saturday; and there will be if
+several fellows I could mention line up against us."
+
+The two boys who had just left the home of a schoolmate named Horatio
+Juggins were great friends. Although Hugh Morgan had seemed to jump
+into popular leadership among the boys of Scranton, soon after his
+folks came to reside in the town, he and Thad Stevens had become
+almost inseparables.
+
+Indeed, some of the fellows often regarded them as "Damon and
+Pythias," or on occasions it might be "David and Jonathan." Both
+were of an athletic turn, and took prominent parts in all baseball
+games, and other strenuous outdoor sports indulged in by the boys of
+Scranton High; a record of which will be found in the several
+preceding books of this series, to which the new reader is referred,
+if he feels any curiosity concerning the earlier doings of this
+lively bunch.
+
+Hugh was cool and calm in times when his chum would show visible
+signs of great excitement. He had drilled himself to control his
+temper under provocation, until he felt master of himself.
+
+It was the 10th of January, and thus far the opportunities for
+skating that had come to the young people of that section of country
+where Scranton was located, had been almost nil; which would account
+for the enthusiasm of the lads when Thad announced how rapidly the
+thermometer was giving promise of a severe cold spell.
+
+Scranton had two keen rivals for athletic honors. Allandale and
+Belleville High fellows had given them a hard run of it before they
+carried off the championship pennant of the county in baseball the
+preceding summer.
+
+Then, in the late fall, there had been a wonderfully successful
+athletic tournament, inaugurated to celebrate the enclosing of the
+grounds outside Scranton with a high board-fence, and the building of
+a splendid grandstand, as well as rooms where the athletic
+participants in sports might dress in comfort.
+
+With the coming of winter the big field thus enclosed had been
+properly flooded, so that it might afford a vast amount of healthy
+recreation to all Scranton boys and girls who loved to skate.
+
+Hitherto they had been compelled to trudge all the way out to
+Hobson's mill-pond, and back, which was a long enough journey to keep
+many from ever thinking of indulging in what is, perhaps, the most
+cherished winter sport among youthful Americans.
+
+The two friends had been asked around by the Juggins boy to inspect a
+wonderful assortment of treasure trove that an old and peculiar
+uncle, with a fad for collecting curios of every description, and who
+was at present out in India, had sent to his young nephew and
+namesake.
+
+These consisted of scores of most interesting objects, besides
+several thousand rare postage stamps. Taken in all it was the
+greatest collection of stamps any of them had ever heard of. And the
+other things proved of such absorbing interest that Hugh and Thad had
+lingered until the afternoon was done, with supper not so far away
+but that they must hurry home.
+
+Thad, apparently, had something on his mind which he wished to get
+rid of, judging from the way in which he several times looked queerly
+at his chum. Finally, as if determined to speak up, he started, half
+apologetically:
+
+"Hugh, excuse me if I'm butting in where I have no business," he
+said; "but when I saw you talking so long with that town bully, Nick
+Lang, this afternoon, after we got out of school, I didn't know what
+to think. Was he threatening you about anything, Hugh? After that
+fine dressing-down you gave Nick last summer, when he forced you to
+fight him while we were out at that barn dance, I notice he keeps
+fairly mum when you're around."
+
+Hugh chuckled, as though the recollection might not be wholly
+displeasing; though, truth to tell, that was the only fight he had
+been in since coming to Scranton. Even it would not have taken place
+only that he could not stand by and see the big bully thrash most
+cruelly a weaker boy than himself.
+
+"Oh! no, you're away off in your guess, Thad," he replied
+immediately. "Fact is, instead of threats, Nick was asking a favor
+of me, for once in his life."
+
+"You don't say!" ejaculated Thad. "Well, now you've got me excited
+there's nothing left but to tell me what sort of a favor Nick would
+want of you, Hugh."
+
+"It seems that for a long time he's been admiring those old hockey
+skates of mine," continued the other. "In fact, they've grown on
+Nick so that he even condescended to ask me to _sell_ them to him for
+a dollar, which he said he'd earned by doing odd jobs, just in order
+to buy my old skates. He chanced to hear me say once that my mother
+had promised to get me the best silver-plated hockey skates on the
+market, for my next birthday, which is now only a few days off.
+That's all there was to it, Thad."
+
+"Well," commented Thad, "we all know that Nick is a boss skater, even
+on the old runners he sports, and which mebbe his dad used before
+him, they're that ancient. He can hold his own with the next one
+whenever there's any ice worth using. And as to hockey, why, if Nick
+would only play fair, which he never will, it seems because his
+nature must be warped and crooked, he could have a leading place on
+our Seven. As it is, the boys refused to stand for him in any game,
+and so he had to herd with the scratch players. Even then Mr.
+Leonard, our efficient coach and trainer, has to call him down good
+and hard for cheating, or playing off-side purposely. It's anything
+to win, with Nick."
+
+"You're painting Nick pretty true to life, Thad," agreed Hugh;
+"though I'm sorry it's so, I've got a hunch that chap, if he only
+could be reconstructed in some way or other, might be a shining mark
+in many of our athletic games."
+
+"Oh! that's hopeless, Hugh, I tell you. The leopard can't change its
+spots; and Nick Lang was born to be just the tricky bully he's always
+shown himself."
+
+Hugh shook his head, as though not quite agreeing with his chum.
+
+"Time alone will tell, Thad. There might come a sudden revolution in
+Nick's way of seeing things. I've heard of boys who were said to be
+the worst in the town taking a turn, and forging up to the head.
+It's improbable, I admit, but not impossible."
+
+"Oh! he's bad all the way through, believe me, Hugh. But did you
+sell the skates, as he wanted you to do?"
+
+"No, I told him I didn't care to," Hugh replied. "I was tempted to
+agree when he looked so bitterly disappointed; then an ugly scowl
+came over his face, and he broke away and left me; so that
+opportunity was lost. Besides, it's best not to be too sure I'm
+going to get those silver-plated skates after all, though Mom is
+looking pretty mysterious these days; and some sort of package came
+to her by express from New York the other day. She hurried it away
+before I could even see the name printed on the wrapper."
+
+"Perhaps," said Thad a bit wistfully, "you might bequeath me your old
+skates in case you do get new ones. Mine are not half as good for
+hockey. I don't blame Nick for envying you their possession; but
+then it hasn't been so much what you had on your feet that has made
+you the swift hockey player you are, but coolness of judgment,
+ability to anticipate the moves of the enemy, and a clever stroke
+that can send the puck skimming over the ice like fury."
+
+"Here, that'll do for you, Thad. No bouquets needed, thank you, all
+the same. According to my notion there are several fellows in
+Scranton my equals at hockey, and perhaps my superiors. Nick Lang,
+for instance, if only he had skates he could depend on, and which
+wouldn't threaten to trip him up in the midst of an exciting
+scrimmage."
+
+"But, see here, Hugh, you were speaking just now about a chap built
+like Nick turning over a new leaf, and making himself respected in
+the community in spite of the bad name he's always had. Honestly
+now, do you really believe that's possible? Is there such a thing as
+the regeneration of a boy who's been born bad, and always taken
+delight in doing every sort of mean thing on the calendar? I can't
+believe it."
+
+Hugh Morgan turned and gave his chum a serious look.
+
+"I've got a good mind to tell you something that's been on my mind
+lately," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+A BULL IN THE CHINA SHOP
+
+On hearing his chum say that, Thad gripped Hugh's arm.
+
+"Then get busy, Hugh," he hastened to remark. "When you start
+cogitating over things there's always something interesting on foot.
+What is it this time?"
+
+"Oh! just a little speculation I've been indulging in, Thad, and on
+the very subject we were talking about--whether a really bad man, or
+boy, for that matter, can ever turn right-about-face, and redeem
+himself. You say it's impossible; I think otherwise."
+
+"Tell me a single instance, then, Hugh."
+
+"Just what I'm meaning to do," came the ready response, "but it's in
+romance, not history; though there are just as strong instances that
+can be proven. I've heard my father mention some of them long ago.
+But it happens, Thad, that I've been reading over, for the third
+time, a book we once enjoyed together immensely. We got a splendid
+set of Victor Hugo's works lately at our house, you remember."
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed Thad, "you're referring to his _Les Miserables_, I
+guess. And now I remember how you said at the time we read it
+together that the scene where that good priest forgave the rascally
+Jean Valjean for stealing his silver candlesticks and spoons, after
+he had been so kind to him made a great impression on your mind.
+But, see here, Hugh, are you comparing that sneak Nick Lang to Jean
+Valjean, the ex-convict?"
+
+"Yes, in a way," the other replied. "The man who had been released
+from the galleys, after he had served his term for stealing a loaf
+of bread was despised by society, which shut the door in his face.
+He was like a wild beast, you remember, and hated everyone. Well, by
+degrees, Nick is finding himself in just about the same position.
+Everybody looks on him as being thoroughly bad; and so he tells
+himself that since he's got the name he might as well have the
+game."
+
+"I suppose that's about the way it goes," Thad admitted.
+
+"There's no doubt of it," Hugh told him. "Several times I remember
+we had an idea Nick meant to reform; but he went back to his old
+ways suddenly. I think people must have nagged him, and made him
+feel ugly. But I've been wondering, Thad, what if Nick could have a
+revelation about like the one that came to Jean Valjean at the time
+that splendid old priest, looking straight at the thief when the
+officers dragged him back with those silver candlesticks and spoons
+hidden under his dirty blouse, told them the men had committed no
+wrong, because he, the priest, had given the silver to him; which we
+know he _had_ done in his mind, after discovering how he had been
+robbed."
+
+Thad shook his head in a dogged fashion, as though by no means
+convinced.
+
+"I reckon you'd be just the one to try that crazy scheme, Hugh, if
+ever the chance came to you; but mark me when I say it'd all be
+wasted on Nick."
+
+"But why should you be so sure of that?" asked the other. "The
+ex-convict was pictured as the lowest of human animals. Hugo painted
+him as hating every living being, because of his own wrongs; and
+believing that there was no such thing as honor and justice among
+mankind. It was done to make his change of heart seem all the more
+remarkable; to prove that a fellow can never sink so low but that
+there _may_ be a chance for him to climb up again, if only he makes
+up his mind."
+
+Thad laughed then, a little skeptically still, it must be confessed.
+
+"Oh! that sounds all very fine, in a story, Hugh, but it'd never
+work out in real life. According to my mind that Nick Lang will go
+along to the end of the book as a bad egg. He'll fetch up in the
+penitentiary, or reform school, some of these fine days. I've heard
+Chief Wambold has declared that the next time he has anything
+connected with breaking the law on Nick he expects to take him
+before the Squire, and have him railroaded to the Reformatory; and
+he means it, too."
+
+"Well, you can hardly blame the Chief," agreed Hugh, "because Nick
+and his pals, Leon Disney and Tip Slavin, have certainly made life
+hard for the police force of Scranton for years back. Brush fires
+have been started maliciously, just to see the fire-laddies run with
+the machine and create a little excitement; orchards have been
+robbed time and again; and, in fact, dozens of pranks more or less
+serious been played night after night, all of which mischief is laid
+at the door of Nick Lang, even if much of it can't be actually
+traced there."
+
+"Of course, what you say is the exact truth, Hugh."
+
+"Give dog Tray a bad name, and he gets it right and left," chuckled
+Hugh. "I've had an idea that once in a while some of the more
+respected fellows in town may have broken loose, and gone on night
+expeditions. They felt pretty safe in doing it, because every
+citizen would believe Nick was the guilty one. But, in spite of your
+thinking my idea impossible, I'd be tempted to try it out, if ever I
+ran across the chance. It'd settle a thing I've worried over more
+than a little."
+
+No more was said on that subject, though afterwards Thad had it
+brought to his attention again, and in a peculiar way at that.
+
+The two boys separated a little further on, each heading homeward.
+
+On the following morning it was found that their predictions
+concerning the weather had been amply verified. The mercury had
+dropped away down in the tube of the thermometer, and every
+youngster had a happy look on his or her face at school, as though
+the prospect for skating brought almost universal satisfaction.
+
+Thad, with several others, had gone out to Hobson's mill-pond to try
+the new ice after high school had dismissed for the week-end. Hugh
+wanted to accompany them very much, but he had promised his mother
+to spend a couple of hours that afternoon in mending something,
+which had gone for a long time. And once his word was given Hugh
+never broke it, no matter how alluring the prospect of sport might
+be abroad.
+
+It was about half-past three in the afternoon.
+
+Hugh sat in his den amidst his prized possessions. He was working on
+his lessons so as to get them out of the way, as there was some sort
+of affair scheduled for that evening, which he meant to attend; and
+he would be too tired after skating all day on Saturday to study any
+that night, as he well knew.
+
+Several times he glanced over to where his carefully polished and
+well-sharpened skates, strapped together, lay on a side table. Each
+look caused him to shrug his shoulders a bit. He could easily
+imagine he heard the delightful clang of steel runners cutting into
+that smooth sheet of new ice out at the mill pond; and the figures
+of the happy skaters would pass before his eyes. Yes, probably Sue
+Barnes would be there, too, with her chums, Ivy Middleton and Peggy
+Noland, wondering, it might be, how he, Hugh, could deny himself
+such a glorious opportunity for the first real good skate of the
+season.
+
+Then Hugh would heave a little sigh, and apply himself harder than
+ever to his task. When he had an unpleasant thing to do he never
+allowed temptation to swerve him. And, after all, it was pretty snug
+and comfortable there in his den, Hugh told himself; besides, that
+was a long walk home for a tired fellow to take, even in good
+company.
+
+Then he heard his mother speaking to someone who must have rung the
+doorbell.
+
+"Go up to the top of the stairs, and turn to the right. You will
+find Hugh in his den, I believe. Hugh, are you there? Well, here's a
+visitor to see you."
+
+Supposing, of course, that it must be one of his close friends, who
+for some reason had not gone off skating, and wished to see him
+about some matter of importance, Hugh, after answering his mother,
+had gone on skimming the subject on which his mind just then
+happened to be set.
+
+He heard the door open, and close softly. Then someone gave a gruff
+cough. Hugh looked around and received quite a surprise.
+
+Instead of Thad Stevens, Owen Dugdale, Horatio Juggins, "Just"
+Smith, or Julius Hobson he saw--Nick Lang!
+
+"Oh, hello, Nick!" he commenced to say, a little restrained in his
+welcome; for, of course, he could give a guess that the other had
+come again to try and buy his skates, which Hugh was not much in
+favor of selling.
+
+He shoved a chair forward, determined not to be uncivil at any rate.
+After that talk with Thad about this fellow it can be understood
+that Hugh was still bent on studying Nick, with the idea of deciding
+whether he did actually have a grain of decency in his make-up, such
+as could be used as a foundation on which to build a new structure.
+
+The outlook was far from promising. Indeed, he could not remember
+ever seeing Nick look more antagonistic than just then, even though
+he tried to appear friendly.
+
+"But then," Hugh was telling himself, "I reckon now Jean Valjean was
+about as fierce looking a human wild beast as that good old priest
+had ever seen at the time he invited the ex-convict into his snug
+house, and horrified his sister by asking him to sit at table with
+them, and spend the night there under his hospitable roof."
+
+"You wanted to see me about something, did you, Nick?" he asked the
+other.
+
+Nick had dropped down on the chair. His furtive gaze went around
+the room as if it aroused his curiosity, for this was really the
+first occasion when he had ever graced Hugh's den with his company.
+
+When his eyes alighted on the coveted skates Nick's face took on an
+expressive grin. Then he turned toward Hugh, to say, almost
+whiningly:
+
+"Sure thing, Hugh. I thought mebbe I'd coax you to let me have the
+skates, if I told you I'd managed to get another half dollar by
+selling a pair of my pigeons. Here's a dollar and a half; take it,
+and gimme the runners, won't you?"
+
+His manner was intended to be ingratiating, but evidently Nick was
+so accustomed to bullying everyone with whom he came in contact that
+it was next to impossible for him to change his abusive ways. Hugh
+felt less inclined than ever to accommodate him. Under other and
+more favorable conditions he might have been tempted to promise Nick
+to hand him over the skates, _for nothing_, after he had actually
+received the expected new ones.
+
+"I'm sorry to refuse you again, Nick," Hugh said coldly; "but at
+present I have no other skates, and, as I expect to take part in a
+hockey match with the scratch Seven to-morrow, I'll need my
+runners."
+
+"But there's nothing to hinder you selling me the same, say next
+week, that I can see; unless mebbe you're just holdin' out on
+account of an old grudge against me. How about that, Hugh?"
+
+Hugh was still unconvinced.
+
+"Just now I'm not in a humor to sell the skates, Nick," he said.
+"If I change my mind, I'll let you know about it. That's final. And
+when I dispose of my skates it's my intention to _give_ them away,
+not sell them."
+
+He turned to do something at the desk where he was sitting.
+Meanwhile, Nick had shuffled away, as though meaning to leave the
+room. When Hugh looked up he was half-way through the door, and
+turning to say with a sneer:
+
+"I ain't going to forget this on you, Hugh Morgan, believe me. I
+thought I'd give you a chanct to smooth over the rough places
+between us; but I see you don't want anything to do with a feller
+who's got the reputation they give me. All right, keep your old
+skates then!"
+
+With that he hurried down the stairs. And a minute afterwards Hugh,
+happening to glance over to the table at the side of the room, made
+a startling discovery. The skates had disappeared!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+GIVING NICK A CHANCE
+
+"Why, he cribbed them after all!" Hugh exclaimed, as he jumped to his
+feet, and hurried over to the table, hardly able to believe his own
+eyes.
+
+Something caught his attention. A dirty dollar bill and a fifty cent
+silver piece lay in place of the skates. Then Nick had not exactly
+_stolen_ Hugh's property, but imagined that this forced sale might
+keep him within the law.
+
+Hugh at first flush felt indignant. He gave the money an angry look,
+as though scorning it, despite the hard work Nick may have done and
+sacrifices also made in order to build up that small amount.
+
+"Why, the contemptible scamp, I'll have to set Chief Wambold after
+him, and recover my skates!" he said, warmly for him. "Serve him
+right, too, if this is the last straw on the camel's back, to send
+him to the House of Refuge for a spell. He is a born thief, I do
+believe, and ought to be treated just like one."
+
+Hugh, aroused by the sense of injustice, and a desire to turn the
+tables on the slippery Nick, even stepped forward to snatch up his
+cap, with the full intention of hurrying out to see if he could
+overtake the thief; and, if not, continuing on until he came to the
+office of the police force. Then he stopped short with a gasp.
+
+He had suddenly remembered something. Into his mind rushed the
+details of a certain recent conversation in which he had indulged
+with his closest chum, Thad Stevens. Again he saw the picture of
+that good priest of the story, looking so benignly upon the wretched
+Jean Valjean, brought into his presence with the valuable silver
+candlesticks and spoons found in his possession, which he kept
+insisting his late host had presented him with, however preposterous
+the claim seemed.
+
+"Why, this is very nearly like that case, I declare!" ejaculated
+Hugh, almost overcome by the wonderful similarity, which seemed the
+more amazing because of the resolution he told Thad he had taken.
+
+He dropped back into his seat, with the money still gripped in his
+hand. He stared hard at it. In imagination he could see Nick, who
+never liked hard work any too well, they said, busying himself like a
+beaver, putting in coal for some neighbor, perhaps; or cleaning a
+walk off for a dime. He must have done considerable work to earn
+that first dollar.
+
+"Then after that," Hugh was saying to himself, "he sold a pair of his
+pet pigeons, and I reckon he thinks a heap of them, from all I've
+heard said. Yes, Nick must have wanted my old skates worse than he
+ever did anything in all his life. And when I refused to sell them
+to him he just thought he'd do the trading by himself. It's a queer
+way of doing business, and one the law wouldn't recognize; but, after
+all, it was an upward step for Nick Lang, when he could have taken
+the skates, and kept the cash as well. This certainly beats the
+Dutch! What ought I to do about it, I wonder? Of course, if I told
+the whole thing to mother, I suppose she'd let me have the new skates
+ahead of time; or I could borrow Kenneth Kinkaid's, because, after
+breaking his leg that way in the running race he says he isn't to be
+allowed to skate a bit this winter. But ought I let the scamp keep
+my skates?"
+
+He mused over it for several minutes, as if undecided. Then the
+sound of voices outside caught his attention. One seemed to be gruff
+and official, another whining.
+
+Hugh jumped up and stepped to a window. He could see down the street
+on which the Morgan home stood. Three persons were in sight, and
+hurrying along toward the house. One of these he recognized as his
+chum, Thad, who must have returned from Hobson's mill-pond earlier
+than he had expected. Another was the tall, attenuated Chief
+Wambold; and the party whom he was gripping by the arm--yes, it was
+none other than Hugh's late visitor, Nick Lang!
+
+"Oh, they've caught him, it seems, just like those awful police did
+poor, wicked Jean Valjean," Hugh muttered, thrilled by the sight;
+"and right now they're fetching Nick back here, to ask me if he
+wasn't lying when he said I'd sold or given him my skates!"
+
+He realized that, undoubtedly, by some strange freak of fortune Thad
+must have seen the other gloating over his prize; and recognizing the
+skates, for they were well-known to him, he had beckoned to the
+policeman who happened to be near by, with the result that Nick was
+nabbed before he realized his peril.
+
+Hugh had to decide quickly as to what he should do, for they were
+coming in through the gate even now. Once again did the wonderful
+story he had been reading flash before his mind.
+
+"I _must_ try it out!" he exclaimed suddenly, gripped by the amazing
+coincidence between this case and that so aptly described by Hugo.
+"I said I would if ever I had a chance. It worked miracles in the
+story; perhaps it may in real life, Anyway, it's going to be worth
+while, and give me a heap of enjoyment watching the result. So here
+and now I say that I've sold my skates to Nick, and that they really
+belong to him at this minute. But I reckon he'll be scared pretty
+badly when he faces me again, expecting the worst."
+
+Thad knew how to get in by the side door that opened on the back
+stairs; so he did not waste any time in ringing the bell. Now Hugh
+could hear heavy footsteps. They were coming, and the great test was
+about to be made.
+
+The door opened to admit, first of all, Thad, his face filled with
+burning indignation, and his eyes sparkling with excitement. Close
+on his heels the others also pushed into the room on the second
+floor, transformed into a genuine boy's den by pictures of healthy
+sport on the walls, besides college burgees, fishing tackle, a bass
+of three pounds that had been beautifully stuffed by Hugh himself to
+commemorate a glorious day's sport; and dozens of other things dear
+to the heart of a youth who loved the Great Outdoors as much as he
+did.
+
+Chief Wambold looked triumphant and grim. Nick fairly writhed in
+that iron clutch, and his face had assumed a sickly sallow color;
+while his eyes reminded Hugh of those of a hunted wild animal at bay,
+fear and defiance struggling for the mastery.
+
+"Stand there, you cub!" snarled the police officer, as he gave Nick a
+whirl into the room, closing the door at the same time, and planting
+his six-foot-five figure against it, to prevent such a thing as
+escape.
+
+It was quite a tableau. Hugh believed he would never forget it as
+long as he lived. But Thad, it appeared, was the first to speak.
+
+"Hugh, this skunk has gone and beat you after all!" he cried,
+pointing a scornful finger at the glowering Nick, who was eyeing Hugh
+hungrily, as if trying to decide whether or not the other would tell
+Chief Wambold to lock him up as a thief. "I chanced to see him pull
+something out that he had been hiding under his coat, and recognized
+your nickel-mounted skates. So I beckoned to Chief Wambold, and told
+him about it; he made Nick come back here to face you, and confess to
+the theft."
