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diff --git a/37912.txt b/37912.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5f83bcd --- /dev/null +++ b/37912.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5833 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girls of Central High at Basketball, by +Gertrude W. Morrison + +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 Girls of Central High at Basketball + The Great Gymnasium Mystery + +Author: Gertrude W. Morrison + +Release Date: November 2, 2011 [EBook #37912] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH AT *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was +produced from scanned images of public domain material +from the Google Print project.) + + + + + +[Illustration: THE BALL ROSE AND FLEW DIRECTLY AT THE BASKET.] + + + + +THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH AT BASKETBALL + +GERTRUDE W. MORRISON + +1914 + + + + +CONTENTS: + CHAPTER I--HESTER IS MIFFED + CHAPTER II--THE KERNEL IN THE ATHLETIC NUT + CHAPTER III--JOHNNY DOYLE + CHAPTER IV--"THERE'S GOOD STUFF IN THAT GIRL" + CHAPTER V--HESTER AT HOME + CHAPTER VI--THE FIRST GAME + CHAPTER VII--THE SECOND HALF + CHAPTER VIII--THE ROUND ROBIN + CHAPTER IX--ANOTHER RAID + CHAPTER X--MOTHER WIT AND THE GRAY MARE + CHAPTER XI--HEBE POCOCK + CHAPTER XII--"OUT OF IT" + CHAPTER XIII--THE WIND VEERS + CHAPTER XIV--RACING THE FLAMES + CHAPTER XV--THE KEYPORT GAME + CHAPTER XVI--UPHILL WORK FOR THE TEAM + CHAPTER XVII--HEBE POCOCK IN TROUBLE + CHAPTER XVIII--MOTHER WIT TO THE RESCUE + CHAPTER XIX--AT LUMBERPORT + CHAPTER XX--WINNING ALL ALONG THE LINE + CHAPTER XXI--WHAT HESTER DID + CHAPTER XXII--WHAT MR. BILLSON COULD TELL + CHAPTER XXIII--CLIMBING UP + CHAPTER XXIV--HESTER WINS + CHAPTER XXV--THE MYSTERY EXPLAINED + + + + +CHAPTER I + +HESTER IS MIFFED + + +The referee's whistle sounded sharply, and the eighteen girls of +Central High engaged in playing basketball, as well as an equal number +strung along the side lines, stopped instantly and turned their eyes +on Mrs. Case, the physical instructor. + +"Hester Grimes! you are deliberately delaying the game. I have +reprimanded you twice. The third time I will take you out of the team +for the week----" + +"I didn't, either!" cried the person addressed, a rather heavily built +girl for her age, with a sturdy body and long arms--well developed in a +muscular way, but without much grace. She had very high color, too, +and at the present moment her natural ruddiness was heightened by +anger. + +"You are breaking another rule of the game by directly addressing the +referee," said Mrs. Case, grimly. "Are you ready to play, or shall I +take you out of the game right now?" + +The red-faced girl made no audible reply, and the teacher signalled +for the ball to be put into play again. Three afternoons each week +each girl of Central High, of Centerport, who was eligible for +after-hour athletics, was exercised for from fifteen to thirty minutes +at basketball. Thirty-six girls were on the ground at a time. Every +five minutes the instructor blew her whistle, and the girls changed +places. That is, the eighteen actually playing the game shifted with +the eighteen who had been acting as umpires, judges, timekeepers, +scorers, linesmen and coaches. This shifting occupied only a few +seconds, and it put the entire thirty-six girls into the game, shift +and shift about. It was in September, the beginning of the fall term, +and Mrs. Case was giving much attention to the material for the +inter-school games, to be held later in the year. + +Hester Grimes had played the previous spring on the champion team, and +held her place now at forward center. But although she had been two +years at Central High, and was now a Junior, she had never learned the +first and greatest truth that the physical instructor had tried to +teach her girls: + +"_Keep your temper!