+
+Nick growled something half under his breath, that sounded like:
+
+"Didn't steal 'em, I tell you; I bought the skates fair and square
+from Hugh here. You're all down on me, and won't listen to a thing I
+say; that's the worst of it."
+
+The tall head of the Scranton police force held up something he had
+been carrying all the while.
+
+"Here's the skates he had, Hugh," he went on to say. "Thad tells me
+they are your property. He even showed me your initials scratched on
+each skate. Take a good look at the same, and let me know about it,
+will you, before I lug this sneak off to the lock-up. I reckon he's
+headed for the Reform School this time, sure!"
+
+At that Nick grew even more sallow than before, if such a thing were
+possible; and the fear in his eyes became almost pitiable.
+
+Hugh, meaning to make a straight job of his idea, calmly looked the
+skates over. He knew full well how Nick was watching his every
+action, trying to hug just a glimmer of hope to his heart that,
+perhaps, Hugh might be merciful, and let him off, as the skates were
+now once again in his possession. The shadow of the Reformatory
+loomed up dreadfully close to Nick Lang just then, darker than he had
+ever before imagined it could look. It terrified him, too, and
+caused him to shiver as though someone had dashed a bucket of
+ice-cold water over him unexpectedly.
+
+"Yes, I recognize these skates very well, Chief," Hugh told the
+waiting officer.
+
+"And do they belong to you, Hugh?" continued the officer, with a
+stern look at the cringing culprit near by, who weakly leaned against
+the table for support after his recent rough handling.
+
+"They _were_ my property until just ten minutes, more or less, ago,
+Chief," said Hugh, deliberately fixing Nick with his eye, so as to
+impress things on him in a way he could never forget. "Then I had an
+offer from Nick here to buy them. At first I was averse to letting
+him have them, but I changed my mind. These skates belong to Nick,
+Chief. You must set him free, and not hold this against him. He's
+going to wipe the slate clean this time and astonish folks here in
+Scranton by showing them what a fellow of his varied talents can do,
+once he sets out to go straight. And, for one, I wish him the best
+of success from the bottom of my heart. I hope you enjoy your
+skates, Nick."
+
+He held out his hand, and the astounded Nick mechanically allowed
+Hugh to squeeze his digits. But not one word could he say, simply
+stared at Hugh as though he had difficulty in understanding such
+nobility of soul; then, taking the skates, he went from the room.
+They could hear the clatter of his heels as he hurried down the
+stairs, as though afraid Hugh might yet repent and send the officer
+after him.
+
+Of course, Chief Wambold departed, shrugging his shoulders as though
+still more than half convinced there had been something crooked about
+Nick's suspicious actions.
+
+Of course Thad had to be told the whole amazing story. He shook his
+head at the conclusion, and went on record as being a doubter by
+saying:
+
+"I wish you success in your wonderful experiment, Hugh, I sure do;
+but all the same I don't believe for a minute the leopard is going to
+change its spots, or that Nick Lang, the worst boy in Scranton, can
+ever reform."
+
+Hugh would say nothing further about it, only, of course, he made
+Thad promise to keep everything secret until he gave permission to
+speak. If Nick made good this would never happen.
+
+That night Hugh had a jolly time, and it was fairly late when he
+crept into bed. As he lay there, instead of going to sleep
+immediately, he looked out of the window toward the west, where a
+bright star hung above the horizon. It seemed like a magnet to Hugh,
+who lay there and watched for its setting, all the while allowing his
+thoughts to roam back to the remarkable happening of that afternoon.
+
+"It's a toss-up, just as Thad says, whether anything worth while will
+come of my experiment," he told himself; "but, anyhow, I've given
+Nick something to think over. And if he makes the first advances
+toward me I'm bound to meet him half-way. I only hope it turns out
+like the story of Jean Valjean did. But there goes my Star of Hope
+down behind the horizon; and now I'd better be getting some sleep
+myself. All the same I'm glad I did it!"
+
+And doubtless he slept all the more soundly because of the noble
+impulse that had impelled him to save Nick Lang from the Reform
+School.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE HOCKEY MATCH WITH A SCRATCH SEVEN
+
+There was a large crowd present to watch the local hockey match that
+morning. Not only were Scranton High pupils interested, but many of
+the town folks seemed to find it convenient to stroll around to the
+field that, during the recent summer, had been the scene of bitterly
+contested baseball games.
+
+Even a number of gentlemen were on hand to criticize, and also
+applaud, according to what their judgment of the work of the young
+athletes proved to be. Some of these men had been college players,
+or, at least, interested in athletic sports. They hailed the
+awakening of Scranton along these lines most heartily. And most of
+them had only too gladly invested various sums in the up-building of
+the athletic grounds.
+
+Now that the high board-fence surrounded the large field, and the
+carefully planned clubhouse stood at the near end, the grounds had a
+business-like air. Those who knew just how to go about it had seen
+that the water was just the right depth, and this was now frozen
+almost solid. As the enclosure was limited in dimensions, it became
+apparent that half of the ice should be given over to the hockey
+players. When the game was finished the entire pond could be used by
+the general public.
+
+The "rink" had been scientifically measured off, and such lines as
+were necessary marked, after the rules of the game. The two goals in
+the center of the extreme ends were stationary, the posts having been
+rooted to the ice in some ingenious fashion, with the nets between.
+
+Hugh Morgan had been unanimously chosen to serve as leader of the
+Scranton Seven. He was admirably fitted for the position, since his
+playing was gilt-edged, his judgment sound, and he never allowed
+himself to become excited, or "rattled," no matter what the crisis.
+
+The other members of the team consisted of fellows who had done nobly
+in the stirring baseball encounters of the previous summer, and were,
+moreover, well up in the various angles of skating.
+
+By name they were as follows, and those who have read previous
+stories in this High School Series will recognize old friends in the
+list:
+
+Julius Hobson, Thad Stevens, Joe Danvers, Owen Dugdale, Horatio
+Juggins and Justin Smith, commonly known as "J. J."
+
+The scratch team consisted of some fine players in addition, boys who
+were swift on the wing and able with their hockey sticks. When the
+two teams were lined up to hear the last instructions from Mr.
+Leonard, who, being the physical instructor at Scranton High, had
+taken upon himself the duties of umpire and coach and referee all in
+one for this occasion, they stood as follows:
+
+ _Scranton High_ _Position_ _Scratch Team_
+ Stevens ......... Goal ........... Anthony McGrew
+ Hobson .......... Point .......... Frank Marshall
+ Danvers ......... Cover Point .... Dick Travers
+ Smith ........... Right End ...... Nick Lang
+ Dugdale ......... Center ......... Tom Rawlings
+ Juggins ......... Left End ....... Phil Hasty
+ Morgan .......... Rover .......... Tug Lawrence
+
+Just before the game began there was a hasty consultation among the
+players opposed to the regular team. One of their members had sent
+word he could not come up to time, as his mother had refused to let
+him play. This necessitated a change of program. A substitute must
+be found, and as they knew that Hugh's Seven already greatly
+outclassed them it was of considerable moment that they pick up a
+player who would strengthen their team, regardless of his identity.
+
+So Nick Lang had been approached and offered the position of Right
+End, a very important place for swift action and furious fighting.
+Nick had been skating quietly by himself and evidently greatly
+enjoying his new skates, which many boys recognized as the pair Hugh
+Morgan had once owned.
+
+He had hesitated just a trifle, and then agreed to fill the vacancy.
+There were those who shook their heads dismally when they saw Nick
+the trouble-maker in the line-up. Previous experiences warned them
+that the game was very likely to break up in a big row, for such had
+been the fate of many a rivalry when rough-and-ready Nick Lang
+entered the lists.
+
+But Hugh, who had secretly been the first to suggest to the captain
+of the other Seven that Nick be chosen, somehow believed the one-time
+bully of Scranton might surprise his critics for once by playing a
+straight, honest game.
+
+Hugh, of course, was mounted on his new silver skates. He had found
+little difficulty in persuading his mother to advance his birthday
+gift a few days, after telling her the whole circumstances; and it
+must be said that Mrs. Morgan approved of his plan from the bottom of
+her heart.
+
+Mr. Leonard had often had trouble with Nick in times gone by. When
+he sternly told the boys before the game was started that he meant to
+be severe in inflicting punishment and penalties for foul or off-side
+work he had Nick mostly in mind. Indeed, everyone who heard what he
+said concluded that it was meant almost entirely for the Lang chap.
+
+Nick only grinned. Those who knew him best did not find any
+encouragement about his apparent good nature. Nick could "smile, and
+smile again, and still be a villain," as some of them were fond of
+repeating.
+
+The game began, and was soon in full progress, with the players
+surging from one end of the rink to the other, according to which
+side had gained possession of the puck, and were endeavoring by every
+legitimate means possible to shoot the little rubber disc between the
+goal posts, and into the net of their opponents.
+
+It was soon seen that as a whole the Scratch Team was woefully weak.
+Hugh's players had things pretty much their own way. Before more
+than half of the first twenty-minute period had been exhausted the
+score stood five goals for Scranton High, and none to the credit of
+their opponents.
+
+Then the tactics of the Scratch Team underwent a change. The captain
+put Nick Lang forward to oppose Hugh Morgan when the puck was again
+faced for a fresh start. In a fashion truly miraculous Nick managed
+to gain possession of the rubber, and the way in which he sent it
+flying before him along the ice was well worth seeing. Many started
+to cheer, forgetting their former antipathy toward the bully.
+Despite the clever work of Hugh, and others, as well as the able
+defense of the goal-keeper, Thad Stevens, Nick succeeded in shooting
+the puck between the goal posts for a score.
+
+Hugh was ready to shake hands with himself, he felt so pleased. And
+not once so far had Mr. Leonard found occasion to reprimand Nick on
+account of foul work so flagrant that it could be no accident.
+
+Many rubbed their eyes and asked their neighbors if that could really
+be Nick Lang, the terror of Scranton, who played like a fiend, and
+yet kept well within his rights?
+
+"But just wait till something happens to upset Nick," they went on to
+say, with wise shakes of the head. "We know how he's just bound to
+carry on. It's a nice game so far, but the chances are three to one
+it'll break up in a row yet; they always do when that fellow has a
+hand in the going. He wouldn't be happy without a fuss, and an
+attempt to win by some dirty work."
+
+When the first half had passed, and there was a recess of fifteen
+minutes called for the warm players to secure a little rest, the
+score was five to three. That looked better for a well-contested
+game. And so far there had not been any flagrant breaking of rules
+to call for condemnation on the part of the referee.
+
+Mr. Leonard himself looked a little surprised. He could not
+understand it, but continued to keep an extra sharp eye on the usual
+trouble-maker, as though expecting Nick to break loose with more than
+ordinary violence because he had kept "bottled up" so long.
+
+Hugh noticed another thing that interested him. During this
+intermission Nick skated by himself. His old cronies, Tip Slavin and
+Leon Disney, were on the ice, and, of course, indulging in their
+customary derogatory remarks concerning the playing of the Regulars,
+but Nick did not seem to want to join them, as had always been his
+habit hitherto.
+
+Twice Hugh saw the crafty Leon skate up alongside and speak
+insinuatingly to the other, as though trying to persuade him to agree
+to something; but on each occasion Nick shook his head in the
+negative, and broke away. Leon looked after him rather
+disconsolately, as though at a loss to understand what could have
+happened to take all the fight and "bumptiousness" out of the former
+bully.
+
+Then play was resumed.
+
+Hugh had taken his comrades to task during the intermission. He told
+them several weaknesses had developed in their team play, which
+should be corrected if they hoped to down the strong Keyport Seven.
+Nor did Hugh spare himself in making these criticisms, for he knew
+his own faults. It is a wise boy who does.
+
+Having tested Nick's superb playing and found it good, the captain of
+the Scratch Seven was willing to put him forward as their star
+player, even if it went against the grain to realize that they had to
+depend on a fellow so much in disrepute.
+
+There were several hot scrimmages, as always occur during a strenuous
+game of ice hockey. Even the most careful of players will sometimes
+err in judgment at such times, and either be reprimanded by the
+referee or having their side penalized on account of their too
+energetic work. Strange to say, Nick Lang never once caused a
+penalty to be inflicted on his side, though Rawlings, Hasty and
+Lawrence were unwitting offenders, as were also Dugdale and Hobson on
+the part of Scranton High.
+
+Everybody was satisfied when the game finally came to an end with the
+score nine to six. It was a pretty good contest, all things
+considered. Perhaps the Regulars did not try quite as hard as they
+might, since after all this was to be considered only in the light of
+practice, and they were more taken up with correcting certain glaring
+errors than in making goals.
+
+The talk of the whole game, however, was the playing of Nick Lang,
+who had left the ice after it was all over; but not before Hugh had
+congratulated him on his fine work.
+
+"How did he ever go through with it all, and never make a nasty break
+once?"
+
+"This must foe one of Nick's special good days, I reckon!"
+
+"He's sure a hummer, all right, when he chooses to play straight.
+What a pity he has that crooked streak in his make-up. Only for that
+Nick would be a jim-dandy hand at any old athletic sport. I wonder
+if it will last, or is he due to break loose, to-night perhaps, just
+because he's held himself in so long."
+
+These and many similar remarks passed between the astonished boys of
+Scranton High, but they did not seem able to understand it at all.
+Hugh, however, only smiled when they appealed to him, and would say
+nothing; but deep down in his heart he was satisfied that the seed he
+had sown had fallen on fallow soil and taken root.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THAD BRINGS SOME STARTLING NEWS
+
+"Hugh, have you heard the news this Sunday morning?"
+
+With these abrupt words Thad Stevens burst upon his chum who was
+feeding some long-eared, handsome Belgian hares, which of late he had
+taken to keeping, as it had become quite a fad among the Scranton
+boys.
+
+Hugh turned to look at his friend. It was plain to be seen that Thad
+was laboring under considerable excitement. His face was flushed as
+if with running, while his eyes glowed much more than was their wont
+under ordinary conditions.
+
+"Why, no, I haven't heard a thing except the church bells ringing,
+and people going past our house early this morning for mass. You
+know we live on a street that is largely used by those who have to
+get out shortly after daybreak Sunday mornings in winter. What's
+happened during the night? There couldn't have been a fire, because
+I'd have heard the bell, and been out with the rest of the boys."
+
+"Oh! you couldn't guess it in a dozen trials, Hugh. It was a regular
+down-right burglary that was pulled off, even if the stuff taken
+consisted of candy, cigarettes, and the like, as well as some
+sporting goods and several revolvers."
+
+Hugh looked interested.
+
+"From the way you talk, Thad, I should say it might have been Paul
+Kramer's Emporium that had suffered; because he's really the only man
+in Scranton who keeps sporting goods."
+
+"A good guess, Hugh, because Paul is the chap. They got in through a
+back door, and everybody says it was a pretty slick job, too," Thad
+went on to say.
+
+"Let's see what you're telling me," Hugh remarked thoughtfully. "If
+they took candy and cigarettes and sporting goods it would look to me
+pretty much as if the robbery was the work of unprincipled boys,
+rather than men."
+
+Thad stared hard at his companion.
+
+"Well, you are a wonder, Hugh, at seeing through things!" he hastily
+declared. "Why, that was what Chief Wambold said right away. And,
+Hugh, he followed it with the declaration that he guessed he could
+put his finger on the guilty fellows without much trouble. You know
+who he had in mind, of course, Hugh?"
+
+"It goes without saying that one of them would be Nick Lang," came
+the quick reply, while a small cloud crept over Hugh's face.
+
+"Sure thing," continued Thad, shrugging his shoulders. "When a
+fellow has built up a nice reputation for himself along those lines
+he can't blame folks for suspecting him of every single tricky piece
+of work that is pulled off in town. In the past Nick has been
+ring-leader in lots of lawless doings, and the Chief was dead certain
+he'd get him with the goods on this time, as he called it."
+
+"Perhaps he may, but I hope that for once Chief Wambold will find
+himself mistaken," said Hugh soberly, and then adding: "How did you
+happen to hear about it, Thad?"
+
+"Oh! I chanced to be out early this morning on an errand for mother,
+taking some things over to that sick colored wash-lady we have do our
+weekly work, and passing through the public square on my way back I
+saw a crowd around Kramer's place. Of course I stayed on the job,
+and heard all sorts of things said. But, Hugh, they've got one of
+the thieves, all right."
+
+"Who was he, Leon Disney?" asked the other, quickly, as he suddenly
+remembered the actions of the boy in question when he twice
+approached Nick Lang on the ice during that intermission for rest in
+the hockey match; and when he, Hugh, fancied Leon was entreating his
+former pal to do something which Nick refused to entertain.
+
+"Just who it is," said the wondering Thad. "The Chief went to his
+house and insisted on making a thorough search. He's a shrewd old
+duck, is Chief Wambold, for all his faults. He seemed to guess just
+where a boy like Leon would hide the spoils of a raid like this.
+Under the floor of the old barn on the Disney place he found about
+half the stuff that was taken, candy by the wholesale, cigarettes,
+two revolvers, and even a pair of choice hockey skates."
+
+"About _half_ you are saying, Thad; then it looks to me as if there
+must have been just two of the thieves, for they had divided things
+equally between them."
+
+"What a lawyer you would make, Hugh, or a detective either, for that
+matter," the other boy exclaimed.
+
+"What did Leon say when they found the stolen stuff hidden under his
+barn?" further questioned Hugh, deigning to smile at his chum's
+compliment, however.
+
+"Nary a thing would he say, except to declare himself innocent, and
+that he himself had heard a noise out there last night, and guessed
+that some enemy of his must have set up a mean game on him, wanting
+to get him nabbed. But say, Hugh, the Chief pulled seven packets of
+cigarettes out of his coat-pocket, every one stamped with the same
+maker's name; and nobody in Scranton handles that brand but Paul
+Kramer."
+
+"It looks pretty bad for Leon, I should say," remarked Hugh.
+
+"Oh! he'll get a free pass to the Reform School this time, as sure as
+anything!" asserted Thad; "and a good riddance of bad rubbish, most
+people in Scranton will be saying. Of course they'll be sorry for
+his mother, who is a respectable woman, and has had heaps of trouble
+with that good-for-nothing son of hers."
+
+"But about the other thief, Thad?"
+
+"Well, Chief Wambold said there wasn't any doubt in the wide world
+but that it must be Nick Lang, and I guess everybody around agreed
+with him, Hugh."
+
+"Did he go up and arrest Nick?" asked Hugh, deeply interested.
+
+"Just what he did, and I was along with the crowd," Thad told him.
+"Well, sir, you never saw such a cool customer. Nick smiled as
+brazenly in the face of the Chief as anything you ever saw. They
+searched, and searched, but never a scrap of the stolen goods could
+they run across."
+
+"Well, what then, Thad?"
+
+"Why, of course the Chief declared that Nick had only been some
+smarter than his pal in hiding the spoils where no one could find the
+stuff. He told Nick he would have to arrest him on general suspicion
+because Leon and he were such great pals, and Leon was already as
+good as convicted."
+
+"Yes, and what did Nick say to that?" asked Hugh.
+
+"Would you believe it, Hugh, he up and told the Chief that he could
+prove an alibi. You see, the robbery was done before eleven o'clock
+last night, because the clock that was knocked down when the thieves
+were rummaging around in the store had been broken, and it stopped at
+just a quarter to eleven. Even Chief Wambold agreed on that point."
+
+"Yes, and it was cleverly settled, I must say, Thad. But how about
+Nick's alibi; would the Chief accept his mother's word, knowing that
+the chances were Nick had slipped out of the house by a window when
+she supposed him to be sound asleep in his bed?"
+
+"Oh! Nick had much better proof than that, Hugh. He demanded that
+Chief Wambold call up old Deacon Joel Winslow, who, you know, is a
+man much respected around Scranton, and keeps the blacksmith shop out
+on the road to Allandale where it crosses the one leading to Keyport.
+Yes, sir, and when the officer did so from Headquarters the
+blacksmith weather prophet plainly told him Nick had been working
+alongside himself from seven until a quarter-after-eleven the night
+before!"
+
+Hugh laughed. It really seemed as though a load had been suddenly
+taken off his chest. He had begun to fear lest his experiment might
+have already met with its Waterloo.
+
+"I'm pleased to hear you say that, Thad, I certainly am," he
+remarked, "And did our wonderful Chief conclude to hold Nick after
+that?"
+
+"He wanted to, Hugh,--I could see that plain enough; but Nick
+demanded that he be set at liberty. Say, you know I'm not much of an
+admirer of Nick Lang, but he did bluff the tall Chief of Police good
+and hard. He actually told him he'd sue him for damage to his
+reputation if he dared to hold him when there wasn't a particle of
+evidence connecting him with the robbery, except that once upon a
+time he used to go with Leon Disney, as lots of other fellows did,
+too."
+
+"Then he was let go free, I take it, from what you say, Thad?"
+
+"Oh! well, the police head said he knew very well Nick was in the
+racket, even if he had covered his footsteps so cunningly; and even
+fooled Deacon Winslow. He told Nick he'd parole him temporarily, but
+that he might still consider himself as under arrest."
+
+"That must be a joke," chuckled Hugh. "It was silly on the part of
+Chief Wambold. But then, of course, Nick has made him a whole lot of
+trouble in the past. So only one fellow has been taken, and he
+refuses to tell on his pal, does he?"
+
+"Absolutely, though the Chief says he means to put Leon through the
+third degree, and force a confession from him. What does he mean by
+that, Hugh? I've seen it mentioned in the papers lots of times."
+
+"I believe in cities like New York some of the detectives act roughly
+with a suspected prisoner, and scare them into saying things. But a
+clever head of police once on a time had a smarter way of getting a
+confession than by rough-house tactics."
+
+"Yes? Tell me about it then," pleaded Thad.
+
+"When he had reason to believe several members of a gang were
+implicated in a robbery, or other crime, he would have the weakest
+arrested, and brought into his presence. Then, while the man sat
+there nervously waiting for the dreaded ordeal of an interview and
+looking out of a window, he would see one of his fellow gangsters
+taken past in charge of several plain clothes men. Of course that
+would give him a shock, and when the Chief turned and told him the
+other fellow had already promised to make a confession in order to
+save himself, the prisoner nearly always broke down, and told
+everything to get in ahead."
+
+"Well, the last I saw of Chief Wambold," continued Thad, "he was
+starting out to interview Deacon Winslow. You see, he believes the
+old blacksmith must have meant ten-fifteen instead of eleven. That
+would give Nick plenty of time to get back to town, so as to take
+part in the robbery of the Emporium."
+
+Hugh rubbed his hands together after the manner of one whose mind was
+completely satisfied.
+
+"I fancy he'll have all his trouble for his pains," he went on to say
+calmly.
+
+"Meaning that the deacon will stick to his statement, and so clear
+Nick of complicity in the crime--is that it, Hugh?"
+
+"We all know Deacon Winslow to be a reliable man," Hugh told him.
+"He is accustomed to dealing in figures, and not inclined to make a
+mistake about the time. I'd wager now he has something positive to
+settle the matter of Nick's staying there, working at the forge, and
+learning how to be a blacksmith, until exactly fifteen minutes after
+eleven."
+
+"Well," said Thad, scratching his head as though still confused,
+"things look pretty queer to me, and I hardly know what to believe
+about that Nick Lang."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+NOT GUILTY
+
+At that Hugh, having finished his work in connection with the care of
+his tame pets, turned around and faced his chum.
+
+"On my part, Thad," he was saying, quietly but sincerely, "I'm
+getting to be hopeful of Nick. I honestly believe that fellow has
+seen a great light. I think he's made up his mind to turn over a new
+leaf and redeem his rotten past. And I want to say here and now it's
+up to every boy in Scranton High to treat him decently while he's
+still fighting his old impulses of evil. I know I shall let him feel
+I believe in him, until he does something to forfeit my esteem."
+
+"That's just like you, Hugh; and I guess the rest of us ought to be
+ashamed to throw any stumbling block in the way of a chap who is
+trying to get out of his old rut. But it passes my comprehension how
+he can change, and play fair and square, when all his life he's been
+so tricky and low-down mean."
+
+"As for that, lots of men who were once down in the gutter have
+reformed, and proved giants in helping others to get up to
+respectability again. Take that Jean Valjean we were talking about
+the other day, who changed right-about-face, and became just as fine
+a man as he was bad before. You don't suppose it all came in a
+flash, do you?"
+
+"Why, no, of course not, Hugh. He was the lowest sort of a beast, as
+pictured by Hugo, with the vilest ideas concerning human nature.
+After he had that revelation, and saw the good priest actually tell a
+lie in order to save him, he woke up, and, as you said, began
+thinking for himself. Then the change came gradually, and he
+determined to work to help those who were down and out like himself."
+
+"All right," said Hugh. "This case of Nick Lang is like this, in a
+small way. But, Thad, do you feel like taking a walk this fine crisp
+winter morning?"
+
+"Just for the exercise, or have you any scheme in your mind, Hugh?"
+
+"Both, I might say. The mile walk will do us good, and then we may
+be able to satisfy ourselves about a few things. It is just half a
+mile out to the cross-roads, and Deacon Winslow's house and smithy,
+you know."
+
+Thad looked interested at once.
+
+"So, that's the way the wind blows, is it?" he remarked. "You want
+to interview the deacon, too, as well as Chief Wambold?"
+
+"But not from the same motive, Thad. On the contrary, while he went
+out to try and find a reason for believing Nick guilty, in spite of
+his alibi, I mean only to ask a few questions that will clear up a
+little point that is a bit muddled."
+
+"Perhaps I could guess what that is," said Thad quickly. "You're
+puzzled to understand why Nick should have been out there on just
+last night of all times, when any other would have done just as well.
+How about that, Hugh?"
+
+"That's one of the things I'd like to have cleared up," Hugh
+admitted. "Between us, Thad, I've got a pretty good notion Nick knew
+about this contemplated raid on Kramer's store. Perhaps in times
+past they may even have plotted such a thing, so as to get all the
+cigarettes and candy they wanted for once. I even believe he was
+refusing Leon and Tip Slavin, who were urging him to join in with
+them, when I saw him shake his head and skate away yesterday."
+
+"Go on, Hugh, you've got me interested again; sure you have."
+
+"While Nick wouldn't think of betraying his former associates, from
+whose company he had broken away, at the same time he was smart
+enough to see he would be placed under suspicion. And he must have
+arranged this alibi so as to prove his positive innocence. If that
+turns out so, it shows Nick to be a wise one."
+
+Shortly afterwards the pair were trudging along the road outside the
+corporation limits of the town of Scranton. It was some time before
+the customary church hour, and they were almost certain to find the
+old deacon at home, Hugh believed.
+
+On the way they met a car coming along the road. In it was Chief
+Wambold. Scranton had advanced far enough toward the dignity of
+cityhood to have an auto for the police force, since the Chief often
+had to go to neighboring towns on matters of business, taking a
+prisoner, or getting one to fetch back.
+
+He nodded to the boys as he shot past.
+
+"Doesn't look very amiable, does he?" muttered Thad. "So I rather
+guess he didn't get much satisfaction from the old deacon. But he's
+awful stubborn, is our efficient head of police; and if he can find
+any way to put that business on Nick's shoulders he will, take my
+word for it."
+
+Hugh only smiled as though he was not worrying about anything Chief
+Wambold could accomplish. He had known the other to make several
+"bone-plays" since coming to Scranton, and hence Hugh did not have a
+very high opinion of the official's merits, though not doubting his
+honesty of purpose at all.
+
+After a short time they arrived at the smithy. Deacon Winslow lived
+close to his shop. He was a big man, with the proverbial muscles of
+the blacksmith; and for many years he had been looked upon as a
+pillar in the church he attended.
+
+Besides this he was reckoned a good man, who could always be counted
+on to go out of his way to do a favor for anybody. The poor of
+Scranton loved him better than they did anyone they knew. His acts
+were often "hidden under a bushel," since he did not go around, as
+Thad once said, "blowing his own horn, and advertising his goodness
+as one would soft soap."
+
+Strange as it might seem, Deacon Winslow had taken quite a fancy to
+Nick Lang, and possibly he was the only respectable man in all
+Scranton who did. Perhaps he admired Nick's muscular build, and
+believed he would make a fine smith, if the husky boy only took a
+liking to the vocation of hammer and forge and anvil.
+
+Then again it was likely that the deacon, who was a shrewd old fellow
+as well as good-natured and honest, saw deeper into that bad boy's
+soul than ordinary people, judging from surface indications. Hugh
+himself was inclined to believe this might be the case.
+
+Be that as it may, Nick had been known to go out there to the Winslow
+shop occasionally after supper, and work alongside the old man for
+hours at a time. Folks considered it only another odd fad on the
+part of the deacon. They prophesied that he would sooner or later he
+sorry for having anything to do with such a good-for-nothing
+scapegrace as Nick Lang, who would not hesitate to play some nasty
+practical joke on his benefactor when the notion seized him and he
+had grown tired of bothering with blacksmithing.
+
+The deacon himself came to the door. He knew both lads, and asked
+them to step in and sit with him before his cheery fire, as he had
+half an hour on his hands before starting to church.
+
+Hugh plunged into the matter without waste of time. He told Deacon
+Winslow how he had been reading that wonderful story of Jean Valjean;
+and then what a strange freak of fate allowed him to play the same
+part that the good priest had done.
+
+Step by step he carried it along, and Deacon Winslow appeared to be
+deeply interested, if one could judge from the way he rubbed his
+hands together, and nodded his head approvingly when he learned of
+the motives that had influenced Hugh to act as he did.
+
+Even what had occurred on the ice on the preceding afternoon was
+narrated, for, as Hugh explained, he believed it had a great deal to
+do with the startling event that had stunned Scranton that same
+Sunday morning.
+
+When he had finally ended with a profession of his belief in Nick's
+innocence the old man once more nodded his head. His wise eyes shone
+with a rare delight as he gazed at Hugh. The boy could not help
+thinking that the good priest in the story must have been a whole lot
+like old Deacon Winslow; who could believe wrong of no one, boy or
+man, but was always finding some excuse for forgiving, even those who
+deceived him in business transactions.
+
+"You have done well, my lad," said the old man warmly, patting Hugh
+on the arm affectionately. "And rest assured Nick is entirely
+innocent of this crime. I have become deeply interested in that boy.
+He has had a bad name, it is true; but somehow I seemed to feel that
+there were elements of great good in him, if only he could be brought
+to book, and made to change his ways of life. He must have a new
+viewpoint of human nature, to start with. I thought I might arouse
+him through talking, and fatherly advice, but so far I could not see
+success following my labors. But you have hit upon an ingenious
+device, my boy, that promises wonderful results. We may yet make a
+second Jean Valjean of the despised Nick Lang; and that would be an
+achievement worthy of anyone."
+
+Hugh felt more than repaid for all he had done when he heard the old
+deacon say this with such warmth.
+
+"There was one thing I wanted to learn, sir, if you don't mind
+telling me," he went on to say. "It concerns his engagement to come
+out here and help you last night. Were you expecting him? Was
+Saturday night the one he generally took to come and help you get rid
+of some of your extra work that couldn't be done in the daytime, for
+all the horse-shoeing you have on your hands?"
+
+The deacon smiled, and Hugh really had his answer before the old man
+even opened his lips. All the same he was pleased to hear him say:
+
+"Up to now it has always been on Monday night Nick came out. That
+was more convenient for me, as a rule, and he accommodated himself to
+my wishes. But yesterday afternoon he dropped in to see me here,
+with his skates dangling across his shoulder, as if he had been
+skating. He said he would like very much to come for that once on
+Saturday night, instead of Monday; and that he had a good reason for
+making the change, which meant a whole lot to him."
+
+"I see," remarked Hugh; "and it was clever of Nick. You agreed, of
+course, sir, seeing that he was here?"
+
+"It made no particular difference to me," added the blacksmith, "and
+I was glad to know the lad cared enough about the work to want to
+make the change. So I told him to be along as usual about seven, as
+I had a raft of work on hand that would keep us until well on after
+eleven. As a fact, it was fifteen minutes after that hour when Nick
+started for home."
+
+"You remember that positively then, sir,--the hour, I mean?" asked
+Hugh.
+
+"Oh! I could swear to it," came the reply. "In the first place I
+heard the town clock strike eleven, and counted the strokes myself,
+remarking that we must shut up shop soon as it was getting close to
+Sunday morning. Then as he was quitting Nick asked me again just
+what time it was, and I consulted my reliable watch. I can see now
+that possibly Nick had an object in impressing the time on my mind,
+so I could say positively he was there at eleven, and after. I don't
+like the idea of his having known about the intended robbery, and
+keeping silent, but suppose he considered himself in honor bound to
+his former chums."
+
+So their interview with Deacon Winslow proved a very enjoyable one
+after all. Hugh felt he should like to know the big amiable
+blacksmith better, for he had been drawn to him very much indeed.
+
+"And," he told Thad, as they trudged back along the road to town,
+"the way things seem to be working, I'm more than ever encouraged to
+keep on with my experiment."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+TURNING A PAGE OF THE PAST
+
+"Do you know," mused Thad, as they continued on their way to town,
+"the more I see of that blacksmith the better I like him. In my
+opinion, he's a grand old man."
+
+"I was just going to say that myself," Hugh told him. "He makes me
+think of the priest in the story. And they say he loves boys--all
+boys."
+
+"You can't make him believe there's a boy living but who has
+_something_ worth while in him," Thad advanced. "Sometimes it's hid
+under a whole lot of trash, as Deacon Winslow calls it, and you've
+got to search a heap before you strike gold; but if you only persist
+you'll be rewarded."
+
+"His actions with regard to Nick prove that he practices what he
+preaches, too," said Hugh.
+
+"Well, the old man went through a bitter experience many years ago,"
+Thad went on to say; "and he learned his lesson for life, he often
+says."
+
+"Why, how's that, Thad? I've heard a great many things about
+different people since we came to Scranton; but I don't remember
+listening to what happened to the old deacon long ago."
+
+"Is that a fact, Hugh? Well, I'll have to tell you about it, then.
+Once upon a time they had a boy, an only child; and, as happens in
+some families where the parents are the finest kind of Christian
+people, young Joel had a bad streak in his make-up. Oh! they say he
+gave his father no end of trouble from time to time. And it wound up
+in a row, with the boy doing something disgraceful, and running away
+from home, nearly breaking his mother's heart."
+
+"Didn't he ever come bad again?" asked the interested listener.
+
+Thad shook his head in the negative.
+
+"They never looked on his face again, either living or dead," he
+said. "Worse than that, they never even heard from him. It was as
+if Joel had dropped out of sight that night when he left a line to
+his mother saying he was going west to where they raised men, not
+sissies. And so the years rolled around, and, they say, the old lady
+even now sits looking into the sunset skies, dreaming that her Joel,
+just as she remembered him, had sent word he was coming back to visit
+them in their old age, and to ask forgiveness for his wrong-doing."
+
+Hugh was greatly moved by the sad tale, which, however, he knew could
+be easily matched in every town of any size in the country; for it is
+of common occurrence, with a multitude of sore hearts turning toward
+that Great West.
+
+"That must have been how long ago, Thad?" he asked presently.
+
+"Let me see, I should think all of forty years; perhaps forty-five
+would be closer to the mark, Hugh."
+
+"How sad," mused the other lad, with a shake of his head; "and to
+think of that poor old lady, an invalid, you said, and confined to a
+wheelchair, watching the sinking sun faithfully each evening as it
+sets, still yearning for her boy to come back. It is a dream that
+has become a part of her very existence. Why, even if young Joel had
+lived he would now be over sixty years of age, but she never thinks
+of him that way. The deacon, they say, is eighty-five, though you'd
+never believe it to see his brawny muscles and healthy complexion."
+
+"You see," continued Thad, anxious that his chum should know
+everything connected with the subject, now he was upon it, "the old
+man often takes himself to task because he didn't understand boys as
+he might have done, when younger. He believes he could have spared
+his wife her great sorrow if he had only been more judicious, and won
+the boy's confidence as well as his affection."
+
+"And that accounts for the deep interest he has felt in all boys ever
+since," Hugh was saying reflectively; "especially those who seem to
+have a streak of badness in them."
+
+"I suppose," Thad remarked, "it is his way of doing penance for what
+he considers a fault of his earlier years. Sometimes I think I'd
+just like to be able to follow up that chap when he ran away from
+home, and learn what really did become of him."
+
+"He may have met with a sad fate out West, Thad; plenty of fellows
+have gone out and been swallowed up in the whirlpool."
+
+"If, on the other end, he didn't, and lived for many years,"
+continued the other, "he must have been pretty tough not to write to
+his poor old mother at least once in a while. I could never forgive
+Joel for that. But they say he had an ugly nature, and was very
+stubborn. Well, I'm glad the deacon has taken an interest in the
+reformation of Nick Lang, even if I have my doubts about his meeting
+with any sort of success."
+
+"Well, you may be a whole lot surprised one of these fine days, my
+boy," Hugh smilingly told him.
+
+"The age of miracles has passed, Hugh," remarked Thad skeptically.
+
+"Not the miracles that are brought about by a complete change of
+heart on the part of someone the world looks down on as a scamp,"
+Hugh persisted. "But you're one of those who want to be shown; I
+reckon, Thad, your folks must have come from Missouri, didn't they?"
+
+"Wrong again, Hugh, because none of them ever saw the Mississippi,
+though my grandfather fought through the Civil War, and was with
+Grant when Lee surrendered at Appomattox Court House. But I admit I
+am a little stubborn, and prejudiced. It runs in the blood, I
+suppose. The Stevens were always sort of pig-headed."
+
+"I've also heard considerable about the deacon as a weather seer,
+Thad; how about that? Does he manage to hit it off occasionally, so
+as to equal our forecaster at Washington, whose predictions come true
+every now and then?"
+
+"Oh! the deacon has made that quite a fad," he was told by the
+obliging Thad. "He doesn't confine himself to figuring out just what
+sort of day we'll have to-morrow, or even for the coming week. He
+looks ahead, and finds out from the signs of Nature what sort of
+winter or summer we're going to have next,--cold, mild, hot, cool,
+dry or rainy. And say, I've heard he hits it nearly every time."
+
+"Well, what did he say about this particular winter?" Hugh asked,
+with renewed interest; for such subjects always gripped his
+attention, because he believed some of these shrewd countrymen, who
+watched the weather and observed what was going on all around them,
+could tell better than any scientific gentleman what was liable to
+come along during the succeeding seasons.
+
+"He predicted a severe winter," replied Thad promptly. "Some people
+laughed at what he said, especially when Christmas came and went, and
+so far we'd had precious little of cold. But it's come along at
+last, and from all reports some of the most dreadful weather ever
+known is happening away out in the Northwest right now."
+
+"And how does the old blacksmith get his ideas--from Nature, you
+said, I believe, Thad?"
+
+"He studies the bark on the trees; the way the squirrels store the
+nuts away; and how the caterpillars weave their cocoons. Oh! he has
+a hundred different signs that he depends on before making up his
+mind. I used to laugh when I heard him talking about it, but since
+I've grown older I've decided that there may be a whole lot in that
+sort of weather prediction."
+
+"I incline that same way," agreed Hugh. "Many of the little animals
+of the woods are given a wonderful instinct that enables them to know
+what to expect. Even bees that always lay by a certain amount of
+honey for winter use, are said to stock up extra heavy on years when
+a severe winter comes along. It must be a mighty interesting study,
+I should think. Some time I mean to know the old deacon better, so
+as to get posted on his vast store of knowledge along those lines."
+
+"His wife is rather feeble now," continued Thad. "She's a fine old
+lady though, and as cheery as can be, considering all things."
+
+"But if, as you said, she has to move around in one of those
+self-propelling wheel-chairs, how does she ever get her house-work
+done, Thad?"
+
+"Oh! they have a girl in during the daytime," came the explanation;
+"though Mrs. Winslow still mixes all the cakes and bread. And, say,
+she does make the greatest crullers you ever tasted in your born
+days. I know, because that couple are always sending things out to
+houses where there are growing boys. Their world lies in boys only;
+you never hear either of them say a thing about girls."
+
+Hugh could easily understand that. He had been in numerous homes
+where there were only boys in the family; and the parents knew next
+to nothing about the delight and constant anxiety of girls.
+
+"As I like crullers about the best of any sort of cakes," he
+chuckled, "I think I'll have to cultivate the acquaintance of Mrs.
+Winslow. Some time I may have the pleasure of tasting her famous
+cooking that you rate so highly. But to turn to another subject,
+Thad, have you heard any more reports about those Keyport High
+fellows we expect to go up against next Saturday?"
+
+"Yes, I have, Hugh. Podge Huggins was over there two days back. He
+saw them practicing on some thin ice over a pond, and he told, me
+they were an exceptionally husky proposition. He also saw us work
+yesterday afternoon in the scratch game, and when I asked him how we
+compared with Keyport, why Podge wouldn't give me a straight answer;
+but only grinned and turned the subject."
+
+"Evidently then Podge doesn't have the confidence in his school team
+that he ought to feel," said Hugh, apparently not at all disturbed.
+"Well, we have a whole week still for practice, and ought to keep on
+improving. I'm hoping that Keyport may overdo it, which is always
+possible."
+
+"You mean too much work will cause them to go stale; is that it,
+Hugh?"
+
+"Physical directors and coaches are always on their guard against
+that, Thad. The boat team is always strongest at a certain point.
+If the race comes off when they attain that top-notch pinnacle,
+they're apt to do their very best; but should it be delayed, by
+weather or something else, the coach becomes alarmed, because he
+knows there's a great chance of their losing speed from too much
+nervous tension and overwork."
+
+From which talk it was evident that Hugh must have imbibed
+considerable valuable knowledge from Mr. Leonard, who, as a college
+man, ought to understand a thing or two concerning sporting matters.
+
+So the two chums continued to talk all the way back to town. Hugh
+had picked up a whole lot of information by making the journey out to
+the cross-roads. Somehow he seemed to feel drawn toward the old
+blacksmith, who seemed to be such a sterling character.
+
+Hugh had met him in church circles and at sociables, but, not knowing
+the tragedy that lay back in the deacon's younger life, he had so far
+failed to cultivate his acquaintance. But he was now determined to
+see more of Deacon Winslow, for he believed the weather prophet would
+be able to tell him a host of interesting things about Nature's
+storehouse, from which he had gleaned astonishing facts during many
+years' study.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+OWEN DUGDALE'S ANNOUNCEMENT
+
+Another week of school had commenced, with winter now in full swing.
+
+The weather seemed to have settled down to show what it could do,
+after such a long delay. It was making up for lost time, some of the
+boys declared. But then it could hardly be too cold for fellows
+warmly dressed, and who had their three hearty meals a day. The poor
+might complain, because they suffered, especially when such spells
+were prolonged.
+
+Deacon Winslow was seen in town more frequently than usual, he
+leaving the work to the charge of his assistant for an hour or so at
+a time. He always carried a big basket in his wagon or sleigh; and
+those who knew his warm heart could easily understand that his visits
+were wholly at homes where there was none too much in the way of
+comforts and food.
+
+During the earlier days of the week the talk was pretty much of
+winter sports. Ice hockey occupied a prominent place in the
+conversations that were carried on wherever three or more Scranton
+High fellows clustered, to kick their heels on the pavement, or sun
+themselves while perched on the top of the campus fence that would go
+down in history as the peer of the famous one at Yale.
+
+During afternoons the hockey players gathered at the park, and each
+day saw them engaging in some sort of practice game,--their opponents
+being such fellows as could be gathered together to constitute a fair
+Seven.
+
+Hugh seemed satisfied with the progress made, and Mr. Leonard, too,
+looked as if he felt well repaid for the trouble he was taking
+showing them certain clever moves that might reward them in a
+fiercely contested match.
+
+Meanwhile the mystery concerning that robbery at Paul Kramer's
+Emporium had not yet been wholly solved. Leon Disney still
+languished in the lock-up at Police Headquarters, his folks having
+been unable to secure bail for him. They could not raise the amount
+themselves, and somehow there seemed to be no person in the whole
+community philanthropical enough to take chances with Leon, who was
+reckoned an exceedingly slippery individual, who would most likely
+run away before his trial came off, leaving his bondsman to "hold the
+bag," as the boys called it.
+
+He was just as stubborn as ever in his denial of complicity in the
+robbery. Leon doubtless believed that a lie well stuck to was bound
+to raise up friends. There are always well disposed people whose
+sympathies are apt to be aroused when they hear of a case like this.
+
+But Leon was not being held on circumstantial evidence. He had been
+caught "with the goods on him." All that loot hidden under the old
+barn on his place was positive proof of his guilt. Still he held
+out, and declared himself the victim of some base plot calculated to
+ruin his reputation; which was rather a queer thing for Leon to say,
+since the only reputation he had in Scranton was for badness.
+
+Another thing was that he still declined to betray his pal, for
+everyone felt positive he had had company when foraging through the
+cases in Paul Kramer's establishment, taking such things as naturally
+appeal to a boy's heart--candy, cigarettes, revolvers and sporting
+goods.
+
+Chief Wambold suspected one boy from the start, after finding that
+the former chief offender in these lines could prove a positive
+alibi. This was the third of the bad lot, Tip Slavin.
+
+He had even gone to Tip's humble home and made a thorough search,
+high and low, but without the least success. If Tip were guilty he
+must have been smarter than his confederate, who had hidden his share
+of the plunder under the loose boards of the floor of his folks' barn.
+
+Not having any evidence beyond suspicion the officer did not dare
+arrest Tip, who continued to loaf about his customary corners and
+look impudently at every fellow who stared meaningly at him when
+passing. Hugh himself never once doubted the guilt of Tip Slavin;
+though he fancied the authorities might have a hard time catching
+him, unless the stubborn Leon at the last, finding himself on the way
+to the Reform School, confessed, and implicated his companion.
+
+He and Thad were talking about that very same thing on Thursday
+afternoon while on the way home from the park a little earlier than
+usual.
+
+"Where do you think that sly Tip could have hidden the stuff, Hugh?"
+Thad asked, continuing their conversation.
+
+"Oh! there would be plenty of places, and no one likely to ever run
+across it, on one condition," replied the other.
+
+"What might that be?" demanded Thad.
+
+"If only Tip could himself keep away from his cache," he was told.
+"That may be his undoing, after all. You know, when an ordinary
+thief has done something big, and is being looked for, the smart
+police always ask whether he has a wife or a sweetheart; because they
+know that sooner or later he is bound to communicate with such a
+person, and so a clue may be found to his hiding-place. Well, Tip's
+heart will be located where his treasure is. He'll soon get a
+_yearning_ to indulge in some of the candy and cigarettes he's got
+hidden away."
+
+"Then if Chief Wambold knew his duty," snapped Thad vigorously, "he'd
+keep tabs of Tip day and night, and shadow him wherever he went."
+
+"That would be his best move," agreed Hugh.
+
+"You ought to post the Chief on that same sort of clever job, Hugh."
+
+"Well, I did think of that," admitted the other boy, "but somehow I
+hated to have a hand in railroading Tip to the Reformatory. It's
+true he ought to be there, for he's a terror to the whole community;
+but he's got a mother, Thad, and I'd hate to see her swollen eyes,
+and remember that I'd had a hand in parting her from her boy. It
+isn't as if I were paid for doing such things, as Chief Wambold is;
+this is hardly any business of mine, you know, and I've concluded to
+keep my hands off."