_" + +Since spring several of the girls playing on the first team of Central +High had left school, graduating as seniors. The work now was to whip +this team into shape, and finally Mrs. Case and the girls themselves, +voting upon the several names in their capacity as members of the +Girls' Branch Athletic League, had settled upon the following roster +of names and positions as the "make-up" of the best-playing basketball +team of Central High: + + Josephine Morse, goal-keeper + Evangeline Sitz, right forward + Dora Lockwood, left forward + Hester Grimes, forward center + Laura Belding, jumping center + Lily Pendleton, back center + Dorothy Lockwood, right guard + Nellie Agnew, left guard + Bobby Hargrew, goal guard + +The basketball court of Central High was located in the new Girls' +Athletic Field, not far from the school building itself, and +overlooking beautiful Lake Luna and the boathouses and rowing course. +At the opening of Central High this fall the new field and gymnasium +had first come into use. + +The athletic field, gymnasium and swimming pool were the finest in the +State arranged for girls' athletics. They had been made possible by +the generosity of one of the very wealthy men of Centerport, Colonel +Richard Swayne, and his interest in the high school girls and their +athletics had been engaged by one of the girls themselves, Laura +Belding by name, but better known among her schoolfellows and friends +as "Mother Wit." + +The play went on again under the keen eye of the instructor. Mrs. Case +believed most thoroughly in the efficiency of basketball for the +development and training of girls; but she did not allow her charges +to play the game without supervision. Lack of supervision by +instructors is where the danger of basketball and kindred athletics +lies. + +The game is an excellent one from every point of view; yet within the +last few years it has come into disfavor in some quarters, and many +parents have forbidden their daughters to engage in it. Like bicycling +in the past, and football with the boys, basketball has suffered "a +black eye" because of the way it has been played, not because of the +game itself. + +But the Girls' Branch played the game under sound rules, and under the +keen oversight of the instructor engaged by the Board of Education of +Centerport for that purpose. Basketball is the first, or one of the +first vigorous team games to become popular among women and girls in +this country, and under proper supervision will long remain a favorite +pastime. + +The rules under which the girls of Central High played the game were +such as brought into basketball the largest number of players allowed. +Whereas there were often in the games on Central High courts only +right forward, left forward, center, right guard and left guard, with +possibly a jumping center--these games being engaged in by the girls +for their own amusement--in the regular practice and when the +representative team played the teams of other schools, the girls on +the field numbered nine upon a side. + +Thus conforming with the new rules, Mrs. Case, and the physical +instructors of the other highs of Centerport and the neighboring +cities, made the interest in basketball more general and enabled a +greater number of ambitious girls to gain coveted positions on the +first team. + +Suddenly Mrs. Case's whistle stopped the play again. And as the bustle +and activity subsided, two girls' voices rose above all. + +"You just see! It's only Hester who gets scolded----" + +"It's not so! If she'd play fair----" + +"Miss Pendleton and Miss Agnew are discussing something of much +importance--much more important than the game," said the referee, +tartly. + +"Well, she said----" began Nellie Agnew, who was usually a very quiet +girl, but who was flushed and angry now as she "looked daggers" at +Lily Pendleton, who was Hester Grimes's chum. + +"That will do, Nellie!" exclaimed the instructor. "You girls evidently +have not taken to heart what I have been telling you. The only way to +play this--or any other team game--is to work together and talk as +little as possible. And by no means allow your tempers to become +heated. + +"We have formed a new line-up for the fall series of games with East +and West High, and the highs of Keyport and Lumberport. It would be +too bad to change the make-up of the team later; but I want girls on +our champion team, who play the first class teams of other schools, +who know how to keep cool and to keep their mouths shut. Now! don't +let me have to repeat this again to-day at least. Time!" + +Hester Grimes turned and gave Nellie Agnew an angry look and then went +on playing. The girls officiating at the lines changed with the actual +players. Later they shifted again, which brought the first team into +the field once more with the ball. + +When the practice was over Mrs. Case stopped Hester Grimes before she +could run off the field. She spoke to her in a low voice, so that no +other girl could hear; but she spoke firmly: + +"Hester, you are making a bad impression upon the teachers as well as +on the minds of your fellow pupils by your indulgence