+
+"Well, now, somehow I don't just look at it the way you do, Hugh.
+Perhaps I'm not quite so tender-hearted as you are. It may be the
+best thing that ever happened to Tip if he is sent to the Reform
+School before he plunges any deeper into the mire of crime. Plenty
+of boys have become fine men after being sent there, to be taught
+what it should have been the duty of their careless or incompetent
+parents to put into their heads."
+
+"Do you mean that you might take a notion to drop a hint to the
+Chief, Thad?"
+
+"I'll think it over, and decide later," the other told him. "Perhaps
+I'll ask advice of Dominie Pettigrew, who's a good friend of mine,
+and would tell me what my duty was, not only to Tip, but to the
+community at large, which he had so flagrantly abused time and again."
+
+"Suit yourself about that, Thad. Perhaps, after all, you may be
+right, and that it would be a good thing all around if Tip could be
+sent away with Leon. But it's likely Leon will weaken when his trial
+comes off, and betray his pal; though he may give Tip a hint
+beforehand so he can clear out in time."
+
+"And about Nick Lang?" continued Thad.
+
+"I haven't changed my mind about him, as yet," Hugh replied sturdily
+enough. "So far Nick seems to be minding his own business, and
+having as little to do with other boys as possible. I heard Dr.
+Carmack say he was astonished at the difference in Nick's work in
+classes. He seemed particularly pleased, too, because, with all the
+other teachers, he's had a hard time with Nick in the past."
+
+"But in all the days we've practiced our hockey work Nick hasn't once
+joined the scrub team we've fought against. That's why we've been
+able to lick them so easily, I guess, Hugh. That fellow certainly is
+a wizard on runners, and would make a good addition to our Seven, if
+by some chance he could be squeezed in. But one of the Regulars
+would have to be dropped, and I think there would be some bad blood
+shown if anyone had to give way to a fellow who's had such a bad
+reputation in the past. Even now lots of people think he's only
+shamming reform for some deep purpose."
+
+"Lots of people are due for a surprise, then, let me tell you," said
+Hugh. "But, of course, just as you say, I wouldn't dare take any
+fellow out as long as he was working his best, and substituting Nick.
+It would raise a howl, to be sure. But, Thad, if the time should
+ever come when we're up against a hard proposition, with defeat
+staring us in the face, and one of our team was injured, I'd grab at
+Nick like a drowning man does at a plank floating near."
+
+"One lucky thing happened for us, Hugh, anyhow."
+
+"You're referring to the toss of the coin that gave us the choice of
+grounds for the game, and will force Keyport to journey over here on
+Saturday, eh, Thad?"
+
+"Yes, that's what I had in mind. Captain Mossman seemed to be a
+pretty fine sort of chap, too, I thought, when he dropped in on us
+yesterday afternoon to look the place over; because it seems he's
+never played before in Scranton."
+
+"Well, Scranton was hardly on the map until this year," Hugh laughed.
+"However, some of our neighboring towns have already learned that
+Scranton is alive and wide-awake."
+
+"Just what they have, Hugh, and there are other surprises coming for
+them, too. I noticed that you cut out all play while the Keyport
+chap was with us. Didn't want him to get a line on our methods, I
+suppose?"
+
+"It might give them a little advantage, you see, and weaken our play.
+Some of the Scranton boys have gone over to Keyport to see what's
+doing there. They bring back great reports of the confidence shown
+in the team; but Coach Leonard has positively forbidden any member of
+our Seven to make the trip. He says it smacks too much of spying to
+please him."
+
+"Oh! that's drawing the line pretty tight, Hugh. Lots of players in
+the baseball world try their level best to get a line on a pitcher
+who is going to oppose them, and consider it legitimate enough."
+
+"Well, they are professionals, to begin with," said the other; "and
+business is business with them. But, right or wrong, there's going
+to be no spying on our part, so long as Mr. Leonard has charge of the
+athletic end of the game at Scranton. You can depend on that every
+time."
+
+"There's Owen now; he wasn't at practice this afternoon, I wonder
+why?" exclaimed Thad, as they sighted another boy coming toward them.
+"He looks as if he might be bursting with some sort of news, Hugh.
+Now I wonder what he's run up against."
+
+Owen quickly arrived. His face did have an eager look, and his eyes
+were fairly dancing with some sort of emotion.
+
+"Hugh, I've got something to tell you!" he burst out with, at which
+Thad shot a knowing glance toward his chum, which said as plain as
+could be: "There, what did I say to you?"
+
+"All right, Owen, relieve yourself of the load right away, before you
+burst," Hugh went on to advise, in his pleasant fashion.
+
+"It's about a certain chap who's under suspicion right now of having
+been implicated in that breaking into the Kramer store and robbing
+it."
+
+"Tip Slavin, you mean, Owen?" asked Hugh, looking interested at once.
+
+"Yes, no other, Hugh. Well, I've discovered beyond a shadow of a
+doubt that he is the guilty partner of Leon Disney, just as everybody
+suspected!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+AN ADVENTURE ON THE ROAD
+
+Thad gave utterance to an ejaculation, and then followed it up by
+saying:
+
+"Well, now, I like that! After all, Hugh, I may not have to bother
+giving the Chief that tip you mentioned, if Owen here has discovered
+something big. Tell us about it, Owen, please; since you've got us
+excited by your news."
+
+"I couldn't get over to practice this afternoon, Hugh, as of course
+you noticed," the other commenced to say. "But it wasn't any fault
+of mine, I give you my word. I had to do several things around the
+house for mother. One of the pipes had frozen and had to be thawed
+out. Then there were other jobs that kept me busy for an hour.
+Finally, when I began to hope I might get down a short time before
+you closed shop, she remembered an errand that would take me out on
+the road leading to Hobson's Mill-Pond. I had to go to Farmer
+Brown's for some butter and eggs."
+
+All this was said with such a lugubrious expression that Hugh had to
+laugh.
+
+"It's plain to be seen you started on that walk feeling anything but
+pleased, Owen," he went on to remark. "Of course you'd much rather
+have been skating with the balance of the crowd over at our new rink.
+Well, what happened?"
+
+"Just this, Hugh. I was well out of town, and walking briskly along,
+thinking of the game we expect to win on Saturday, when someone
+suddenly turned a bend ahead. I saw that it was a boy who was
+smoking a cigarette like everything,--yes, Tip Slavin, if you please.
+He discovered me at about the same second, and, say, you ought to
+have seen how he flipped that coffin-nail thing from his lips, and
+came on as bold as anything."
+
+Thad chuckled.
+
+"Huh! guess you got him dead to rights that time, Owen. Did you
+accuse him of being a thief?" he asked hurriedly.
+
+"Well, hardly, because, you see, I wasn't begging for a fight; and
+there's no doubt in the world that's what would have followed. But I
+made out as if I hadn't noticed anything out of the way, and just
+nodded careless like to Tip as we passed by."
+
+"I admire your way of grasping the situation," said Hugh
+impressively, "because already I can guess you had some sort of
+scheme in your mind to make use of your discovery."
+
+"Just what I did," chortled Owen. "I walked on, and turned the bend
+he had come around. Then I crept back, and peeked, taking care he
+didn't glimpse me. When I saw him stop as if deciding on something I
+was disappointed, because I expected he meant to come back after it;
+but then he seemed to think it not worth while, and later on passed
+out of sight in the distance."
+
+"And then you hunted for the cigarette he had thrown away, I
+suppose?" ventured Thad.
+
+"Oh! I'd noted the exact spot where he was at the time, and also on
+which side of the road he'd tossed the stub; so I didn't have much
+trouble about picking it up; after which I continued on my way.
+Hugh, here it is."
+
+"With that Owen took something from his pocket, carefully wrapped in
+the folds of his handkerchief. It turned out to be a half-smoked
+cigarette. Hugh fastened his eyes instantly on some small printing
+in blue ink, giving the name of the manufacturers down in Virginia.
+
+"It's the same make as those found under the Disney barn-floor," he
+said impressively; "and that alone would be proof that Tip has a
+cache somewhere back along the road to the mill-pond, perhaps in a
+hollow tree in the woods. A clever police officer could easily find
+it by following back Tip's trail, and learning just where he came out
+of the woods. I myself happen to know his left shoe has a triangular
+patch across the toe,--that would serve to identify the tracks
+anywhere."
+
+"Listen to that, will you, Owen?" gasped the wondering Thad. "If my
+chum here doesn't take up the line of an investigator of crime for a
+livelihood believe me there'll be a great loss to the world. I
+wonder now, Hugh, if you've got tabs on all the fellows, so that you
+could tell who made any footprint in the mud?"
+
+Hugh only laughed as he went on to say:
+
+"It was just a mere accident that I knew that about Tip's mended
+sole, and it might never happen again. But when Owen here told us
+about a hidden cache I only gave you my opinion as to what would be
+the easiest way to discover its location. But what will you do about
+it, Owen,--let the Chief know of your discovery, or keep mum?"
+
+"Why, I look at it this way," said the other, with a line of
+perplexity marked upon his usually smooth forehead; "if it was only a
+_suspicion_ I might keep quiet, not wanting to injure Tip, though
+I've got little cause to love the brute. But since I actually _know_
+something that would prove a valuable clue to the officers, I'm
+afraid it would be what I've heard a lawyer call 'compounding a
+felony' if I refused to inform on Tip. How about that, Hugh? I want
+to do the right thing, even if I hate to be an informer."
+
+"It's up to you, Owen, and your duty is plain enough," said Hugh.
+
+"Then I ought to see the Chief, you mean?" asked the other.
+
+"I'd advise you to do so, for your future peace of mind, if nothing
+else," Hugh told the hesitating boy, who thereupon drew a long
+breath, and remarked:
+
+"I'm more than half sorry now I went back to look for this cigarette;
+because only for my picking up such positive evidence I needn't get
+into this nasty game. But I'm in now, and I'll have to shoulder my
+share of the responsibility, I guess. So, while the thing is still
+fresh in my mind, I'll trot around to Headquarters to wake up our
+sleeping Chief. Things have come to a pretty pass here in Scranton
+when boys have to lend a helping hand to the police force so as to
+nab a petty thief."
+
+With that Owen left them. When he had a duty to perform, however
+unpleasant it might be, Owen was accustomed to grappling with it, and
+not compromising.
+
+Thad looked after the other and remarked:
+
+"How queer things do come about, Hugh. Just to think of Owen
+discovering Tip sauntering along the road and smoking one of those
+stolen cigarettes. Pretty cute of him, too, sneaking back and
+hunting for the evidence. I suppose it'll wind up in Tip being
+locked up with Leon, and eventually going to the Reform School."
+
+"Few people will be sorry," observed Hugh, although he felt a twinge
+when his mind reverted to the mothers of the two boys.
+
+"I wonder what Nick thinks of it all," mused Thad. "He must realize
+that he had a narrow squeak of it; because, only for that sudden
+change of heart on his part, brought around by what you did about
+those nickeled skates, he might have been in the cooler right now,
+along with crafty Leon."
+
+As they had arrived at the point where their paths diverged, the two
+chums separated. Hugh had returned home somewhat earlier than
+customary, as he had something to do for his mother, just as Owen had
+admitted was the cause of his absence from the ice that same
+afternoon.
+
+Usually boys like to linger on the ice until long after the shades of
+night have settled down and time for supper is perilously near. With
+a jolly bonfire blazing on the bank, and the skaters going and coming
+all the while, the prospect is so alluring that it is indeed
+difficult for any lad to break away. And the father who has not
+forgotten his own shortcomings of long ago is apt to wisely overlook
+some such transgression of parental authority, when the ice beckons,
+and, in spite of good intentions, all outdoors seems to grip a fellow
+in fetters of steel.
+
+Some little time later Hugh might have been seen in a neighbor's
+family sleigh heading out of town. There was plenty of snow for this
+sort of thing, though the ice had been kept well cleared through the
+use of brooms handled by many willing hands. The skating had not
+been injured in the least, for they flooded the pond each night
+afresh, giving it a glittering new surface by morning.
+
+Hugh had to go a couple of miles out. He, too, was bound for a farm,
+to fetch back a sack of potatoes that his mother had purchased, and
+which should have been delivered before then, only that the one horse
+on the place had taken a notion to fall sick, and that rendered the
+farmer helpless.
+
+It was already well on toward sunset when Hugh started out. He
+expected to be overtaken by twilight before getting back home; but
+that was a small matter, since he knew the road very well, and with
+the snow on the ground it would not be really dark at any time.
+
+It was certainly bitter cold. Hugh wore warm gloves especially
+suited for driving, or any purpose when the zero mark was approached
+by the mercury in the tube of the thermometer. He also kept his ears
+well muffled up by means of a toque of dark blue worsted, which he
+wore under his ordinary cap.
+
+As he had on a heavy wool-lined pea-jacket that buttoned close up
+under his chin the boy found nothing to complain about in that cold
+atmosphere, for his blood coursed through his veins with all the
+richness of healthy youth.
+
+"But all the same," he was telling himself, as he passed an humble
+cottage where, through a dingy window, a lone lamp could be seen; and
+some children gathered about the kitchen stove, "I'm thinking this
+bracing weather that we boys have wanted to see so much, is pretty
+hard on poor folks. The world is unevenly divided, as mother often
+says; some have too much for their own good; and others far too
+little for comfort."
+
+He presently arrived at his destination. The neighbor's horse, while
+not at all fleet, was a steady goer, and Hugh had not allowed him to
+"loaf on the job" so long as he could touch the whip to the animal's
+broad back.
+
+The sack of potatoes was soon tucked away in the back part of the big
+sleigh. He also bundled some extra coverings about it, which he had
+brought along with him, to prevent any chance of the precious tubers
+freezing. A basket, with some other things, was also stowed away in
+the back of the vehicle; after which the boy said good-night to the
+farmer, and started on his return trip.
+
+Hugh was about half-way home when something occurred to excite him
+not a little, though at the time he did not even suspect what an
+intimate relation it might have in connection with certain facts that
+he and his chum had only recently been discussing at length.
+
+His horse suddenly gave a series of snorts, and at the same time
+shied to one side as if startled. Hugh gripped the lines tighter,
+and strained his eyes to see what was wrong, while, perhaps, his
+heart did start to beating faster than ordinary, although he could
+not be said to be alarmed in the least, only excited.
+
+A wavering figure started out toward him. Then Hugh discovered,
+greatly to his surprise, that it was a woman, and that she held by
+the hand a child of about five, a boy at that.
+
+She tried to speak to him, but seemed overcome with weakness, as
+though she might have been trudging along until exhausted by want of
+food and the severe cold. Hugh guessed that possibly the couple must
+have come out of a side road he had passed a few hundred feet back,
+for they were certainly not there when he went by on the way to the
+farmer's place.
+
+He saw her stretch out her hand toward him, caught the feeble words,
+"Help--my poor little boy!" and then, to Hugh's utter dismay, she
+sank to the ground in a heap!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE MYSTERY DEEPENS
+
+Fortunately, Hugh was a lad equal to any occasion. Of course, he had
+never had an experience like this before; but somehow he seemed to
+understand that the first, indeed, only thing to be done, was to get
+the woman and child in the sleigh some way or other, and then make
+for home at breakneck speed.
+
+So out he jumped, and, after considerable difficulty, managed to lift
+the now unconscious woman into the sleigh. He had never realized
+until then how like lead an inert person might seem, although not
+heavy in reality, when possessed of life and animation.
+
+He tore the coverings off the sack of potatoes, and tucked them
+eagerly about his charges; for he had also placed the little fellow,
+now sobbing bitterly, under the possible impression that "mommy" was
+dead, in the sleigh. As for the potatoes they could "go hang," as he
+told himself under his breath; though, perhaps, they might not freeze
+in the brief time he meant to be on the road now.
+
+In again Hugh jumped. Old Bill felt the whip come down this time in
+deadly earnest, and actually jumped in his amazement. Hugh kept him
+going at a mad pace. He was thrilled with the importance of getting
+home as speedily as possible. The woman had looked so deathly white
+that the boy was alarmed. And how he pitied the little chap who
+cuddled against his side, still surging over now and then with his
+grief, while Hugh drove along.
+
+They struck town, and people turned to stare upon seeing Hugh
+whipping his horse so unmercifully. They could not understand it,
+and rubbed their eyes. Surely that was Hugh Morgan in the sleigh,
+but why should _he_ be pounding his horse, and half standing erect?
+If it had been a fire chief going to a blaze he could hardly have
+excited more comment.
+
+A boy who was walking briskly along the street with a package under
+his arm came to a full stop, and stared as though he thought he had
+taken leave of his seven senses. It was Thad Stevens, and no wonder
+he was amazed, having recognised his chum in the frantic driver.
+
+Thad gave vent to a whistle to relieve his pent-up feelings. Then he
+started on a gallop after Hugh. He could not rest easy until he had
+learned just what might have happened to cause his usually collected
+chum to act in this strange fashion.
+
+When he arrived at the Morgan home it was to find Hugh had landed the
+child on the little porch in front of the door. This latter was
+open, and his mother, together with the hired girl, stood there,
+trying to comprehend what Hugh was saying.
+
+Thad came panting up, and was immediately seized upon by Hugh.
+
+"Great luck! Just in time to give me a helping hand, Thad!" cried
+the other.
+
+"What with--the Murphies?" asked the astonished Thad; for he had
+known Hugh expected to go out to the farm after a sack of potatoes.
+
+"Not this time," snapped the other; "it's a poor woman who fainted
+from cold and exhaustion while she was trying to ask me the way
+somewhere. That child is hers. Come, give me a hand, Thad, and
+we'll carry her into the house. Mother says she must be put to bed
+right away, and won't hear of my taking her over to the hospital."
+
+That aroused Thad, and between them the two stout lads had little
+difficulty in carrying the still unconscious young woman into the
+warm house. Up the stairs Mrs. Morgan and the girl led them, and
+into the neat spare-room, reserved for favored company.
+
+Once she had been laid on the bed, after the blankets and coverings
+had been turned down, and the little boy was being soothed by Hugh's
+mother, she told the boys they could now go downstairs again, and she
+would report later as to what next should be done.
+
+"First carry in the potatoes, Hugh, for they are too expensive this
+season to let the frost get them," she went on to say, patting the
+little fellow, whose tears had by now ceased to run down his chubby
+cheeks; "then call up Doctor Cadmus, and tell him to come around
+immediately. I'm sorry your father is away from home just now, but I
+can depend on my son."
+
+The boys went out again and lugged the heavy sack of potatoes around
+to the cellar door, by means of which they were taken in where they
+would be safe from the bitter air of the winter. Then Thad was sent
+around to the neighbor's with the horse and sleigh, while Hugh meant
+to get the good physician on the wire, and hasten his coming on an
+urgent call.
+
+"If Mr. Jones notices that old Bill is wheezing a bit, as if he'd had
+a warm run of it, please explain how it happened, Thad. I wouldn't
+like him, after all his kindness, to think I'd whip up his horse for
+nothing, or just in a spirit of sport."
+
+As it was an hour when Doctor Cadmus was through with his day's
+calls, Hugh had the good luck to hear the physician's voice on the
+wire.
+
+"Mother wants you to come right over, Doctor!" Hugh told him.
+
+"Who's sick?" demanded the other, being very fond of all the Morgan
+family; "not your good mother, I hope, Hugh?"
+
+"No, neither of us, Doctor," the boy continued. "I ran upon a young
+woman and a small child when on the road after potatoes in Mr. Jones'
+sleigh. She fainted dead away before she could tell me who she was,
+or where she was going. I managed to get them both aboard, and
+fetched them here. Mother has put her to bed; but she is afraid a
+fever is coming on, and it worries her. You'll be here right away,
+Doctor, won't you, please?"
+
+"As fast as I can get there, my son!" came the prompt reply.
+
+If there was a touch of pride in the voice one could not wonder at
+it; for like a good many other people of Scranton Doctor Cadmus had
+conceived a great liking for Hugh; and thought there had never been
+another boy fashioned after his model, which, of course, was all
+nonsense, as Hugh often protested indignantly when he heard any such
+talk.
+
+Only a short time elapsed before the doctor and Thad reached the
+front door at the same minute.
+
+"Wait for me in the library, Thad, if you don't mind being late for
+your supper. Doctor, I'll show you the way upstairs," and with this
+remark Hugh preceded the stout little physician up to the second
+floor.
+
+As for Thad, he never once dreamed of "breaking away" at that most
+interesting stage. Suppers occurred three hundred and sixty-five
+times a year, with an extra one thrown in for good measure when
+leap-year came around; but exciting events like the one happening to
+Hugh were of rare occurrence. Catch him thinking of eating when
+there was a chance right at his door to have a hand in a thrilling
+drama that beat the "movies" all hollow!
+
+So Thad sat down.
+
+Hugh soon joined him. He was immediately pounced upon by his curious
+chum, and plied with all manner of questions. By degrees Thad
+"pumped him dry," and there was nothing more to tell.
+
+"We'll have to wait until she comes back to her senses," Hugh finally
+remarked sagely, "before we'll be able to learn anything definite
+about them, mother and the doctor both say."
+
+"And she's actually out of her head, is she, right now?" Thad
+demanded.
+
+"Yes, and keeps on saying the same thing over and over, just as if it
+might have been in her mind so much lately. She keeps on pleading
+with someone she calls grandfather, and begging him not to put them
+out of his heart and home, for little Joey's sake--it's always little
+Joey she's worrying about and not herself. The doctor says she was
+utterly exhausted by want of sustaining food, added to anxiety and
+the exposure she had suffered."
+
+"But where could she have come from, Hugh? She has never been in
+Scranton, you said that, and I never saw her before either. You told
+me the little boy can only say his name is Joey Walters; and honest
+to goodness, Hugh, there isn't a single family of that name in or
+around this town that I ever heard of."
+
+"They've been trying to get some clues out of the little chap,"
+continued Hugh, "but without much success. All he's said so far is
+that they've come ever so far, and that he liked riding on the cars
+first-rate, only mommy cried so much and wouldn't eat every time he
+did. From the way he talked they suspect that the young woman may
+have come from the West somewhere."
+
+"She _is_ young then, Hugh?"
+
+"Yes, not over twenty-five or so, the doctor says, but frail-looking.
+He thinks there is nothing serious the matter with her, only that
+she's been underfed for a long time, and has suffered. Perhaps she's
+denied herself proper food so as to save up enough money to make this
+trip."
+
+Thad shook his head as if feeling sad over the happening; for the boy
+had a tender heart.
+
+"Well, I certainly hope she'll be better tomorrow, and able to tell
+something about herself," he went on to say, as he prepared to leave.
+"And, Hugh, it was fine of your mother to refuse to let her be taken
+over to the Scranton Hospital, when the doctor proposed such a thing."
+
+"My mother wouldn't hear of it," Hugh told him proudly. "Why,
+already she's in love with that little chap, and he's enough of a
+darling to make any woman with a heart want to mother him. Both of
+us seem to think we may have seen him before somewhere; or else he
+resembles someone we've known once on a time; but, so far, we can't
+imagine who or where it was. But once she comes to her senses,
+whether to-morrow, or some days afterwards, of course the truth will
+be known."
+
+"And Hugh," said the other, with one of his smiles, "if you feel that
+you can't wait for her to tell, suppose you start out to-morrow
+afternoon and try to strike a clue on your own account. That
+wonderful faculty you possess for investigating things ought to put
+you on the track."