in bad temper." + +"Nobody else calls me down for it but you, Mrs. Case," declared the +big girl, bitterly. + +"You are a good scholar--you do not fail at your books," Mrs. Case +continued, quietly. "You do not have occasion in the classroom to +often show your real disposition. Here, in matters of athletics, it is +different. Your deportment does not suit me----" + +"It never has, Mrs. Case," exclaimed the red-faced girl. "You have +criticized me ever since you came here to Central High----" + +"Stop, Hester! How dare you speak that way to a teacher? I shall +certainly report you to Mr. Sharp if you take my admonition in such a +spirit. I have finished with you. If you do not show improvement in +deportment on the athletic field I shall shut you out of practice +entirely." + +The instructor spoke sharply and her face was clouded. She was a very +brisk, decisive woman, and she considered that she had been patient +with Hester Grimes long enough. + +Hester was the only daughter of a very wealthy wholesale butcher, and +from her babyhood had been indulged and given her way. She was one of +those girls who fairly "boss" their parents and everybody around their +homes. She had bought the friendliness of some weak girls by her +display and the lavish use of spending money. Perhaps, however, Lily +Pendleton was really the only girl who cared for Hester. + +Most of the girls who had been relieved from basketball practice had +run in to change to their street clothing. On the lower floor of the +gymnasium building was the swimming pool, shower baths, and dressing +room, besides the lockers for field materials, the doctor's and +instructor's offices, and the hair-drying room. Above was the +gymnasium proper with all the indoor apparatus allowed by the rules of +the Girls' Branch. + +Each girl had her own locker and key, the key to be handed in at the +instructor's office when she left the building. When Hester came into +the long dressing room there was a chatter of voices and laughter. +There was no restriction on talking in here. + +Lily met her chum at the door. The former was naturally a pale girl, +rather pretty, but much given to aping fashions and frocks of grown +women. + +"I'd like to box that Bobby Hargrew's ears," she said, to her angry +chum. "She was just saying that you'd queer the team again before you +got through. She's always hinting that you lost that last game we +played East High last spring." + +"I'll just fix her for that--the mean little thing!" snapped Hester, +and being just in the mood for quarreling she stalked over to where +little Clara Hargrew was talking to a group of friends, among whom +were Nellie Agnew and the Lockwood twins. + +"So you're slandering me, as usual, are you, Miss?" demanded Hester, +her face very fiery and her voice very loud. + +"Meaning me?" demanded Bobby, shaking her curly head, and grinning +impishly at the bigger girl. + +"Who else would I mean, Miss?" pursued Hester. + +"I couldn't slander you, Hessie," said the mischief-loving Bobby. + +"You are a trouble-maker all the time, Bobby Hargrew----" began the +older girl, but Bobby broke in with: + +"If I made anywhere near as much trouble as you do about this +gymnasium, Hessie, I'd talk soft." + +"Now, Bobby," cautioned Nellie Agnew, laying a quick hand upon the +smaller girl's arm and drawing her away. + +But Hester, quite beside herself, lifted her palm and struck at Bobby. +Perhaps the agile girl dodged; or maybe Nellie deliberately stepped +forward. Anyhow, the stroke intended for Bobby landed full upon +Nellie's cheek. Hester was strong and her hand heavy. The print of her +palm left a white patch for a moment upon the plump cheek of the +doctor's daughter. + +"Now you've done it, Hessie!" cried Bobby, angrily. "See what you've +done!" + +"I didn't----" began Hester, rather startled by the result of her blow; +but the tears of anger and pain had sprung to Nellie's eyes and for +once the peacemaker showed some spirit. + +"It served you just right! You're always interfering," flashed out +Hester. + +"You are a bad and cruel girl," said Nellie, sobbing, but more in +anger than pain. + +"Bah! you run and tell Mrs. Case now. That will be about your style." + +"I shall tell my father," said Nellie, firmly, and turned away that +her enemy might not exult longer in her tears. + +"And he's our physician and I guess he'll have something to say about +your actions, Hessie!" cried Bobby Hargrew. "You're not fit to play +with nice girls, anyway." + +"And you're one of the 