+
+"Perhaps I may, that is, if I have time to-morrow," chuckled Hugh;
+"because, you know, we have our last practice at hockey before
+meeting those Keyport experts."
+
+"You said you felt sure she must have come out of that side road near
+where you met them," continued the persistent Thad.
+
+"Yes, but only because I hadn't seen them when going out to the
+farm," his chum explained. "They may have come out of that road; and
+then again it's barely possible they were trying to make a fire
+somewhere among the trees to keep them from freezing."
+
+"By going along that same road, and inquiring at every house you came
+to," Thad continued, "like as not you'd get word of them, if so be
+they stopped to ask directions, or a warm cup of coffee. People
+around here never refuse anyone who comes to their doors. Well, see
+you in the morning then, Hugh. Good-night!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A MOTHER'S SACRIFICE
+
+Friday afternoon had come, and the game at the park was over.
+Although the scratch team organized by Mr. Leonard to oppose the
+Regulars put up a strong fight, they were virtually "snowed under" by
+the splendid playing of Hugh and his six comrades.
+
+The experienced coach seemed very well satisfied. He openly
+complimented the lads after the contest had been carried to its
+finish.
+
+"You are doing splendid work, fellows," he told them, with a look of
+pride on his face; "and the way you played this afternoon was worthy
+of any Montreal Seven that ever toured the East to show how they do
+things up there in Canada at their favorite winter sport. And the
+boys who fought tooth and nail to hold you back, I congratulate them
+also; for they did excellent work. It was no disgrace to be beaten
+in that game; few hockey teams could have held their own against such
+fine play. Keep it up to-morrow, and there need be no doubt as to
+who the winners will be."
+
+It can be easily understood that Hugh and Thad were feeling in a
+particularly good humor then, as they started to walk to town after
+the game, having an errand there before going home.
+
+"I haven't had a fair chance to say a word with you to-day, Hugh,"
+the latter broke out with, once they were alone; "and I'm awfully
+anxious to hear how that poor young woman at your house is coming
+along. Has she spoken yet, and told who she is, and where she came
+from?"
+
+Hugh shook his head in the negative.
+
+"Never a word as yet, Thad. Fact is, Doctor Cadmus says she mustn't
+be worried by questions for several days, possibly."
+
+"Then she's still wandering in her mind, is she, Hugh?"
+
+"Yes, and saying all sorts of things about her girlhood days, as well
+as about her husband, who, mother thinks, must have come to his death
+in some accident. She calls him Joey, too, just like the boy. It
+must be a family name, we imagine. So mother is content to wait
+until she is better, when she will tell all she wants us to know."
+
+"Then you didn't bother taking that wise tip I gave you, Hugh?" and
+Thad's voice had a little ring of disappointment about it.
+
+"Oh! I was up early this morning, and, as the road out there seemed
+so hard and firm, the snow being packed down solid, I just jumped on
+my wheel, and took a little run up in that direction. It wasn't so
+easy, once I struck in on that side road, but I managed to pedal
+along somehow."
+
+"There are a number of houses on that road, I chance to know, Hugh;
+the Simms live there, likewise the Thompsons and the Garrabrants."
+
+"I managed to reach those three houses," Hugh continued; "but it
+didn't pay me, so far as results went, though I enjoyed the run all
+right."
+
+"From that I imagine nobody had seen the woman and child yesterday
+afternoon coming along that particular road, eh, Hugh?"
+
+"No one could remember having met or seen such a person," Hugh told
+him; "and as strangers are uncommon in these parts they would surely
+have noticed her if she passed their doors. So I came to the
+conclusion, as I couldn't even find the marks of her shoes in the
+snow along the road, that she must have come over from Belleville
+way, and was in the woods at the time I first went by, which would
+account for my not meeting her."
+
+"To change the subject, Hugh, I notice that Nick still fights shy of
+the rest of the crowd these days. He was skating on the ice to-day;
+but absolutely declined to take part in the game; though Mr. Leonard,
+wanting to make the opposition as strong as possible so as to put us
+to our best licks, went over and talked with him, trying to coax Nick
+to join the line-up. What makes him act that way, Hugh? One would
+think Nick'd be glad of the chance to play."
+
+"He would, Thad, he certainly would, because he enjoys hockey as much
+as you or myself; but I reckon Nick, for the first time in all his
+life, finds himself afflicted with shyness. You see, he knows people
+don't, as a rule, believe in this sudden reformation. They can't
+have any faith in a fellow who's fooled them so often before. And
+that makes him want to keep away. Nick is fighting it out all by
+himself. If we knew all the wonderful things that he's grappling
+with these days I imagine we'd sympathize with the poor fellow, Thad."
+
+"Hugh, you may be right. Already I'm beginning to feel sorry for
+saying some of the mean things I did when first we guessed Nick was
+trying to turn over a new leaf. It must be terrible hard for a boy
+who's always been bad to change around and face the other way."
+
+"Stop and think, Thad. Take the case of that Jean Valjean, for
+instance. Now, he underwent a complete change of heart, and from
+being a beast, hating humanity, he grew to love other people, and be
+ready to sacrifice himself to save another. You remember how he
+voluntarily gave himself up to the law in that courtroom scene, just
+to save a miserable wretch who was about to be punished under the
+belief that he was the genuine Jean Valjean."
+
+"Yes, but Hugh, he was unknown when he fought his battle, and won
+out. Besides, he had the money he received for the silver the priest
+gave him, with which to get a start in the world. But Nick here is
+known, and people point their fingers at him with scorn, and talk
+openly about his playing another of his pranks."
+
+"That was just what I had in mind when I spoke, Thad. Nick has the
+harder row of the two to hoe. And if he wins out he'll deserve a lot
+of praise, I tell you. But see who's coming along here in a rig,
+will you?"
+
+"Why, it's good old Deacon Winslow, the blacksmith weather prophet;
+and, Hugh, isn't he beckoning to us right now?"
+
+"Just what he is; let's cross over and see what he wants with us,"
+Hugh immediately went on to say; for, as has been intimated before in
+these pages, he had come to feel a great interest in the brawny
+smith, and wanted to cultivate a closer acquaintance with him; there
+was something so genial, so wholesome about the owner of the
+crossroads smithy.
+
+"Jump in and go along with me, lads," sang out Mr. Winslow, as they
+came up. "I'm bound around to the home of Mrs. Disney on a little
+errand; and, since you two are interested, I thought you might like
+to help me explain to the poor woman that I want to go on her boy's
+bail. It's a shame he has to stay in the lockup all this time,
+waiting for his trial to come off."
+
+The chums exchanged quick looks.
+
+"How about it, do we go along, Hugh?" asked Thad.
+
+For answer the other hopped up alongside the deacon, and, of course,
+Thad did likewise. Since the Disney home was not far away they were
+quickly at the door, and knocking for admittance.
+
+Leon's mother answered the summons. She looked frightened at seeing
+the huge bulk of the blacksmith there, and the two boys with him.
+But no sooner had he spoken in his kindly fashion than the anxious
+expression fled from her pale face.
+
+"Please excuse me for dropping in on you, Mrs. Disney," said the
+deacon, after they had been ushered into the humble sitting-room,
+where a wood-fire burned on the hearth; "but I just couldn't stand it
+any longer. I want to stand bail for your boy, so you can have him
+home again with you till his trial comes off."
+
+Leon's mother looked embarrassed. She twisted her apron in her
+nervous fingers, and seemed very near the point of tears.
+
+"Oh! it's kind of you, Deacon Winslow, indeed it is!" she finally
+exclaimed, as she looked up at the smiling, sympathetic big man;
+"but, after all I think it is better that Leon remained where he is
+though it almost breaks my heart to say it."
+
+Thad looked astonished, but Hugh nodded his head, as though he could
+understand what was back of those words so strange for a mother to
+speak. Deacon Winslow was also considerably surprised, it seemed.
+
+"But the bail bond is only for a thousand dollars, madam," he said;
+"and I can afford to put that up for his appearance in court later."
+
+"Thank you again and again for your kindness to a poor woman, and a
+mother, sir!" she exclaimed with a half-suppressed sob in her voice;
+"but there does not seem to be any doubt about my boy's guilt, much
+as I hate to acknowledge it. His association with that Lang boy has
+been his ruin. And he would be likely to run away, to try and escape
+his just punishment, so that the bail bond would be forfeited."
+
+"But even so it wouldn't ruin me, Mrs. Disney," continued the deacon;
+"and I hate to think of you sitting here, and crying your eyes out
+because he is locked up."
+
+She looked straight at him then, as she went on to say bravely:
+
+"But, sir, I am thinking of what will eventually become of my boy.
+If he runs away now he will sink lower and lower, until he commits
+some terrible crime, it may be. But Dominie Pettigrew tells me that
+if he goes to the Reform School there is a chance that he may come
+out later on completely changed in heart, and ready to play his
+honest part in the world. No, I have thought it all over, and prayed
+to be led to do what is best for my Leon. I cannot accept your
+offer, though you mean it in all kindness. For his sake I will wait
+until his time has expired, and continue to hope it may be the making
+of my poor boy."
+
+Deacon Winslow did not attempt to urge her. Indeed, he could hardly
+say anything, for he was half choking with emotion. But he squeezed
+her hand, and gave her a look that must have carried some comfort to
+her poor distracted heart.
+
+Once outside, the boys shook hands with the big man. Hugh was
+feeling more drawn towards him than ever.
+
+"I'm coming out to visit you soon, Deacon," he told the other; "I
+want to know you better. There are a lot of things I mean to ask you
+about the habits of those little animals from which you get your
+hints about the weather; and you told me to drop in any time I felt
+like it, you remember."
+
+"You'll be doubly welcome, both of you, lads!" the big blacksmith
+assured Hugh, as he drove away, more or less disappointed because his
+little plan to assist a sorrow-stricken mother had fallen through.
+
+"Say, his heart must be as big as a bushel-basket, Hugh," admitted
+Thad, as they walked along, heading for the open square in the center
+of the town.
+
+Two minutes later and Thad gave vent to an ejaculation.
+
+"It's all up now, Hugh!" he said, in a half-disappointed tone.
+
+"What is?" demanded his comrade wonderingly.
+
+"The Chief has arrested Tip Slavin, I mean. He must have heard what
+Owen Dugdale had to say about meeting Tip Slavin smoking a cigarette
+on the road to the mill-pond, and set a trap for him. He's just
+stopped his big car in front of Headquarters, and one of his men is
+lifting out a load of stuff, doubtless the plunder Tip cached in the
+woods up there. And the Chief has his hand on Tip's shoulder as they
+get out. I notice that Tip has lost his arrogant look, and seems
+badly scared, too!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+TIP SATISFIES HIS CRAVING--AND LOSES
+
+"Let's step over and see how it happened, Hugh!"
+
+As Hugh himself was not averse to picking up some information along
+that same line, the two chums entered the station-house just after
+the Chief and his man. The latter officer had placed the large
+package done up in a burlap bag on the floor. He was grinning, as
+though considerably pleased with the final results of the raid.
+Chief Wambold, too, was indulging in a smile as the boys entered; he
+even winked one eye at Thad, as though in a particularly good humor.
+
+But there was one person present who did not seem to be in a happy
+frame of mind. That was Tip. He looked "in the dumps," as Thad
+expressed it; and on seeing the boys enter dropped his chin upon his
+breast in shame. All the bravado was gone from his demeanor now; he
+knew that with that evidence against him he was headed for the House
+of Refuge on a fast train.
+
+The man took him through a door into another room, the Chief's
+private office. From this Hugh guessed that Tip was about to be
+questioned at length, in the hope of his possibly implicating still a
+third party in the theft.
+
+"So you found his secret cache, did you, Chief?" remarked Thad
+boldly. "When Owen Dugdale left us he said he was going straight to
+you, to tell about meeting Tip on the road smoking a cigarette; and
+he showed us that it bore the same trademark as those stolen from
+Paul Kramer's place."
+
+Thad went into detail so as to let the tall Chief understand they
+already knew all about the discovery, and had been told, in fact,
+even before he was.
+
+"Yes, we took a hunt up there in the woods this morning," explained
+the other, with a broad smile; "and ran across some tracks that
+looked like Tip's. When we followed the trail it led us direct to a
+big tree that was hollow; and inside the cavity lay that bundle,
+wrapped in a burlap sack. It was almost too easy. An experienced
+crook would never have committed such a blunder, and left so plain a
+trail. Why, it looked as if we were being taken by the hand and led
+there."
+
+"But I guess you didn't carry away the stuff right then, did you,
+Chief?" Thad went on to say, a wise look on his face.
+
+"Hardly, son, hardly," replied the other, with a gesture of his
+hands. "That would have been too silly for anything. What we did
+was to back away, and cover our own footprints as well as we could.
+Then we hid to await developments. I left my man up there while I
+came back to town to conduct my business. Later in the day I once
+more joined him. I expected the boy might be getting hungry for a
+smoke about the same time Owen met him on the road. Well, he came,
+and we pounced down on him just when he had opened the pack, and was
+lighting a weed with his trembling, tobacco-stained fingers; because,
+just like Leon Disney, and that slick Nick Lang, Tip is a confirmed
+cigarette fiend, you know."
+
+"Well, for one, Nick has cut the habit out, Chief, I happen to know,
+for he told me so," Hugh ventured to say.
+
+The big police officer sneered, as though he refused to believe there
+could any good come out of the boy who bore that detested name of
+Nick Lang. During the whole of the time he occupied his present
+exalted position, Chief Wambold had been plagued by the pranks of
+Nick and his cronies; and, in spite of all his efforts, up to now he
+had been unable to fasten anything serious upon them, although he
+gave them credit for every piece of maliciousness practiced in
+Scranton during that period.
+
+"Well, perhaps some people may believe Nick didn't have a hand in
+this outrage," he went on to say, "but I'll never think otherwise
+than that it was his genius for organizing raids that was responsible
+for the robbery. At the least, he may have changed his mind, seeing
+things getting too warm in police circles here. But never forget to
+keep one eye open when dealing with such a slippery customer, for his
+repentance is only skin-deep at the best."
+
+Hugh made no reply. He knew it would have been utterly useless,
+because the Chief was not only a very stubborn man, but inclined to
+be a narrow-minded one in the bargain. So he and Thad walked out.
+The last they heard the officer call after them was:
+
+"Make up your minds, boys, Scranton is going to be purged now as
+never before. We've made a good beginning, and it'll be pretty
+unhealthy for anybody to start a racket from now on. Tip and Leon
+will be going to the Reform School inside of a few days, after
+they've had their trial before the Justice; and the town will be well
+rid of a pair of scapegraces. And thank you for what assistance you
+may have given us, boys."
+
+As they walked along Thad vented his feelings in the matter.
+
+"It looks as if that episode might be called closed, eh, Hugh? The
+evidence is so powerfully strong that neither of the boys can put up
+anything like a half-way decent defense. They're going to be sent
+away, and we'll not be bothered with the bunch again. With Nick on
+the mourners' bench, the old town is going to be pretty orderly for a
+while, until some fresh spirits break loose."
+
+"Let's hope it may be a long time before Nick has a successor," said
+Hugh. "This whole thing is going to be a lesson to such fellows as
+were inclined to run around with the street gangs, and play practical
+jokes nights."
+
+"I notice one thing," remarked Thad, "which is that some of those
+fellows who used to loaf on the street corners in summer are now
+coming to the club-house at the baseball park, now it's opened three
+nights a week. The only trouble is they haven't got half enough
+magazines and games there to go around, so many visit the big room to
+get in out of the cold these nights."
+
+"That is going to be remedied before long," Hugh told him. "Some of
+the men of the town, and Deacon Winslow heads the list, I understand,
+have arranged to spend a lot more money on certain improvements; and
+among other things there will be a pretty fair gymnasium, as well as
+more reading matter of the right sort for boys."
+
+"Now, that's news to me, Hugh!" exclaimed the delighted Thad; "queer
+that I hadn't heard a word about it before. But then you get wind of
+everything that's going on. Folks think they ought to ask your
+advice on all sorts of subjects. That's what it means to be the most
+popular boy in a town."
+
+Hugh laughed.
+
+"Thanks for the compliment, Thad," he said; "but just think of the
+weight of responsibility I have to stagger under, even as the captain
+of the Scranton Seven. Why, everybody stops me on the street, and
+asks the most remarkable questions. They seem to think I'm gifted
+with prophetic vision. They ask me to tell them just how badly we're
+going to whip Keyport to-morrow morning, and lots of other things
+that I know no more about than a baby might."
+
+"Well, have you decided to give up trying to learn where the woman
+with the little child came from?" asked Thad, again switching the
+subject in an abrupt fashion he had.
+
+"Oh! I don't know whether it will pay me to go out again, and try to
+trace her back to Belleville, or some such place," said Hugh.
+"Doctor Cadmus assured my mother she would certainly be in her
+rational mind inside of two days at the longest. So I reckon I had
+better lie on my oars, and wait. I've got plenty to bother about, as
+it is, with that hot game coming off in the morning."
+
+"Perhaps you're wise about that, Hugh. I know I'm a lot too
+impatient by half, and can't bear to wait for things to come to me.
+That's why I always stepped out to meet the ball when at bat; and I
+often caught it before the break came to make it a sharp drop."
+
+"Mother says she thinks her full name is Judith Walters, though, as
+far as we know now, that doesn't help any. Still, if she didn't
+recover, it might assist in finding her family, so they could take
+the boy. He's a fine little chap, and I've already made great
+friends with him."
+
+"You say she keeps on speaking to someone she calls grandfather, who
+seems likely to turn them both out of the house?" Thad persisted, as
+though he might be trying to figure something out.
+
+"Yes, and so we take it for granted there must be some sort of a
+pitiful family tragedy about the whole affair," Hugh told him.
+"Mother suspects she may have married some years ago against her
+grandfather's will; and, losing her husband suddenly through
+accident, she is now on her way back, to plead with a hard-hearted
+old man for a place under his roof. But as you say there's no family
+named Walters near here, and we certainly don't know of any girl
+leaving her home that way."
+
+"The chances are," Thad said decisively, "that she was meaning to
+pass through Scranton, and was heading for some other town, perhaps
+Allandale. You might find out if any such thing happened there some
+years ago; or if an old man could be found who would welcome a dear
+little boy named Joey."
+
+The subject being exhausted for the time being, the boys talked of
+something else until they finally separated, each heading for his own
+particular supper table.
+
+Of course, the news of Tip's arrest was soon known all over town.
+Most people had anticipated such an event, and professed not to be in
+the least surprised to hear about it. Nevertheless, the clever
+device of Chief Wambold, which he took care should be passed from lip
+to lip, so as to add to his popularity, was highly commended.
+
+And there never was a time when Scranton passed a more peaceful night
+than on that occasion. Already great good was coming of the breaking
+up of the vicious gang that had held sway much too long. With two of
+the members locked up, being just as good as on their way to the
+Reform School, and the leader forsaking his former evil practices, it
+looked as though the police force of Scranton would soon become fat
+and lazy through lack of activity.
+
+Hugh did not go out that evening. He was tired, and wished to
+conserve his energies so as to be in first-class trim for that lively
+morning brush with Keyport's Big Seven.
+
+So he spent considerable time playing with little Joey; and, being
+still hopeful of learning something that would afford a clue to the
+mysterious past of the boy's young mother, Hugh often plied him with
+questions.
+
+But his success was hardly flattering to his acumen, for the little
+fellow could not tell him anything that would be of material help.
+Hugh guessed that they had once been out in some mining country, from
+certain things the boy chanced to mention. He also had reason to
+believe the father had come to his death through such a catastrophe
+as so often happens in the mines; for the boy spoke of many families
+losing those they loved when "poppy" was buried in the cold ground.
+
+It was slow work, and anyone less tenacious than Hugh might have
+given up all hope of making a discovery. He believed, however, that
+if no other way arose by means of which they could find out what they
+sought, some time or other Joey was apt to let fall a word that might
+lead to discoveries.
+
+The doctor came before bedtime, and said his patient was getting
+along nicely.
+
+"Given one more day, and possibly by Sunday she may come into her
+senses again," he told them before leaving. "And then she can thank
+you, madam, for all your kind heart has done for her. But that
+little boy is a sunbeam for any house. I have half a mind to steal
+him myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE LIVELY GAME WITH KEYPORT'S SEVEN
+
+Many a fellow in Scranton felt blue early on Saturday morning, when,
+jumping from his warm bed, and hastening over to a window, he looked
+out to discover a few flakes of snow lazily drifting earthwards.
+
+The gloomy sky seemed to be in fit condition for a heavy snowfall,
+that would put the hockey game with Keyport entirely out of the
+question.
+
+By the time breakfast was ready, however, these fugitive snowflakes
+had ceased falling entirely, and, shortly afterwards, the bright sun
+broke out, lifting the load from myriads of enthusiastic young hearts.
+
+After all, it turned out a perfectly glorious winter's day, the air
+being keen, but with little wind to mar the work of the contenders on
+the icy rink.
+
+Along about nine in the morning people began to gather at the park,
+paying for seats in the grandstand. Everybody was as warmly clad as
+possible, since it is no joke to sit for an hour or two, with the
+thermometer registering half-way down to zero.
+
+As before, one-half of the enclosed area was shut off from the
+general public, in order to afford the | hockey players the benefit
+of the new ice. Of course, it had been flooded on the preceding
+night, after the last skater had left, and this caused a splendid
+surface to congeal.
+
+Boys and girls came flocking to the place. Many bore skates, but
+there were others who only wished to witness the contest between the
+two rival high-school teams, as scheduled for that morning. There
+were hosts of other people present also; and already cars and
+conveyances of every description were arriving from Keyport,
+Allandale, Belleville, and such places, filled with eager
+enthusiasts, who loved a good hockey game above all sports, and would
+journey far afield in order to be present when one was to be played.
+
+Shortly afterwards some of the Scranton players appeared on the
+enclosed area. Their coming was greeted with all sorts of cries,
+meant, for the most part, as encouragement, and expressing a firm
+belief in their ability to win out.
+
+"We're pinning our faith on you boys. Dugdale, remember!" cried one
+fellow.
+
+"Don't let them get too big a start on you, because they're terrible
+fighters, once they get a lead!" came from another, who, having lived
+in Keyport, was supposed to know the characteristics of the boys on
+that team.
+
+"And, Hobson, always remember that it's the longest pole that knocks
+the persimmons!" whooped a third fellow student.
+
+Thad and Hugh were sitting on a low bench, adjusting their skates
+leisurely, and listening in an amused way to much of this friendly
+badinage.
+
+"The boys are certainly wanting to win this game, Hugh," chuckled
+Thad. "Makes me think of some of the warm sessions we had last
+summer in baseball contests with Allandale and Belleville. ["_The
+Chums of Scranton High in the Three-Town League_."]
+
+"It seems as if Scranton boys and girls have developed a voracious
+appetite for every kind of out-door sport lately," Hugh went on to
+say. "Did you hear what the committee in charge of the grounds here
+intends to do next week?"
+
+"Haven't heard a whisper so far, Hugh; so give me the news," pleaded
+the other.
+
+"Why, you know the fellows have been building bonfires here at
+night-times when skating. It was all very fine, but there seemed to
+be considerable worry about the new high fence taking fire and
+burning during the night. So they've concluded to run wires across
+from side to side, and string electric lights for use on dark nights,
+but only when the skating is good."
+
+Thad looked pleased.
+
+"Why, that's a boss idea; who suggested it, Hugh?" he demanded.
+
+"Oh! somebody just happened to think of it, and the committee agreed
+it was a good scheme," returned Hugh; but something about his manner
+told Thad the truth.