'nice' ones, I suppose, Miss?" scoffed Hester. + +"I hope I am. I don't lose my temper and queer my team-mates' play. +And nobody ever caught me doing mean things--and you've been caught +before. If it wasn't for Gee Gee favoring you, you'd have been asked +to leave Central High before now," cried Bobby. + +"That's so, too," said one of the twins, quite as angry as Bobby, but +more quietly. + +"I should worry!" laughed Hester, loudly and scornfully. "What if I +did leave Central High? You girls are a lot of stuck-up ninnies, +anyway! I hate you all, and I'll get square with you some day--you just +see if I don't!" + +It was perhaps an empty threat; yet it was spoken with grim +determination on Hester Grimes's part. And only the future could tell +if she would or would not keep her promise. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE KERNEL IN THE ATHLETIC NUT + + +The Girls' Branch Athletic League of Central High had been in +existence only a few months. Gymnasium work, folk dancing, rowing and +swimming, walking and some field sports had been carried to a certain +point under the supervision of instructors engaged by Centerport's +Board of Education before the organization of the girls themselves +into an association which, with other school clubs, held competitions +in all these, and other, athletics for trophies and prizes. + +Centerport, a lively and wealthy inland city located on the shore of +Lake Luna, boasted three high schools--the East and West Highs, and the +newer and large Central High, which was built in "the Hill" section of +the town, the best residential district, on an eminence overlooking +the lake and flanked on either side and landward, as well, by the +business portions of the city. The finest estates of the Hill district +sloped down to the shore of the lake. + +Public interest had long since been aroused in the boys' athletics; +but that in girls' similar development had lagged until the spring +previous to the opening of our story. + +In the first volume of this series, entitled "The Girls of Central +High; Or, Rivals for All Honors," was related the organization of the +Girls' Branch, and the early difficulties and struggles of a group of +girl sophomores, most of whom were now on the roster of the basketball +team as named in our first chapter. Laura Belding was the leading +character in that first volume, and her quick-wittedness and loyalty +to the school and to the athletic association really brought about, as +has been intimated, the building of a fine gymnasium for the girls of +Central High and the preparation of the athletic field connected +therewith. + +In "The Girls of Central High on Lake Luna; Or, The Crew That Won," +the second volume of the series, was narrated the summer aquatic +sports of the girls and their boy friends; and in that story the +Lockwood twins, Dora and Dorothy, came to the fore as champion +canoeists among the girls, as well as efficient members of the crew of +the eight-oared shell, which won the prize cup offered by the Luna +Boat Club to the champion shell rowed by high school girls. + +Lake Luna was a beautiful body of water, all of twenty miles in +length, with Rocky River flowing into it from the west at Lumberport, +and Rolling River carrying off her overflow at the east end of the +lake, where stood the third of the trio of towns--Keyport. Both +Lumberport and Keyport had a well conducted high school, and the girls +in both were organized for athletics as were the three chief schools +of Centerport. + +South of Centerport was a range of low hills, through which the two +railroads which tapped the territory wound their way through deep cuts +and tunnels. In the middle of the lake was Cavern Island, a very +popular amusement park at one end, but at its eastern end wild and +rocky enough. The northern shore of the lake was skirted by farms and +deep woods, with a goodly mountain range in the distance. + +The girls who had been in the first class at basketball practice began +to troop out of the gymnasium in their street apparel. Chetwood +Belding and his chum, Lance Darby, were waiting for Laura and Jess +Morse. With them was a gangling, goose-necked youth, dressed several +degrees beyond the height of fashion. This was Prettyman Sweet, the +acknowledged "glass of fashion and mould of form" among the boys of +Central High. + +"Hullo! here's Pretty!" cried Bobby Hargrew, dancing out behind Laura +and Jess. "You're never waiting to beau _me_ home, are you, Mr. +Sweet?" + +"I--oh--ah----" stammered