+
+"Huh! I can give a pretty good guess who that smart chap is; but
+don't bother trying to deny it, Hugh. The only bad thing about it in
+my mind is that we'll miss those jolly fires. It's always been so
+fine to skate up and stand before one, to get warm, and hear the
+flames crackle, while the girl you're skating with sits on a log, or
+something like that, to warm her feet."
+
+"Oh! well, when you want the romantic side of night-skating, Thad,
+you'll have to go out to Hobson's mill-pond, like you say you used to
+do. There, with plenty of wood handy, you can have the biggest fire
+you feel like making. Here, so close to town, we have to get our
+light in a more modern way. Now, I reckon I'm ready for any sort of
+a scrimmage that comes along."
+
+A shout presently announced that the boys from Keyport had arrived in
+a big car of the "rubber-neck" variety, with five seats across; and
+used for sight-seeing purposes, or any excursion where a dozen or
+twenty wished to go in a crowd.
+
+A little later the fellows came on the ice in a body, with their
+distinguishing jerseys. They appeared to be an exceedingly lively
+bunch, and were soon spinning about, displaying a nimbleness that
+excited apprehensions in many a loyal Scranton heart.
+
+As boys need little introduction, the opposing players quickly
+intermingled, and seemed on the best of terms. Captain Mossman and
+Hugh paired off, to talk over matters connected with the game. They
+were soon joined by Mr. Leonard, and several gentlemen, some from
+Keyport, others hailing from Allandale and Belleville.
+
+It was soon decided that the officials should be chosen as far as
+possible from neutral territory. There were to be a referee, an
+assistant referee, two goal umpires, as many timekeepers, and a pair
+of penalty timekeepers.
+
+Fortunately, Allandale and its sister town had quite a quota of
+former college players and gentlemen who had been members of famous
+hockey clubs in Canada and elsewhere when younger. They had kept in
+touch with the progress of events, so that they were eminently
+qualified to act in the various capacities to which they were now
+assigned by Mr. Leonard and the coach of the Keyport Seven.
+
+Hugh kept looking around from time to time. He wished to be posted
+as to what other promising players connected with Scranton High were
+on the ice, so that in case of necessity he could call on one of them
+to take the place of an injured Scranton boy.
+
+And when he finally noted that Nick Lang had arrived, and was on his
+skates, somehow Hugh seemed relieved. Deep down in his heart he
+believed that should he have occasion to replace a player, as the
+rules allowed, on account of serious injury, which is about the only
+excuse for such a thing, Nick would be his first choice.
+
+He wished now he had spoken to Nick about it, so that he could depend
+on his remaining throughout the game. There was not another fellow
+who would be of such great benefit to Scranton as the boy now wearing
+Hugh's old hockey skates. But it was too late to think of seeking
+him out, for the game was about to be called.
+
+When the rival teams faced each other, and listened to the last
+instructions of the head referee, they were found to line up as
+follows:
+
+
+ _Scranton High_ _Position_ _Keyport_
+ Stevens .......... Goal ............ Kellogg
+ Hobson ........... Point ........... Ackerson
+ Danvers .......... Cover Point ..... Bell
+ Smith ............ Right End ....... Elly
+ Dugdale .......... Center .......... Braxton
+ Juggins .......... Left End ........ Mossman
+ Morgan ........... Rover ........... Jackson
+
+
+Hugh faced Mossman when the puck was dropped on the ice, and play
+began. There was a furious scramble, but Hugh came out of it
+first-best, for he bore away the little elusive rubber disc, and
+managed to carry it some distance down toward Keyport's goal before
+losing control. Then the fun became fast and furious, indeed. Those
+agile skaters whirled back and forth across the smooth ice with every
+imaginable turn and twist.
+
+Clever plays were continually occurring on either side, and these
+were greeted with outbursts of enthusiastic cheering.
+
+The crowd really seemed very impartial and sportsmanlike, considering
+that possibly four-fifths of it represented the local team, and might
+be supposed to feel prejudiced in their favor. They shouted
+themselves fairly hoarse over a brilliant dash on the part of Captain
+Mossman, whereby he outwitted his opponents, and, despite all Thad's
+efforts to block the play, shot the puck home in the cage for the
+first well-won goal of the game.
+
+Later on Owen Dugdale repeated the performance in almost as masterly
+a manner. The applause was, if anything, a shade more uproarous.
+Now the game went on evenly, with a goal apiece; but Keyport was out
+for scoring and would not be denied; so, in a hurry, they pushed the
+fighting down on Scranton territory, and put another goal to their
+credit, though three times did Thad balk the effort before it was
+accomplished.
+
+When the first twenty minutes had expired the score was six to five.
+Keyport was ahead, but the margin was so small that no one despaired.
+
+After the intermission they went at it once more, "hammer-and-tongs."
+Thus far no one had been injured seriously enough to more than delay
+the game a few minutes, and, before the fatal seven had expired, the
+fellow who had been hurt was able to take his place in the line; so
+no substitutes were called on. Hugh was glad of this, though he
+frequently shot a quick glance around to see if Nick Lang still hung
+about; which he certainly did, being deeply interested in the game.
+
+The second half was even more fiercely contested than the previous
+one had been. Scranton rallied behind Hugh, and put up a savage
+attack that carried them up a couple of pegs, the score then standing
+eight to seven; but after a bit Keyport came back and tied it again.
+So it remained until the limit of the game approached perilously
+near, and it seemed as though an extension of time would have to be
+granted, as the rules allowed. But at the last minute, Hugh himself
+carried out a daring steal of the puck; and, before the opposing
+players could block him, shot it into their net for the winning score.
+
+Before the players could get in position again, and the puck be
+faced, the whistle of the referee declared the game over, with
+Scranton a bare winner.
+
+The Keyport players were plainly greatly chagrined, but they proved
+game losers, and had not a fault to find, shaking hands cheerfully
+with their late opponents, and expressing a hope that a return match
+could be arranged on their rink at some date not far in the future.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+ENCOURAGING NICK
+
+It was well on toward noon when Hugh, tired of skating for one day,
+started homeward. For a wonder he walked by himself, something Hugh
+seldom had happen; for if his chum Thad Stevens was not at his side,
+some other fellow, possibly several, would be sure to hurry so as to
+catch up with him.
+
+But Thad had been compelled to go home an hour before on some
+account, his folks having certain plans that forced him to accompany
+them immediately after lunch.
+
+Hugh was feeling a bit tired, but in good spirits, nevertheless,
+because of the clever victory his team had won, in which he had borne
+his part consistently. It always gives a boy a warm sensation around
+the region of his heart to realize that he has not failed those who
+put their faith in his ability. How many can look back with a
+feeling of pride to that "great day" when it was their home-run
+drive, or whistling three-bagger that pulled the home team out of a
+slump, and started a batting-bee that, eventually, won the game?
+Those days are marked with a red letter in the pages of memory.
+
+When part way to town, for the athletic grounds lay outside the
+limits of Scranton, though not far away, Hugh suddenly discovered a
+familiar figure just ahead of him, which, somehow, he had not noticed
+up to then. It was Nick Lang. He had his skates dangling over his
+shoulder by a strap, and Hugh could actually catch his whistle as he
+strode along.
+
+Somehow this told him Nick was feeling in higher spirits than had
+lately been the case. Perhaps he was beginning to feel a new
+confidence in himself, Hugh suspected. In the beginning Nick must
+have seriously doubted his ability to, as some of the boys would have
+called it, "come across, and deliver the goods," when he set out to
+reform his ways.
+
+He had now been keeping up the pace for more than a week. It was
+gradually growing easier, too, the further he went along the
+unfamiliar road. People did not sneer quite so much at him as in the
+beginning. Some even ventured to give him a half-friendly nod when
+they chanced to meet.
+
+And so for the first time perhaps since that day when he made up his
+mind, Nick was unconsciously whistling as he walked along, his
+thoughts busy with matters connected with his set purpose.
+
+Obeying an impulse Hugh quickened his pace.
+
+"Oh, Nick! Hold on a minute, will you?" he called out.
+
+On turning his head quickly and seeing who it was, Nick stopped short
+in his tracks. He was looking a little confused, yet not displeased,
+when Hugh reached him.
+
+Hugh thrust out his hand, and, of course, Nick had to accept it,
+though he did look a little awkward, because this was a new
+experience with him. Still, he gave Hugh's digits a fierce squeeze
+that might be taken as an index to his feelings toward his one-time
+hated enemy.
+
+"I've been wanting to have a little chat with you for some time,
+Nick," the other hastened to say; "but somehow every chance I got
+something would interfere, and the best I could do was to wave my
+hand, or give you a nod. Now this morning, just as I started to
+skate through the crowd to say something important to you, the coach
+called me back and said they were ready to start play. Do you know
+what it was I meant to ask of you this morning, Nick?"
+
+Nick looked puzzled and curious also.
+
+"I might guess it in a week, Hugh," he said, grinning; "but not right
+away. You see, I ain't used to having _anybody_ ask things of me.
+It's generally been a scowl, and a suspicious look, as if they
+thought I mean to play a trick on 'em if they so much as turned their
+heads on me. But then that's just what I used to do often enough; so
+I oughtn't to complain. What did you want with me, Hugh?"
+
+"I was going to ask you to stand by during the entire game, because,
+in case one of my players was hurt so badly that he'd have to be
+dropped out, rather than cut both sides down to six, I meant to put
+you in as substitute, no matter what position had to be filled."
+
+Nick caught his breath. His face flushed, and a glow appeared in his
+eyes. That expression of confidence shown in Hugh's words filled his
+aching heart with new encouragement. Hugh could see the muscles of
+his cheeks working, as though he found it difficult to control his
+emotions. Then Nick spoke.
+
+"That was mighty kind in you, Hugh, to think of me," he said, with
+just a suspicious quiver to his voice. "I'd sure liked to have
+played in that game; but do you think it'd have been wise to have
+picked _me_ for a substitute when there were plenty of other fellows
+on the ice competent to take the place?"
+
+"Not one able to fill your shoes, Nick, and they know it," asserted
+Hugh stoutly.
+
+"But then if you'd done that there'd sure have been a howl raised
+later on by lots of folks who still have it in for me because of the
+past," urged Nick, though it could be easily seen that he felt
+particularly pleased by what the captain of the Scranton High Seven
+had just told him.
+
+"Let them howl," Hugh went on to say. "There never yet was a fellow
+who nobly redeemed his past but what a bunch of wolves set up a howl
+on his heels. Don't you pay any attention to those fellows, Nick.
+Stick to your game through thick and thin. Every day you go on as
+you have been doing you win fresh friends. Even Mr. Leonard, who
+used to fairly detest you, is now singing your praises; and Dr.
+Carmack told me he was pinning his faith on you. He's a long-headed
+man, Nick, a very far-seeing man, who knows boys and is not easily
+deceived. He believes in you; so do I, and a lot of other fellows.
+You're going to make good, and I know it."
+
+"Well, I'm going to keep on fighting, that's all I can say, Hugh,"
+replied Nick grimly. "I'll get there, or bust the biler trying. But
+sometimes I have an awful time with myself, just because I can't
+wholly believe folks will respect a chap who's done as many mean
+things as I have in the past."
+
+"You must put that out of your mind, Nick," urged the other. "Why,
+don't you think I'd have ten times as much respect for the fellow
+who's been down, and climbs up again through his own will-power, than
+for the one who's always been shielded from temptation, and never
+really proved what he had in him? Nine-tenths of the fellows who
+walk along so straight are kept on that road because they happen to
+have wise parents to watch over them; and they were never given an
+overpowering appetite to do wrong things."
+
+Nick drew a long breath. His eyes glistened again, and perhaps with
+something besides the animation that Hugh's kind and encouraging
+words kindled within his soul.
+
+"You see," he went on to say, presently, when he could control his
+voice, "I always did like to run smack up against a hard proposition.
+It's in my nature to want a good fight, and I reckon I've got it this
+time. But I'm a whole lot stubborn, too, Hugh, as likely you've
+learned; and I don't give up easy. Since I started to reform I'm
+a-going to get there if it takes a leg. Anyhow, it's a heap sight
+pleasanter doing it _outside_ the Reform School than inside, like
+some fellows I used to train with are a-going to do, it seems."
+
+All this kind of talk pleased Hugh immensely. He felt more than ever
+satisfied with the magnificent result of that clever little scheme of
+his. Reading Hugo's masterpiece had brought it about, too, and he
+would always have occasion to remember this when handling that volume
+recording the wonderful achievements of the one-time ignorant convict
+and human beast named Jean Valjean.
+
+Nick just then saw several other boys hurrying to overtake Hugh. He
+immediately evinced a desire to start off on a tangent, and head
+elsewhere.
+
+"I've got an errand over in town, Hugh, so I'll break away," he said
+hurriedly, though Hugh could easily guess the real reason for his
+departure. "But I want to tell you I appreciate your kindness, and
+if in the next hockey match there's need of a substitute, and you see
+fit to put _me_ in, why, I'll work my fingers to the bone to make
+good, sure I will."
+
+And Hugh believed it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+WHERE THE SPARKS FLEW
+
+Along about three o'clock that afternoon Hugh, feeling refreshed,
+made up his mind he would go for a walk. There had been no positive
+change in the condition of the mother of little Joey. She was coming
+along nicely, though, Doctor Cadmus assured Mrs. Morgan, and would
+very likely awaken in her proper senses on the following morning. He
+was successfully combating the inclination towards fever, he told the
+good lady, and this gave Hugh's mother considerable relief.
+
+The boy was a fine little chap. Hugh had already come to feel a deep
+interest in him, and had played for an hour with Joey.
+
+"Why not take him out with you, Hugh, if, as you say, you're going
+for a walk?" asked his mother.
+
+"I'd like to," the boy said, "if you thought he could stand going
+such a distance as out to the Cross-roads; for I meant to drop in on
+Deacon Winslow. He asked me to come and see him, and perhaps stay to
+supper in the bargain, for he wants to have a good chat with me.
+And, Mother, I've been meaning to get to know that fine old man
+better; there's something about him that draws me. He's got such
+healthy ideas about everything, and is an entertaining talker when it
+comes to the habits of animals, and the secrets of all animated
+nature."
+
+"Well, I'm sure little Joey would enjoy the walk. He seems fond of
+being outdoors, and has been shut up here since you brought him home.
+And if Deacon Winslow urges you both to take supper with him, there's
+no reason why you should decline. He may fetch you home in his
+sleigh, if the child seems tired, and sleepy."
+
+Hugh decided he would do as his mother suggested.
+
+"Would you like to take a nice long walk out in the country with me,
+Joey?" he asked the little fellow, who had been hovering near by, and
+listening to all that was being said.
+
+"I like to walk," the small chap replied quickly; "but not all day,
+like mom and me did. Mebbe she'll be awake when we come back, Hugh?"
+
+Each time he had been allowed in the room to see his mother was when
+she happened to be in a deep sleep, and her ravings had ceased; so it
+was natural for Joey to conclude she was only making up for lack of
+rest.
+
+So, shortly afterwards, the two started forth, the little fellow with
+his hand in that of Hugh. He had come to feel the utmost confidence
+in this big boy who, in the time of their distress, had fetched
+himself and his poor fainting mother to the nice warm house, where
+they seemed to have the nicest things to eat he could ever remember
+of seeing.
+
+Hugh kept an eye about him, half hoping he might run across Thad,
+although the other had not expected to return before dusk. No such
+luck befell him, and so Hugh concluded he must carry out his original
+scheme, and have only the child for company during his stroll.
+
+Of course, they could not walk at a fast pace, and so it took quite a
+long time for them to draw near the place where the two roads
+crossed. Here, at a point where there was much traffic in vehicles,
+the smithy of the old deacon stood. Time was when he attended only
+to the shoeing of horses, and such other business as a blacksmith
+would find in his line. The coming of the auto had made him change
+his work to some extent; so he kept a line of rubber tires and tubes
+in his shop, and was capable of doing all ordinary repairing, such as
+might be found necessary after a minor accident to a car on the road.
+
+It was pleasant, indeed, when the wintry air was so keen, to step up
+to the open doors of the shop, and see that seething fire in the
+forge beyond the grim anvil. Mr. Winslow stood there, with his
+leather apron on, and his woollen sleeves rolled up to his elbows,
+showing his brawny arms with their muscles of steel. He was working
+the bellows and singing softly to himself, after a habit he had when
+alone.
+
+Apparently, he had let his helper off earlier than customary that
+afternoon, for the deacon was not a hard employer, and ready to grant
+favors when business was not rushing.
+
+Hugh stood there and took in the striking picture, with the glowing
+fire in the forge, that fine, big figure of the old blacksmith
+standing there. The rosy light played on his strong features as he
+crooned his song, his thoughts possibly away back in the past, as is
+the habit of those who near the end of their life span.
+
+Just then little Joey sneezed. The low song of the deacon came to an
+abrupt end, as he turned his head and discovered the two figures in
+the open doorway.
+
+He recognized Hugh immediately, and a look of genuine pleasure
+flashed across his face.
+
+"Is that you, Hugh?" he called out, stopping work with the bellows;
+"and have you come out to take a bite with the old lady and myself?
+I'm certainly glad to see you, lad. And who might this fine little
+chap be?"
+
+It was only natural that a man who loved all boys, little and big, as
+Deacon Winslow did, should drop down on one knee and take Joey in his
+arms. When he looked into the little fellow's winsome face he seemed
+strangely moved. But then in these later days it was always so with
+the old man; never a child did he see but that long-hidden memories
+flowed again, and once more he seemed to be looking on his own boy,
+gone ages and ages ago.
+
+"He and his mother are stopping at our house," said Hugh, meaning to
+tell how he had come to find them in their extremity, later on, when
+possibly the child was not present to hear what he said.
+
+"I've just got a small amount of work to finish, and then I'm done
+for the week," said the brawny smith, as he arose again, winking very
+fast, it seemed to Hugh, for some reason or other. "Here's a bench
+you can both sit on, and watch the sparks fly from the anvil when I
+get my hammer busy. Likely the lad has never seen the same before,
+and it is always deeply interesting to children, I've found."
+
+So they made themselves comfortable. Little Joey was a bit tired
+after his long walk, and leaned confidingly up against Hugh, who had
+thrown an arm about him.
+
+The smiting of the red bar with the hammer caused a shower of sparks
+to fly in every direction. It was fairly fascinating, and Joey
+stared with all his might. Even Hugh always enjoyed seeing a
+blacksmith at work, and hearing the sweet-toned ring of steel smiting
+steel.
+
+Now and again as he worked, Deacon Winslow would ask some question.
+He was acquainted with the fact that the boys of Scranton High had
+expected to play a hockey match that morning with the Keyport team,
+and as no one had thus far told him how the game came out, he asked
+Hugh about it.
+
+From this subject the talk drifted to others, always being of a
+somewhat sporadic nature, caused by the smith's starting work again,
+after heating his iron bar sufficiently in the fire.
+
+"I'll have the night free, for a wonder," he told Hugh, with a sigh
+of pleasure. "I try as best I can to avoid working late on Saturday,
+because I want to be as fresh as possible Sundays, which are always
+full days for me. So when Nick wanted to come out Saturdays, I
+induced him to change it to an earlier night instead. By the way,
+how is the lad coming, on these days with his new resolutions?"
+
+Accordingly, Hugh started in to tell him how Nick was doing finely,
+and even repeated a part of the little talk he and the other had had
+that morning, while on the way to town from the park.
+
+Mr. Winslow listened intently, as he worked the bellows.
+
+"I'm very much interested in the outcome of your experiment, Hugh,"
+he said. "It was a clever idea on your part; and now that Nick has
+made a start I do believe he'll see it through. I always thought he
+had it in him to work out his own salvation, if ever he got a fair
+chance. That opportunity has now dawned, and he's on the right road,
+Hugh; he's on the right road."
+
+"I agree with you there, sir," said the boy. "The very stubborn
+spirit that used to get him into so much trouble is now going to be
+his redemption, since he's got it harnessed up to the right sort of
+vehicle. The more they try to shove Nick off the track the harder
+he'll be apt to stick."
+
+"It was the luckiest thing that ever happened for him," continued the
+deacon, "when you hatched up that wonderful plan on the spur of the
+moment, and tried it out on him. But for that, Hugh, he'd now be
+locked up with his former mates, and headed for the Reform School at
+full speed. As it is, he is free to walk the streets, and already
+beginning to win the confidence of many good people in the town."
+
+Ten minutes afterwards and the brawny smith threw his hammer aside,
+and commenced to undo the thongs that fastened his leathern apron
+about his loins.
+
+"I've finished my stint, lad," he said; "and now we can go into the
+house, where you'll meet my better-half. I've told her so much about
+you, she is eager to make your acquaintance. As for this fine, manly
+little chap here, who seems to spring straight into my heart the more
+I look at him, as if he belonged there, she'll be half-tickled to
+death at the chance to cuddle him in her motherly arms. Alas! lad,
+it's been many a long, weary year since she had the privilege of
+loving a child of her own. Sometimes when I see her sitting there,
+so quiet like, and looking into the wonderfully brilliant sunset
+skies, I seem to know what she is thinking about, and I feel for her.
+It's harder on a mother, than anyone else, to lose her child as we
+did our poor, reckless boy."
+
+Hugh felt a queer sensation in the region of his heart when he heard
+the big man speak so mournfully. He realized then as never before
+how the heart of a parent can never fully recover from a cruel shock,
+such as the loss of one who as a little child had come, it was hoped,
+as a ray of sunlight in the lives of those who loved him.
+
+The home of the smith adjoined his shop. There was, in fact, a door
+that connected them, and through this Deacon Winslow now led his
+thrice welcome guests. Presently they found themselves in what
+seemed to be a cozy little sitting-room, where a wood-fire blazed
+cheerily on the hearth.
+
+Seated in one of those invalid wheel-chairs, which can be so easily
+manipulated by the occupant, after becoming expert at the job, was a
+most benign-looking and motherly old lady, with snow-white hair, and
+a face that was one of the sweetest and most patient Hugh had ever
+gazed upon.
+
+He knew instantly that he was going to like Mrs. Winslow just as much
+as he did her big husband. All the good things he had heard about
+her benevolence must then be true, he concluded, as he looked on her
+smiling face.
+
+"Mother, here's my friend, Hugh Morgan, come out to take supper with
+us, as I told you he'd half-promised to do," said the deacon, in his
+breezy fashion. "And see, he has fetched a little chap along with
+him who'll warm your heart as nothing else could do. This is Joey
+Walters, who, with his mother, is stopping at the Morgan home. Hugh
+didn't say whether they were any relatives of his or not; but this is
+a mighty winsome morsel, Mother, for you to hug."
+
+He thereupon lifted the child up in his strong hands and placed him
+in the lap of the old lady. Hugh noticed that she started, and
+stared hard at the chubby face of little Joey, just as the deacon had
+done; and then she turned her wondering eyes toward her husband.
+There was a look akin to awe in their depths, something that told how
+the sight of the child took her instantly back years and years to
+those never-to-be-forgotten days when just such a lovely little
+cherub had come to bless their home.
+
+Then the old lady gave a long sigh.
+
+"Oh, Joel!" she said, in a trembling voice, "how the sight of him
+startled me. I can shut my eyes, and think time has taken me back to
+our first year of wedded life. Yes, I am overjoyed at making the
+acquaintance of such a robust little fellow. And, Hugh, forgive me
+for not speaking to you before. I have heard much about you, and am
+pleased to know you. But, above all things, let me thank you for
+bringing this child out here to open the hearts of two lonely old
+people who live only in the past as their sun goes down toward the
+darkness of the night."
+
+"I'll run along now, and take my regular bath after my work," said
+Deacon Winslow, trying to speak cheerily, though Hugh knew very well
+he had been more or less affected by what his wife had just said.
+
+Left alone with the old lady, while the servant bustled in and out,
+laying the cloth, and setting the table, Hugh commenced an
+interesting conversation. She asked him a multitude of questions
+covering all sorts of subjects, even to that of athletic sports.
+
+"You see, the Deacon is fond of boys to an extent that it has become
+his one hobby," she explained, in order to let Hugh know why she felt
+an interest in such matters. "He spends all his spare time doing
+things to make growing lads happier, and more contented in their
+homes. People will never know one-tenth of what he's done to save
+boys who were going the pace. His latest protege in that line you
+happen to know, a hulking fellow named Nick Lang, who, I understand,
+has been the terror of Scranton for years. I've met him, and must
+say I have my doubts whether he can ever be tamed, and molded into a
+respectable member of society; but Joel seems to believe no boy is so
+bad but what he has a soft streak in him _somewhere_, if only you can
+find it."
+
+"Well, since he hasn't told you about the inspiration that came to
+me," Hugh felt constrained to say, though averse to speaking of his
+own successes, "I want to say that right now Nick Lang is on the road
+to making good."
+
+"Please tell me all about it then, Hugh?" she urged him.
+
+Accordingly, Hugh started to relate the story from the very
+beginning; and he had a deeply interested auditor; for Mrs. Winslow
+sat there in her wheel-chair, with little Joey cuddled in her arms,
+and one of his soft, chubby hands patting her face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+AT THE DEACON'S FIRESIDE
+
+"Hugh, I do believe you will succeed in your undertaking, and that
+Nick Lang is already firmly planted on the right path!" exclaimed the
+old lady, with considerable warmth, when the story had been brought
+up to date, bringing in an account of Hugh's most recent talk with
+the former terror of the town.
+
+"It looks encouraging, anyhow," he merely replied; though, of course;
+he felt a flush of boyish pride at the warm look she gave him when
+saying what she did.
+
+"My husband has worked with many an erring lad," she continued
+reminiscently; "sometimes with fair success, but only too often
+without, apparently, winning him away from his bad companions. But
+your idea was most unique. To think it all came of your reading
+Hugo's masterpiece, and taking it to heart. But here comes Joel; and
+we can soon be seated at the supper table."
+
+The more Hugh saw of this remarkably genial old couple the closer did
+he seem to be drawn to Deacon Winslow and his crippled wife. Indeed,
+Hugh soon came to the conclusion that they were the warmest-hearted
+pair he had ever known in all his life.
+
+Mrs. Winslow was wheeled cheerily to her appointed place at the table
+by her husband, who waited on her just as assiduously as though they
+were lately married; instead of having "trudged along life's highway
+in double harness," as the deacon, humorously put it, for a matter of
+sixty years or so.
+
+Of course, as Deacon Winslow was a deeply religious man, Hugh
+expected he would ask a blessing before partaking of the bountiful
+spread that was placed on the table; nor was he disappointed. The
+deacon's deep-toned voice was wonderfully musical, and to Hugh it
+sounded almost as though he were singing whenever he spoke. He never
+grew tired of hearing the old blacksmith talk; though they would not
+allow him to be a mere visitor, but, by asking many questions, kept
+Hugh in the conversation.
+
+The little fellow had been placed in a high chair. It looked of very
+ancient vintage, Hugh thought, when first sighting it. Seeing the
+look on his face the good lady of the house said in a voice that she
+tried to keep from vibrating:
+
+"It was our Joel's chair; somehow we have managed to keep it intact
+through all the years. There was a time when I dreamed of some day
+seeing this boy seated at my table in his father's high chair. But
+your small friend, Hugh, fills a long vacant spot. I could almost
+fancy he belonged there, he seems so like----"
+
+Deacon Winslow must have seen that his wife was getting on forbidden
+ground, for just at that moment he broke in with a question that
+demanded an answer from Hugh; and so the subject was dropped. But
+Hugh understood, and he felt his boyish heart throb with genuine
+sympathy for this splendid couple, who had yearned to have a house
+full of children, but somehow found their dearest wish set aside by a
+mysterious decree of Providence.
+
+They had a merry time at the table. Little Joey was as bright as
+Hugh had ever known him to be, and fairly captivated the aged pair
+with his prattle. The old lady in particular hung upon his every
+word, as though in an ecstacy of delight. She anticipated his
+childish wants, and, really, little Joey could never have sat down to
+such a bountiful feast as on that memorable occasion.
+
+Then the meal being ended they repaired again to the cheery fire.
+The deacon put on fresh wood, and the crackle of the blaze was very
+delightful on that cold night. Hugh had already spoken of the long
+walk ahead of him, and how, perhaps, he had better postpone his visit
+for another occasion, so as to get the child back home before it grew
+too late.
+
+"Don't think of it, son," said Deacon Winslow instantly, and in a
+tone that would not be denied. "When the time comes I'll hitch my
+horse to the big sleigh; we'll wrap the child up as snug as a bug in
+a rug; and be over to your house in a jiffy. What if he does get a
+bit drowsy; let him take a nap. I'm sure he'll be safe in the loving
+arms of grandma."
+
+At his mention of that last word the old lady hugged the child, and
+bent her wrinkled kindly face close to his cheeks; but Hugh believed
+it was to hide the rush of sacred emotions that swept over her.
+
+Then they talked.
+
+By degrees Hugh got his host started on the subject that was nearest
+his heart, and which had to do with the wonderful habits of all the
+small, wild animals of which the deacon had made a life-long study.
+
+"It's a wonderfully fascinating subject, Hugh," the old blacksmith
+philanthropist went on to say, as he started in. "I took it up just
+as a fancy, but as the years went by it became a habit that grew on
+me more and more. Yes, I have had an amazing lot of pleasure out of
+my observations. As the good wife here will tell you, I've spent
+hours on hours at night, hidden in the woods, with a light fixed on
+some nest of a muskrat or gopher or fox, just to learn what the
+cunning little varmint did betimes; when of rights I should have been
+in my bed getting rested for another hard day's labor at my forge."
+
+"His holidays have always been taken up in the same way," interrupted
+Mrs. Winslow, smiling lovingly at her husband, whose heart she
+evidently could read as though it were a printed book. "At first I
+begrudged him the time, but later on I knew it was taking his
+thoughts away from subjects that we were trying to keep out of our
+minds, and I never tried to hold him back."
+
+"It was my study of the habits of these small animals and birds that
+gave me what little faculty I may possess for prophesying the weather
+ahead," continued the old man. "They seldom, if ever, go wrong. If
+I've hit it wrong now and then, the fault was mine, not theirs. I
+had failed to properly interpret their actions, that was all."
+
+So he went on to tell Hugh many deeply interesting experiments he had
+undertaken along those lines. He also had a fund of wonderful
+anecdotes, many of them quite humorous, connected with his little
+friends of fur and feather.
+
+The more Hugh heard him tell the greater grew his interest. He
+resolved that at some time in the not distant future, when an
+opportunity came along, he, too, would begin to pay more attention to
+the multitude of interesting things that could be discovered in
+almost any woods, if only the observer kept his eyes about him, and
+did nothing to alarm the timid inmates of various burrows and hollow
+trees.
+
+So an hour passed, all too quickly.
+
+Once Hugh took out his little nickel watch, as if under the
+impression that it must be getting near time for him to think of
+saying good-night; though he hated to leave such a jolly fireside,
+and the fine couple.
+
+"Please don't think of going home yet, Hugh," said the old man,
+looking distressed at once. "The night is young, and I don't know
+when I've enjoyed anyone's company as I have yours. My dreams in the
+long ago were for just such a son as you. I envy your parents, my
+lad. Providence, however, saw fit to turn my activities in another
+direction; and I have done the best I could to be of some little help
+to other people's sons. I only bitterly regret that I am able to do
+so little."
+
+"But I'm afraid the child may become too much bother for your good
+wife, sir," Hugh was saying, although already deciding he would
+remain longer.
+
+The deacon laughed softly. He put out his big hand, and gently
+touched Hugh on the sleeve.
+
+"Look yonder, lad!" he went on to say; "does that strike you as if a
+heavenly little sunbeam like the boy could ever be too much trouble
+for her? See how her dear face is lighted up as she bends over him.
+He's gone fast asleep in her arms, as contented as though with his
+own mother. Ah! lad, it was a kindly act, your fetching that tiny
+bit of humanity out to visit us. You have made her almost happy
+again for once."
+
+Hugh, looking, saw that the old lady was paying no further attention
+to them, or listening to what they were saying. She touched the
+sweet face of the child, and pressed her withered lips against his
+soft skin. If a tear fell on the little fellow's head, was it to be
+wondered at? He saw her open his clothes at the neck, as though the
+heat of that blazing fire might be a little too much, in her matronly
+estimation.
+
+The deacon, too, was looking as though his heart might be in his
+eyes. Such a spectacle as that must have been of rare occurrence at
+his fireside, deeply as he regretted it.
+
+Then he started talking again, for he had been in the midst of an
+unusually interesting description at the time he drew the boy's
+attention to the beautiful picture at the opposite side of the
+fireplace. And Hugh, becoming wrapped up in the amusing episode for
+the moment forgot all about little Joey and the loving soul who had
+him held in her arms.
+
+What the blacksmith was telling related to a thrilling happening he
+had experienced on one occasion, when lying out in the woods watching
+for a certain timid little rodent to commence moving around. At the
+time the deacon had one of those new-fangled hand electric torches
+with him, which he meant to use when the proper moment arrived.
+
+Hearing voices drawing near he thought it best to warn the darkies
+who were advancing in time, for, otherwise, they threatened to walk
+directly over him in the pitch darkness. When, however, he flashed
+his light suddenly toward them, he must have given them the fright of
+their lives, for they uttered howls, and fled precipitately, despite
+his reassuring calls.
+
+"I afterwards learned," said the deacon, smiling broadly at the
+amusing recollection, "that the three men were those colored players
+who constitute the band you young people always have at your barn
+dances, Daddy Whitehead, the leader, and his able assistants, Mose
+Coffin and Abe Skinner. They really believed they had met something
+supernatural in the woods, when taking a shortcut home, after
+attending a dance somewhere out in the country. And, really, I never
+had the heart to undeceive the poor ignorant chaps. But I warrant
+you they kept to the highway after that terrible experience with
+ghosts."
+
+Hugh laughed at the mental picture of those three aged musicians, one
+with his fiddle, another carrying a 'cello, and the third an oboe,
+"streaking" it through the dark woods madly, possessed of a deadly
+fear lest their time had come, and that they were pursued by
+something from the spirit world.
+
+He was just about to make some remark when the words froze on his
+lips. Mrs. Winslow had given vent to a cry. It thrilled Hugh
+strangely, as though he feared some agonizing pain had suddenly
+gripped the old lady.
+
+Both he and the deacon were instantly on their feet. As they glued
+their eyes on the figure across on the other side of the broad hearth
+they saw that she was sitting there with a marvelous look on her
+wrinkled face--a look that seemed to tell of sheer amazement,
+exceeding great joy, incredulity, and many other like emotions that
+Hugh could not stop to analyze.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY
+
+"Joel, come to me quickly!" they heard her gasp, as though she were
+almost suffocating; and both of them hastened to her side.
+
+"What has happened, wife?" cried the alarmed deacon.
+
+"Oh! tell me, am I awake, or dreaming, husband?" she went on to say
+thickly. "See what the child is wearing about his dear chubby neck!
+Surely we ought to know that tiny gold locket. It carries me far
+back through the long, weary, waiting years to the day I clasped it
+about his neck--my baby Joel!"
+
+The deacon snatched the object from her quivering hand. He stared
+hard at it, as though he, too, might suspect he were asleep, and that
+it was all but a vision of a disordered mind.
+
+Hugh was trembling, he hardly knew why. Something seemed to rush
+over him, something that thrilled him to the core. He had felt a
+touch of the same sensation when the good old lady let him look at
+the pictures in her family album, and pointed to one of her baby boy;
+although at the time he could not fully grasp the idea that appealed
+so dimly to his investigating mind.
+
+Then Deacon Winslow found his voice, though it was thick and husky
+when he went on to say hastily:
+
+"Yes, it does look mighty like the one you had for the boy; and we
+never found it again, you remember, after he--left home; so we
+thought he had taken it along with everything else he owned. But
+wait, wife, don't jump at conclusions. It is next to impossible that
+this should be the tiny chain with the plain gold pendant that you
+bought for our little Joel. Surely there must have been many others
+like it made."
+
+Apparently, he was sorely afraid lest the bitter disappointment would
+follow. The blasting of those new, wild hopes of hers might have a
+bad effect on the old lady. That was why the deacon tried to keep
+her from being too sanguine, even though he himself was possibly
+hugging suddenly awakened rapturous dreams to his heart.
+
+"There may have been others, Joel!" she cried exultantly; "but look
+on the back of the medallion. I feared it might be lost some day,
+Joel, so I scratched his initials there. My glasses are too moist
+for me to see well; look and tell me if you can make out anything,
+husband!"
+
+Even Hugh held his breath while the deacon turned the tiny medallion
+over in his hands. Then he snatched up a reading glass of
+considerable power from the table, and held it close to the object in
+his quivering clutch.
+
+They heard him give a cry, and it did not hint at disappointment.
+
+"Oh! Joel, are the three letters there?" she begged piteously, as she
+hugged the still calmly sleeping child closer and closer to her heart.
+
+"Something I can see, wife, although it is very faint," he told her.
+"But then think of the many years that have elapsed. The scratches
+must have been very lightly done at best. Hugh, your eyes are
+younger than mine; and, besides, I'm afraid there are tears dimming
+my sight. Look, and tell us what you see!"
+
+It was a picture, with those two old people so eagerly hanging on the
+decision of the clear-eyed youth. Hugh used the glass, for he wanted
+to make certain. It would be doubly cruel if by any mistake on his
+part those anxious hearts were deceived.
+
+"I can plainly make out the first initial, which is J beyond
+question," he almost immediately said.
+
+At hearing that the deacon cast a swift look toward his wife, which
+she returned in kind. Neither of them could find utterance for a
+single word, however, such was the mental strain under which they
+labored.
+
+"The last letter looks like a W," continued Hugh. "Yes, now that
+I've rubbed it with my finger I am positive of that. As for the
+middle one, I think it must be either an O or a C, though it's rather
+hard to say."
+
+Deacon Winslow gave a deep sigh.
+
+"And our boy's middle name was Carstairs, named after his mother's
+family!" he hastened to say.
+
+Then they exchanged more wondering looks. It was very like a
+miracle, the bringing of the little child into the home of that
+couple whose fireside had so long awaited the coming of such a
+sunbeam.
+
+Deacon Winslow turned almost fiercely on Hugh, and gripped his sleeve.
+
+"You must tell us more about the boy," he said. "Who is he, and
+where did he come from? Those are vital things for us to learn. We
+could never know peace again if this mystery were not made clear. So
+tell us, Hugh, tell us as quickly as you can, so that we may learn
+the best, or the worst."
+
+He saw that they were strangely shaken, and Hugh wisely believed it
+best to reassure them in the very beginning.
+
+"First of all, sir," he started to say, "I begin to believe it may be
+what you would wish most of all. This boy who so much resembles your
+own child of the past is likely to turn out his son or perhaps
+grandson, for his mother's name is Walters, we've learned. You ask
+me where I found him, and I meant to tell you later on, never
+dreaming that it would interest you more than casually. I picked him
+and his mother up Thursday evening just at dusk, when I was coming
+home from a farm in a sleigh, where I had been to get a sack of
+potatoes. The young woman was trying to ask me something when she
+swooned away."
+
+"Go on, lad, go on!" pleaded the deacon hoarsely, as Hugh paused for
+breath.
+
+"Of course, the only thing I could do was to get them into the sleigh
+and whip up the horse," Hugh continued. "Once I reached home my
+mother would not hear of the poor thing being taken to the hospital.
+She had her put to bed and the doctor called in. Since that time she
+has been threatened with fever; in fact, is partly out of her head,
+though Doctor Cadmus says he believes she will be sensible by
+to-morrow morning. She was simply half-starved, and dreadfully
+worried about something."
+
+"But could you not hear a few random words she uttered that would
+give you some idea as to her identity, and where she came from?"
+asked the deacon.
+
+"Besides her name, which seemed to be Walters, she has said nothing
+that gives us a clue, save that we imagine they must have lived
+somewhere in the West."
+
+"In the West--and our Joel started for that section of the country!"
+gasped the old lady, still patting the curly head on her lap lovingly.
+
+"And then the lad's name is very similar," broke in the deacon. "Are
+you sure, Hugh, if isn't Joel? Might not the child have simply given
+the baby pronunciation of Joey?"
+
+"I think that would be very likely, sir," admitted the boy readily.
+
+Again the agitated couple exchanged looks. Hugh would certainly
+never forget the joyous expression that sat upon both faces. It was
+as though Heaven had opened to them, and given them back the child of
+their younger years.
+
+The deacon dropped down on his knees. One arm went around his aged
+wife and the little fellow she cuddled in her lap. In sonorous tones
+he lifted up his voice and gave thanks from the depths of his heart
+for the great mercy shown to them that night.
+
+Hugh was deeply affected. He believed some invisible hand must have
+guided him when he took that sudden notion to have the child go
+walking with him, his mother having suggested that it might do the
+little chap good to get an airing after being shut up in the house
+all day long.
+
+His mind raced back, and once more he marshalled all the facts, as
+far as he knew them, before him. Yes, there did not seem to be any
+reason to believe such a thing as a sad mistake could be made. That
+boy certainly had the Winslow blood in him; why, he greatly resembled
+the Joel of more than fifty years back, as shown in that old-time
+daguerreotype.
+
+Then Deacon Winslow once more rose to his feet. His face was fairly
+radiant, as was that of his wife.
+
+"I believe I can understand how this comes about," he was saying,
+just as if he might have had a revelation as he prayed there. "It is
+no accident, but the hand of a special Providence. Our petitions
+have been heard, and this is the answer; so the last few years of our
+lives may be made happy by the sight of our own flesh and blood. My
+poor service has come up as a memorial before Heaven. And let us
+hope that tomorrow, when that poor girl comes into her senses again,
+she will be able to tell us all of the wonderful story."
+
+"There is one thing I should have mentioned, sir, which slipped my
+mind," Hugh went on to say just then. "Always in her delirium she
+seems to be pleading with someone not to deny her a place under his
+family roof with her little Joey. And it is to an imaginary
+_grandfather_ she is appealing, so pathetically that I have seen my
+mother crying time and again, for very sympathy."
+
+"A grandfather, and cruel at that!" said the old man, shaking his
+head, while the tears rolled unheeded down his furrowed cheeks. "At
+least, that does not apply to me. She will learn presently that we
+stand ready to take her into our hearts and home as our own. Oh! it
+seems too good to be true, this blessing that has come to us
+to-night. And, Hugh Morgan, you must always be associated in our
+minds with this realization of our utmost hopes, which of late years
+we have not even dared whisper to each other."
+
+He wrung the boy's hand until Hugh almost writhed under the pressure;
+while the happy "grandma" continued to devour the plump, rosy-cheeked
+face of her charge with her eyes, as though she could not tear her
+gaze away.
+
+Long they continued to sit there and talk, always upon that one
+subject, because everything else must be subordinated to the
+wonderful revelation that had come to them, to prove that truth is
+often stranger than fiction.
+
+Three times did Hugh suggest that he had better be heading towards
+home: but they pleaded with him to stay "just a little longer"; for
+their starved hearts found it hard to let the newly found treasure
+out of sight, even for a short time.
+
+"But I must really be going," Hugh finally told them. "It is now
+after ten, and mother will be worrying about the child, not knowing,
+of course, that he has found a new protector, two of them, in fact.
+You can both come over after breakfast in the morning, and visit the
+boy. If his mother has regained her senses, and the doctor permits
+it, you will be able to settle the matter once and for all by seeing
+her."
+
+So with that they had to rest content. The child was bundled up
+warmly, and tenderly placed in the sleigh by his huge grandfather,
+after the old lady had kissed his forehead and cheeks a dozen times.
+
+Then they were off, and shortly afterwards arrived at the Morgan
+home. Deacon Winslow insisted on carrying the tiny chap indoors;
+after which he hastened back, to sit up most of the night with his
+wife, talking of the wonderful thing that had come to bless them in
+their old age.
+
+And Hugh, on his part, had a deeply interested auditor in his mother,
+as he spun the yarn that equaled anything he had ever read in the
+Arabian Nights.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+IN A SAFE HARBOR AT LAST
+
+Hugh had finished breakfast on Sunday morning, and was out looking
+after a few pets he had in the way of Belgian hares and homing
+pigeons, when he heard his mother calling him.
+
+"Coming, Mother!" he answered hack, thinking on the spur of the
+moment he was needed to look after the furnace or steam boiler, from
+which the hired girl did not always succeed in getting the best
+results on particularly frosty mornings.
+
+She waited for him just inside the door. Hugh saw immediately that
+his first surmise was wrong, for there was a look on her face to tell
+him it was no trivial matter she had to communicate.
+
+"What is it, Mother?" he asked quickly.
+
+"She is asking for you, Hugh," he was told.
+
+Then he suddenly remembered about the young mother who had lain there
+since Thursday evening, and out of her mind with fever.
+
+"Oh! then the good old Doc was right!" Hugh exclaimed; "he said, you
+know, that he felt sure she'd be in her right senses by Sunday
+morning. You've been talking with her, have you, Mother?"
+
+"Yes, and relieving her immediate curiosity and alarm," he was told.
+"Naturally, she was full of wonder when she awoke to find herself in
+a strange room, with no little Joey near by. She thought it was the
+hospital, and that the cold had claimed him for a victim. But I soon
+calmed her fears, and she knows now all about how she came here; and
+also that her boy is still sleeping happily close by; for he is
+taking a long nap this morning, after his dissipation of last night."
+
+"But, you didn't say anything about the deacon and his dear old wife,
+did you?" continued Hugh.
+
+"Not a word, my son. I wished you to be the one to convey the glad
+news to that poor young mother. She wanted to ask me further
+questions, but I avoided committing myself. She did come from the
+Far West, it appears. Her money ran out just too soon and they had
+to leave the train at a station this side of Waldron Falls. She was
+go determined to reach Scranton before night that she actually
+started out afoot, it seems, despite the cold and the snow-covered
+roads. Several kind-hearted men gave them lifts on the way; but it
+was a long journey, and she became exhausted before reaching her
+destination. But come with me, Hugh; she wishes to thank you face to
+face."
+
+Hugh did not like that part of it. As a rule, he ran away from such
+scenes; but in this case he knew that would never do, since he wished
+to learn further concerning Joey and his mother; and, besides, had
+some pleasant information to tell her that must cheer her heart
+amazingly, and also hasten her recovery.
+
+So he followed his mother into the spare room where the young woman
+lay. She had been propped up with extra pillows by Mrs. Morgan while
+they talked, though kept well covered up. Indeed, the loving hands
+of the older lady had succeeded in placing a warm, knitted sack upon
+her arms and shoulders, Hugh saw.
+
+She looked eagerly at the boy. Her face was not so feverish as
+before; indeed, he could see without being a physician that the
+patient was much better.
+
+"And this is Hugh?" she said, in a voice that trembled. "Yes, I seem
+to remember your face, and how you listened to me trying to tell you
+how much I wanted to get to Scranton before I fell sick, for I could
+feel it coming on. And your mother tells me you carried us both home
+in your sleigh. It was a generous heart that could take an utter
+stranger in, as you have done, and care for her as if she were your
+own flesh and blood. Please let me thank you, Hugh, from the bottom
+of my heart."
+
+Hugh took the hand she extended; but he was careful not to give it
+one of his customary vigorous squeezes; she looked so wan and frail
+that he knew he must hold himself in check.
+
+"Oh! it was a mighty little thing for anyone to do, Mrs. Walters," he
+said, in some confusion, but speaking the name with a purpose in view.
+
+"How did you know that was my name, Hugh?" she asked immediately.
+
+"You mentioned it, my dear, in your delirium," explained Mrs. Morgan;
+"and then, besides, Joey told us that much."
+
+"And did I tell you anything more in my ravings?" she asked, looking
+worried.
+
+"Only something about a certain grandfather whom you seemed to think
+might not receive you as you ardently hoped when you started forth on
+this long journey," the older lady told her. "But then you did not
+know what was in store for you. Sometimes great blessings, as well
+as dire calamities, spring upon us without the least warning. Hugh,
+I shall leave the telling to you from this point on."
+
+The young mother looked from one face to the other.
+
+"Oh! what is it?" she almost gasped. "You are keeping something from
+me I ought to know. Please tell me, Hugh, I beg of you. If it is
+good news I shall be so very grateful, for little Joey's sake mostly.
+Everything I do, everything I think of, is in connection with my
+darling child."
+
+"Then I hope you will forgive me if I'm rushing things too fast!"
+exclaimed the eager boy, unable to restrain his news longer; "but
+little Joey spent two hours last evening asleep in the loving arms of
+his great grandmother; while Deacon Winslow again and again embraced
+both, and gave thanks for the great blessing that had come to his
+fireside!"
+
+How her eyes sparkled when she heard what he said. If Doctor Cadmus
+had been in the room just then he might have cautioned them against
+too much excitement, lest the fever return; but surely such glorious
+news could not do harm, with her heart singing songs of thanksgiving.
+
+"Oh! tell me all about this wonderful thing!" she cried; "how could
+you guess my secret, if I did not betray it in my delirium? Now that
+you have said this much I must know all about it. Please go on,
+Hugh!"
+
+He needed no such urging when the words were ready to fall in a
+stream from his lips. So Hugh commenced, and rapidly sketched the
+strange happenings of the preceding evening--how he had taken the
+little fellow with him for a walk, and stopped at the smithy to see
+the sparks flying upwards in showers; of the invitation to take
+supper, and spend an hour in chatting with the deacon and his good
+wife. Then, quick on the heels of this he told how Mrs. Winslow,
+while holding Joey in her arms so lovingly as he slept in his
+innocence, had suddenly made that amazing discovery in connection
+with the baby chain, and smooth medallion, shaped like a locket.
+
+She lay there with her eyes closed, eagerly drinking in every word
+the boy uttered. The unrestrained tears crept unheeded down her
+cheeks; but Mrs. Morgan did not worry, because only too well did she
+know these were tears of overpowering joy; and not of grief.
+
+Finally the story was all told, and she opened her eyes, swimming as
+they were, to look fondly at each of them in turn.
+
+"What happiness has come into my life!" she said, with a great sigh;
+and, evidently, the load of years had rolled from her heart. "And
+how grateful I must always be to the kind friends who have brought it
+to me and mine. I can never do enough to show you how I appreciate
+it all."
+
+Then Hugh thought himself privileged to ask a few questions in turn,
+wishing to thoroughly satisfy himself with regard to several points
+that were as yet unexplained.
+
+She told them how her husband had lost his life; and that, when she
+and the boy faced poverty, the resolution had come to her to go East
+and try to find the relatives whom she had only lately learned were
+located somewhere near Scranton. She had come across an old and
+time-stained diary kept by her mother's father, who, of course, was
+the runaway son of Deacon Winslow; and thus she learned how he had
+left his home in the heat of anger, and never once communicated with
+his parents up to the time of his death, which occurred a short three
+years after his marriage.
+
+It was all very simple, and supplied the missing links in the chain.
+
+After she had told them these things once more she asked Hugh about
+the aged couple. That was a subject the boy could talk about most
+enthusiastically for a whole hour, he was that full of it. And the
+happy look on her face told how like balm to her heart his words came.
+
+"And they are coming to see you early this morning," he finally
+assured her. "I wouldn't be surprised if either of them has had a
+single wink of sleep last night for counting the minutes creep by,
+they are that anxious to claim you and Joey."
+
+Just then the doorbell rang. Hugh laughed, as though he had been
+expecting such a happening; in fact, he had heard the sound of sleigh
+runners without creaking on the hard-frozen snow, and suspected what
+it signified.
+
+"There they are this minute!" he exclaimed; "shall I run down and let
+them in, Mother? And ought they come right upstairs?"
+
+"Have them take off their wraps first, and warm their hands at the
+radiator," she wisely told him, thinking of the invalid who would
+soon be in their embrace.
+
+It was a very brief time before he ushered them into the room. First
+the old lady was assisted across the floor, for she could hardly
+walk, even when so determined to come over, and greet her
+granddaughter. And when her arms were twined around the weak little
+figure on the bed, and she pressed her to her matronly bosom, Joey's
+mother broke down in hysterical sobs, and, in turn, twined her arms
+about the neck of her newly found relative.
+
+The old deacon looked radiant. He kissed her on the forehead, and
+tried to say something appropriate, but was compelled to turn his
+head aside and blow his nose vigorously, for his emotions overpowered
+him.
+
+Presently, however, they were able to talk rationally, and then it
+was all settled how Joey and his mother were to live with the old
+couple, and be their very own always. Everything was explained, and
+Hugh finally found himself able to "break away," being consumed by a
+desire to run across lots to Thad's house, and tell him the wonderful
+story.
+
+There is no need of accompanying Hugh on his errand, and seeing how
+Thad took the amazing news. Of course, he was simply thunder-struck,
+and delighted also beyond measure. He must have made Hugh tell the
+full particulars as many as several times, for they were all of an
+hour together. But then, Thad's folks had been called in, and told
+how after all these years a descendant of Deacon Winslow had come
+back to the old roof-tree, to make the happiness of the aged couple
+complete.
+
+Of course, the story was soon known all over Scranton, and everybody
+rejoiced with the beloved old blacksmith who had so long been the
+best friend of the boys of the neighborhood. But Hugh, who was
+really the hero of the occasion, was congratulated by everybody for
+being the means of re-uniting these lonely souls, and incidentally
+providing Little Joey with a good home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+MEETING BELLEVILLE'S STRONG TEAM
+
+Another week rolled around, and once again school had closed for the
+Saturday and Sunday period of rest from studies.
+
+It seemed as though luck favored the young people of Scranton this
+season, so far as fair weather went. There had been no snowfall of
+consequence during the entire week; and now Saturday opened with fair
+skies, as if inviting them to go forth and enjoy themselves to their
+full bent.
+
+The great hockey game with Belleville High was to take place in the
+neighboring town, as Captain Kramer (known far and wide simply as "O.
+K.," because those were his initials) had drawn the long straw in
+settling this matter with Hugh, and was, therefore, given the choice
+of territory, according to custom.
+
+Really no one in Scranton was sorry. They had held the last match
+there on the new rink, and could not expect to have a monopoly of
+these happenings all through the season. Besides, they had a
+splendid lake over at Belleville, which would be considerable of an
+attraction to the young people of Scranton, whom fortune had not
+treated so kindly, since they had formerly been compelled to trudge
+several miles to Hobson's mill-pond when they wished to skate, swim,
+or fish; though now, of course, they had the newly flooded area in
+the baseball park for diversion.
+
+A great many went over to Belleville in every manner of vehicle.
+Sleighs were in great demand, but, besides these, cars could be seen
+by dozens on the highroad leading to the rival town, situated some
+ten miles away.
+
+It must needs be something over which they had no control that could
+keep any Scranton High boy or girl away from Belleville that Saturday
+morning. The very atmosphere seemed to be charged with electricity,
+and was calling them to hasten away, to join the throngs already
+pouring forth, bent on giving encouragement to those gallant young
+athletes representing their school, who had as yet not tasted of
+defeat on the ice that season.
+
+The lake just outside of Belleville was quite extensive, and could
+not be insulted with the name of "pond," for it ran at least a mile
+in length, and half that in width.
+
+While the ice was no longer as smooth as had earlier been, the case,
+still it seemed in fair condition. Besides, the Belleville boys had
+managed to flood that section to be given over as a rink; and
+ordinary skaters were warned to keep off, so that it might not be all
+"cut up" with sharp runners before the match was started.
+
+The Belleville team looked dangerous. They were, of course, pretty
+much the same fellows whom Scranton High had met the preceding summer
+on the baseball diamond; some of them had also taken part in the
+athletic tournament late in the Fall, accounts of which events will
+be found duly chronicled in earlier volumes of this series.
+
+When all the preliminaries had been settled good-naturedly, the rival
+teams lined up to hear the last instructions of the referee. This
+party was the same gentleman who had officiated with such
+satisfaction in the game with Keyport on the preceding Saturday.
+
+Here is the list of players, and the positions they occupied,
+Scranton having kept the identical Seven with which the last game had
+been so cleverly won, though many people were of the opinion they had
+a much more difficult proposition before them in the Belleville boys:
+
+
+ _Scranton High_ _Position_ _Belleville_
+ Stevens ......... Goal ............ Leonard
+ Hobson .......... Point ........... Wright
+ Danvers ......... Cover Point ...... "O. K." Kramer
+ Smith ........... Right End ........ Gould
+ Dugdale ......... Center ........... Waterman
+ Morgan .......... Rover ............ Conway
+ Juggins ......... Left End ......... Haggerty
+
+The game had hardly begun before Hugh realized that those Belleville
+fellows had determined to down the visitors, if it took every ounce
+of strenuous ability they possessed. Previous defeats at the hands
+of Scranton High rankled in their hearts, and they were grimly
+resolved, "to do or die," as one of them told Thad Stevens while
+chatting before the game was called.
+
+They made a whirlwind beginning, and had scored two goals before the
+visitors began to "find" themselves. This would never do, Hugh
+determined. He gave his players a signal that called for a spurt,
+and himself led the way by capturing the puck, and shooting it into
+the cage of their opponents amidst loud footings of great joy from
+the loyal and now anxious Scranton rooters.
+
+Juggins distinguished himself also immediately afterwards by a
+lightning play that amazed the Belleville spectators. He dodged all
+interference and when finally too hard pressed, managed to send the
+rubber disc across to Dugdale, who continued the good work by
+shooting it into the charge of Hobson; and, almost before Leonard
+could try to stop its flight, it had gone with a crash into the cage
+for the second goal on Scranton's side.
+
+Things began to look brighter. If Belleville could play brilliant
+hockey through the coaching of an efficient instructor, the visiting
+team knew a few things also, which were calculated to surprise their
+rivals.
+
+Of course, most, if not all of the Belleville Seven had attended the
+game on the preceding Saturday, their own match for that day, which
+they had easily won, coming off in the afternoon. Consequently, they
+had studied the methods of the Scranton boys, and believed they would
+be able to profit by their knowledge later on.
+
+But Hugh had been wise to this fact, and posted Mr. Leonard, the
+coach; who, meanwhile, taught them a few new little wrinkles that
+were calculated to disturb the calculations of Belleville when the
+time came for the meeting. As in football, ice hockey presents a
+fruitful field for diplomacy and clever tactics; and the wisest
+general usually manages to carry his team to victory over those who
+may be much more nimble skaters and even smarter with their sticks,
+but not so able in the line of strategy.
+
+Belleville also took a "hunch," as some of the boys called it, and
+again forged to the front. Indeed, they scored three times against
+one more goal for the visitors; and when the first half of the match
+had been finished the game stood at five to three against Scranton.
+
+Hugh was in a dilemma. He knew that to win out he must have an
+infusion of new blood, for those husky players of the local school
+were too rapid for the Scranton boys. But, according to the rules of
+the game, substitutes can only be allowed in case of serious injury.
+So, unless one of his player chanced to be hurt in such a way as to
+necessitate his withdrawal from the game there could be no changes
+made in the line-up.
+
+This is so hedged about with safeguards against fraud that even if a
+player is hurt he must be examined by someone competent to say
+whether he may be able to commence work again inside of seven
+minutes; and if so, the game must proceed. Should he be excused from
+further participation in the contest his captain may have the
+privilege of putting in another man; or, if he chooses to play with
+only six on the ice, the other side must also eliminate a player, so
+as to make the line-up equal.
+
+Perhaps some of Hugh's comrades must have guessed what was gripping
+their leader around that time. Nothing else could have induced
+Smith, for instance, to say, as he did to Hugh, while they were
+resting in preparation for the last half of the game to start in:
+
+"I'm awfully ashamed of that rotten run I made, Hugh, when you handed
+me the rubber so handsomely. If I'd known my business as I should
+I'd have landed it in the wire cage as snug as anything. But I
+fumbled, and that Conway got it away from me, the robber. I'm no
+good, Hugh; and I'd give a heap if only you could kick me out of the
+game, and get a better substitute."
+
+"It can't be done, Just," Hugh told him; "a player has to be pretty
+badly hurt to be dropped, you know, and a substitute taken on. Cheer
+up, and get a fresh start. Two goals shouldn't be a hard job for us
+to tackle, once we get going at our old pace. There are a few tricks
+left in the bag still, before we reach the bottom."
+
+"But, see here, I'm pretty lame at that, after the stumble and fall I
+had, Hugh," said "Just" Smith eagerly; "perhaps the referee would let
+me throw up my job if he saw how badly my shin has been scraped."
+
+"Oh! you're in pretty good shape still, 'Just,' and you know it,"
+remarked Hugh, smiling at the evident determination of his friend to
+sacrifice himself for the general good. "When we start play again
+we'll try the last dodge Mr. Leonard taught us, and see if it'll work
+for a goal. It's clean sport, and nothing tricky, you know."
+
+So "Just" Smith shrugged his shoulders, and did not seem at all
+happy, though he let the matter drop. Hugh wondered, though, what
+that grim look on his face meant, and, later on, had a hazy idea that
+he had found out.
+
+The game started again. Encouraged by their success, Belleville
+again took matters in their own hands and forced the fighting. There
+were several weak places in the Scranton High line-up. Many who
+diagnosed the play were of the opinion that the game was already as
+good as lost.
+
+Then came a most violent scrimmage, into which "Just" Smith plunged
+with the utmost recklessness, as though determined to wipe out all
+his former mistakes in some brilliant playing. Suddenly the
+referee's whistle called the game. Something had happened to bring
+about a stoppage of play. A fellow was down on the ice, with half a
+dozen others bending over him.
+
+It was "Just" Smith, and he was apparently badly injured in the
+bargain. A doctor was speedily called, who pronounced it a fracture
+of the leg, and decided that the player would have to be taken home
+immediately for a physician's attention.
+
+As "Just" Smith passed his captain, being carried by two husky
+players to a waiting car that would convey him home, he actually had
+the nerve to grin in Hugh's face. A suspicion came into the latter's
+mind to the effect that the player had purposely taken terrible risks
+in the hope that he might be disabled, so that a substitute could be
+put in his place; though, of course, Hugh tried to banish this
+thought as soon as it gripped him.
+
+"Get your substitute, Hugh, or else we'll have to drop a man!" called
+the Belleville captain; and Hugh glanced apprehensively around; then
+broke through the dense crowd, and seized upon a skater who had been
+hovering near.
+
+It was Nick Lang!
+
+"We need another player, Nick!" Hugh exclaimed eagerly; "and I want
+you to help get the team out of this nasty hole, for the sake of good
+old Scranton High. So don't say you won't, but come along, and do
+your level best to bring us out ahead!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+NICK MAKES GOOD----CONCLUSION
+
+The look upon the face of Nick Lang when Hugh spoke in this way told
+the leader of the Scranton Hockey Seven he would fight with might and
+main to turn the tables on the winning Belleville team.
+
+Nick's hour had struck!
+
+The long-awaited opportunity to prove the genuine nature of the
+change that had taken place within his heart had arrived. He was
+going into play as one of the Regulars; he had been especially picked
+for that important service among twenty likely lads who only too
+gladly would have accepted a chance to distinguish themselves in such
+an emergency.
+
+Accordingly Nick had a large letter S fastened to his jersey, to mark
+the side on which he fought, so that the referee might easily know
+where he belonged. One word from the coach as he strode forward Nick
+would never forget as long as he lived; it was a word of confidence;
+and, remembering how Mr. Leonard had at one time detested and
+distrusted this boy, it meant everything to Nick.
+
+The game started again after the lapse of seven minutes.
+
+Belleville considered that they had "the edge" on the visitors, and
+immediately went at it as though bent on adding considerably to the
+number of goals marked to their credit. But almost immediately it
+was discovered that the infusion of new blood had somehow altered the
+complexion of things greatly.
+
+Thanks principally to the marvelous agility and strategy of Nick, a
+goal was shot inside of two minutes. It was immediately followed by
+another, this time Nick winning the score without the least help from
+anyone.
+
+Wild applause rang out from parts of the crowd, where, of course,
+Scranton rooters mostly congregated. How sweet those cheers must
+have sounded in the ears of Nick Lange, who for years had only earned
+the hoots and jeers of his fellows in Scranton, on account of their
+distrust, and his own evil ways.
+
+Why, the Belleville folks sat up and rubbed their eyes. They had
+never dreamed that any fellow not a professional player could prove
+himself such a marvelous wizard on steel runners. Nick fairly
+dazzled them with his speed, his eccentric twistings when hotly
+pursued, and the clever way in which he kept that rubber disc just in
+front of his hockey stick, always carrying it along toward the point
+where he meant to strike for goal.
+
+And when he did make that stroke vain were the frantic efforts of the
+usually dependable Leonard to block its amazing passage; for almost
+before he swung he heard the plug of the puck landing in the wire
+cage which he was especially set to guard, and knew that another
+tally had been added to Scranton's growing score.
+
+The conditions had changed, and the shoe was now on the other foot.
+
+Thanks to the fine playing of Nick Lang Scranton was now ahead, and
+it seemed extremely doubtful whether Belleville would have another
+chance to make a single tally. The boys were plainly disconcerted by
+the excellent work of the substitute, and seemed to have lost much of
+that aggressive spirit so absolutely necessary in ice hockey in order
+to win games. They played almost sullenly, as if realizing that it
+was all over but the shouting.
+
+Vain were the efforts of Captain Kramer to put new life in his
+followers. He himself fought more desperately than ever, and once
+even succeeded in taking the puck away from the triumphant Nick, the
+only one who attained that glory; only to lose it immediately
+afterwards to Owen Dugdale, who transferred it to Stevens by way of
+Hobson; and then it plunged into the cage, despite Leonard's mad
+attempt to stay its swift flight.
+
+"Who's this you Scranton boys have thrown into the game?" demanded
+one chagrined Belleville gentleman, as he saw what a radical change
+Nick's coming had made in the affair on the ice rink. "He plays
+suspiciously like a certain Canadian I saw last winter, who set
+everybody in New York City wild with his work. Is Jean La Rue
+visiting anybody in Scranton; and have you rung him in on us to-day,
+to send our poor chaps down to defeat?"
+
+"Don't you believe it, Mister," chortled a boy standing near by,
+whose jersey was decorated with the letters "S. H. S.," standing, of
+course, for Scranton High School. "That fellow is only our Nick
+Lang, who was born and brought up in our home town. The place was
+never proud of that face until this great day, because Nick, you see,
+has been the worst boy ever known in Scranton. Why, his escapades
+would take a week to tell you. He used to be the terror of
+everybody, the bully all boys feared and shunned. But it seems like
+Nick has turned over a new leaf. Folks didn't all believe in his
+change of heart; but after to-day, say, Nick could own the whole town
+if he was so minded. I'd give a heap if I was standing in his shoes
+this same day. He'll be a hero, as sure as he used to be the town
+scapegrace!"
+
+It was just that way up to the time the referee signaled that the
+last half of the game had been played to a finish. Nick seemed
+capable of doing almost as he pleased. Whenever he got possession of
+the puck it was, as one enthusiastic Scranton boy whooped, a "regular
+procession." The Belleville lads just couldn't touch him. His
+actions bewildered them, so that they were continually becoming mixed
+up with their own side when they thought to corner Nick and the puck.
+
+The score?
+
+Well, it seemed too bad that after such a brilliant beginning
+Belleville should fall so low, and see the terrible figures, thirteen
+to seven, marked up against them.
+
+In the annals of sport, as chronicled at Scranton High, that contest
+would always be known as the "Battle of Winchester," just because, as
+in the Civil War, when the Union army was in retreat and demoralized,
+the coming of a single man, General Phil Sheridan, caused them to
+turn about, and presently win a conclusive and overwhelming victory.
+And Nick Lang had been the Phil Sheridan for Scranton on that
+glorious day!
+
+Nick tried to make a "grand sneak" as soon as the game finished, but
+the crowd would have none of that, hemming him in so that he could
+not run; and then for the first time in all his life the one-time
+bully of Scranton tasted of the joys of popularity.
+
+Fellows wrung his hand who had always treated him with disdain. He
+was slapped on the back and praised to the skies. Why, even Sue
+Barnes, Ivy Middleton, Peggy Noland, and a lot of other school-girls
+seemed proud to shake hands with Nick, who was as red in the face as
+a turkey gobbler, and rendered quite breathless trying to answer the
+myriad of sincere congratulations that were showered on him.
+
+But by the happy light in his eyes Hugh knew the die was cast, once
+and for all. Having tasted of the sweets of popularity and honest
+praise, nothing on earth could now tempt Nick to fall back again to
+his former ignoble ways. His foot was firmly planted on the second
+round of the ladder, and he had his aspiring eye on the better things
+nearer the top.
+
+The deacon had come over to see the game. He and Hugh went home
+together, and the talk was mostly concerning the wonderful
+reformation of Nick Lang.
+
+"I'm hoping to have Nick come to me when he leaves school," the good
+old man was saying. "He has the making of a clever blacksmith in
+him, and I'd dearly like to turn over my shop to him some day not far
+in the future; because it's almost time the old man retired, now that
+he has a sunbeam coming to his house, which is going to take up much
+of his attention."
+
+So it seemed that Nick's future was assured, if so be he cared to
+take up that honorable trade, by means of which the deacon had
+accumulated his little fortune.
+
+As for the two former pals of Nick, Tip Slavin and Leon Disney, in
+due time they were convicted of the robbery of Paul Kramer's store,
+and sent away to the excellent State institution, to remain there
+until they had reached the age of twenty-one.
+
+There was at least a fair hope that long before that time arrived one
+or both of the boys would have learned a trade and decided to live a
+respectable life in the future; for many lads who were deemed
+uncontrollable at home, under the lax training they received there,
+have been fashioned into splendid men because of the strict
+discipline at the Reform School.
+
+There is little more to add to make our story complete.
+
+Joey and his mother were soon installed under the hospitable roof of
+the deacon, where they found themselves the objects of love and
+devotion. The miseries of the past would soon be forgotten in the
+great happiness that had come to them. And certain it is that no one
+would be a more welcome guest there than Hugh Morgan, because it was
+partly through his efforts that this joyous event had been made
+possible.
+
+Since Scranton High had taken such a leading part in the outdoor
+sports so beloved by all wide-awake boys, it could be set down as
+certain that the fellows in Allandale and Belleville would not be
+content to let them rest upon their well-earned laurels, but would
+strive with might and main to excel them on the diamond, the
+cinder-path, the football gridiron, or some other field of athletic
+endeavor.
+
+That many fiercely contested games would result was a foregone
+conclusion; and it is to be hoped that we shall have the privilege of
+meeting the readers of this volume in the pages of subsequent books,
+where some of those exciting happenings may be set down in an
+interesting manner.
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chums of Scranton High at Ice
+Hockey, by Donald Ferguson
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