Purt, in much confusion. "It weally would give +me pleasure, Miss Bobby; but I weally have a pwior engagement--ah!" + +Just then Hester and Lily came out of the door. Bobby dodged Hester in +mock alarm. Lily stopped in the shelter of the doorway to powder her +nose, holding up a tiny mirror that she might do it effectively, and +then dropping both mirror and "powder rag" into the little "vanity +case" she wore pendant from her belt. + +Purt Sweet approached Miss Pendleton with a mixture of diffidence and +dancing school deportment that made Bobby shriek with laughter. + +"Oh, joy!" whispered the latter to Nellie, who appeared next with the +Lockwood twins. "Purt has found a shrine before which to lay his +heart's devotion. D'ye see _that_?" pointing derisively to Lily and +young Sweet turning the first corner. + +Hester was strolling away by herself. Nellie said, quickly: + +"Let's not go _this_ way. I don't want to meet that girl again +to-night." + +"Much obliged to you, Nell, for taking my slapping. But Hester never +really meant to hit me, after all. You got in the way, you know." + +"You'd better behave," said one of the twins admonishingly. "You made +this trouble, Bobby." + +"There you go!" cried Bobby, with apparent tears. "Nobody loves me; +Hester tried to slap me, and Pretty Sweet wouldn't even walk with me. +Oh, and say!" she added, with increased hilarity, "what do you suppose +the boys are telling about Pretty now?" + +"Couldn't say," said Dora Lockwood. "Something ridiculous, I venture +to believe." + +"It's _funny_," giggled Bobby. "You see, Purt thinks he's really +getting whiskers." + +"No!" exclaimed Dorothy. + +"Sure. You watch him next time you have a chance. He's always feeling +to see if his side-tapes have sprouted. He _has_ got a little yellow +fuzz on his upper lip--honest! + +"Well, Purt went into Jimmy Fabro's shop the other day--you know, that +hair-cutting place right behind Mr. Betting's store, on the side +street? Well, Purt went in and took a chair. Jimmy was alone. + +"'What you want--hair cut again this week, Pretty?' asked Jimmy. + +"'No--o,' says Purt. 'Sh--sh--shave.' + +"Jimmy grunted, dropped back the chair, muffled Purt up in the towels, +and then squinted up and down his victim's cheeks. Finally he mumbled +something about being 'right back' and ran into Mr. Belding's and came +back with a watchmaker's glass stuck in his eye. Then he squinted up +and down Purt's face some more and finally mixed a big mug of +lather--and lathered Purt's eyebrows!" + +"Oh! what for?" demanded Dora Lockwood. + +"That's what Purt asked him," giggled Bobby. "Jimmy said in his gruff +way: + +"'I'm hanged if I can see hair anywhere else on your face, Pretty. You +want your eyebrows shaved off, don't ye, Pretty?' So, Chet says, +Purt's been trying to shave himself since then in a piece of broken +mirror out in the wood shed, and with a jack-knife." + +Although Nellie Agnew laughed, too, at Bobby's story, she was in no +jolly mood when she parted from the other girls and entered Dr. +Agnew's premises. + +The doctor, Nellie's father, was a broadly educated physician--one of +the small class of present day medical men who, like the "family +doctor" of a past generation, claimed no "specialty" and treated +everything from mumps to a broken leg. He was a rather full-bodied +man, with a pink, wrinkled face, cleanly shaven every morning of his +life; black hair with silver threads in it and worn long; +old-fashioned detachable cuffs to his shirts, and a black string tie +that went around his collar twice, the ends of which usually fluttered +in the breeze. + +There had long since been established between the good doctor and his +daughter a confidential relation very beautiful to behold. Mrs. Agnew +was a very lovely woman, rather stylish in dress, and much given to +church and club work. Perhaps that is why Dr. Agnew had made such a +comrade of Nellie. She might, otherwise, have lacked any personal +guide at a time in her life when she most needed it. + +It was no new thing, therefore, that Nellie should follow the doctor +into the office that evening after dinner, and perch on the broad arm +of his desk chair while he lit the homely pipe that he indulged in +once a day--usually before the rush of evening patients. + +When Nellie had told her father all about the unpleasant quarrel at +the gymnasium the doctor smoked thoughtfully for several minutes. Then +he said, in his clear, quiet voice--the calm quality of which Nellie +had herself inherited: + +"Do you know what seems to me to be the kernel in the nut of these +school athletics, Nell?" + +"What is it, Daddy Doctor?" + +"Loyalty. That's the kernel--loyalty. If your athletics and games don't +teach you that, you might as well give 'em up--all of you girls. The +feminine sex is not naturally loyal; now, don't get mad!" and the +doctor chuckled. "It is not a natural virtue--if _any_ virtue is +humanly natural--of the sex. It's only the impulsive, spitfire girls +who are naturally loyal--the kind who will fight for another girl. +Among boys it is different. Now, I am not praising boys, or putting +them an iota higher than girls. Only, long generations of working and +fighting together has made the normal male loyal to his kind. It is an +instinct--and even our friends who call themselves suffragettes have +still to acquire it. + +"But this isn't to be a lecture, Nell. It's just a piece of advice. +Show yourself loyal to the other girls of Central High, and to the +betterment of basketball and the other athletics, by----" + +"By what?" cried Nellie. + +"By paying no attention to Hester Grimes, or what she does. After all, +her shame, if she is removed from your basketball team, is the shame +of her whole class, and of the school as well. Ignore her mean ways if +you can. Don't get in the way of her hand again, Nell," and his eyes +twinkled. "Remember, that blow was not intended for you, in the first +place. And I am not sure that Clara Hargrew would not sometimes be the +better for the application of somebody's hand--in the old-fashioned +way! No, Nell. Say nothing. Make no report of the affair. If Hester is +disloyal, don't you be. Keep out of her way as much as possible----" + +"But she spoiled our games with the other schools last spring, and she +will do so again," complained Nellie. + +"Then let Mrs. Case, or somebody else, be the one to set the matter in +motion of removing Hester from the team. That's my advice, Miss." + +"And of course I shall take it, Daddy Doctor," said Nellie slowly. +"But I _did_ think it was a chance for us to get rid of Hester. She is +_such_ a plague." + +The doctor's eyes twinkled. "I wonder why it is that we always want to +shift our burdens on other folks' shoulders? Do you suppose either the +East or West Highs would find Hester any more bearable if she attended +them instead of Central?" + +The girls of Central High had something of more moment than Hester +Grimes's "tantrums" to think of the next day. Bobby Hargrew came +flying up the path to the doctor's porch long before school time. +Nellie saw her and ran out to see what she wanted. + +"What do you s'pose?" cried Bobby. + +"Couldn't guess, Chicken-little," laughed Nellie. "Has the sky +fallen?" + +"Almost as bad," declared Bobby, twinkling, but immediately becoming +grave. "The gymnasium----" + +"Not burned!" + +"No, no! But it's been entered. And by some awfully mean person. The +apparatus on the upper floor has been partly destroyed, and the +lockers broken into downstairs and lots of the field materials +spoiled. Oh, it's dreadfully mean, Nellie! They even sawed through the +rungs of the hanging ladders a little way, so that if anybody swung on +them they'd break. + +"And with all the harm they did, nobody can tell how they got into the +building, or out again. The watchman sleeps on the premises. You know, +he's not supposed to keep awake all night, for the same man keeps the +field in repair during the day. But my father says that Jackway, the +watchman, must have slept like the dead if he didn't hear the +marauders while they were damaging all that apparatus. + +"It's just too mean," concluded Bobby. "There isn't a basketball that +isn't cut to pieces, and the tennis ball boxes were broken open and +the balls all thrown into the swimming pool. Tennis rackets were +slashed, hockey sticks sawed in two, and other dreadful things done. +It shows that whoever did it must have had a grudge against the +athletic association and us girls--must have just _hated_ us!" + +"And who hates us?" cried Nellie, the question popping out before she +thought. + +Bobby turned rather white, though her eyes shone. She tapped Nellie on +the shoulder with an insistent index finger. + +"You and I know who _says_ she hates us," whispered the younger girl. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +JOHNNY DOYLE + + +Franklin Sharp, principal of Central High, had something particular to +say that morning at Assembly. At eight-thirty o'clock the gongs rang +in each room and the classes marched to the hall as usual. But there +was an unusual amount of excitement, especially on the girls' side of +the great hall. + +The news Bobby Hargrew had brought to Nellie Agnew had spread over the +Hill long before schooltime. Bobby, running from house to house, had +scattered the news like burning brands; and wherever she dropped a +spark a flame of excitement had sprung up and spread. + +And how many of the girls had whispered the same thing! What Hester +Grimes had said the previous afternoon had been heard by a dozen +girls; a hundred had learned of it before the gymnasium had cleared +that afternoon; now the whole school--on the girls' side, at least--knew +that Hester had declared her hatred of the girls of Central High +before the damage was done in the gymnasium. + +This gossip could not fail to have flown to Principal Sharp's ears. He +was eminently a just man; but he seldom interfered in the girls' +affairs, preferring to let his assistant, Miss Grace G. Carrington +(otherwise "Gee Gee" among the more thoughtless of her pupils) govern +the young ladies. But what the principal said on this occasion seemed +to point to the fact that he had taken cognizance of the wild +supposition and gossip that was going the round of the girl's classes. + +"A cruel and expensive trick has been perpetrated by some +irresponsible person with pronounced criminal instincts," declared Mr. +Sharp, seriously. "This is not the outburst of some soul prone to +practical joking, so-called; nor is it the mere impish mischievousness +of a spirit with a grudge against its fellows. The infamous actions of +the person, or persons, in the girls' gymnasium last night show +degeneracy and a monkeyish wickedness that can be condoned in no +particular. + +"We can declare with confidence that no pupil of Central High could +have accomplished the wicked work of last night. It would have been +beyond the physical powers of any of our young ladies to have broken +into the building; and we are equally confident that no young +gentleman on our roster is at that early stage of evolution in which +he would consider such work at all amusing. + +"Of course, there will be an investigation made--not alone by the +school authorities, but by the police. The matter is too serious to +ignore. The damage done amounts to several hundreds of dollars. And +the mystery of how the culprit or culprits entered the building, with +the doors and windows locked and Jackway asleep in his bed in the +doctor's office, must likewise be explained. + +"Meanwhile, young ladies and gentlemen, let no wild romances or +unsubstantiated rumors shake your minds. We none of us know how the +criminal entered the gymnasium, or who he is. Let the matter rest +there until the investigation is completed and the actual wrong-doer +brought to book. I hope I make myself clear? That is all. You are +dismissed to classes." + +But, to himself, perhaps the principal said: "Meanwhile I will go out +and stop the water from running down hill!" For the gossip having once +begun to grow, there was no stopping it. Some of the girls had already +begun to look askance at Hester when they passed her. Others +whispered, and wondered, and surmised--and the wonder grew like the +story of the man who ate the three black crows. + +Hester, however, did not realize what all this meant. She was still +angry with Nellie, and Bobby, and the others whom she considered had +crossed her the previous afternoon. And especially was she angry with +Mrs. Case, the physical instructor. + +"I don't much care if the stuff in the gymnasium _was_ all cut up," +she declared, to her single confidant, Lily Pendleton. + +"Oh, Hester! Don't let them hear you say it!" cried her chum, who had +heard some of the whispers against Hester, but had not dared repeat +them to her chum for fear of an outbreak of the latter's unfortunate +temper. + +"What do I care for 'em?" returned Hester, and went off by herself. + +Hester Grimes was not entirely happy. She would not admit it in her +own soul, but she was lonely. Even Lily was not always at her beck and +call as she once had been. To tell the truth, Lily Pendleton seemed +suddenly to have "a terrible crush" on Prettyman Sweet. + +"And goodness only knows what she sees in that freak to want to walk +with him," muttered Hester, in retrospection. + +Lily and Purt were pupils in the same dancing class and just at +present dancing was "all the rage." Hester did not care for +dancing--not even for the folk dancing that Mrs. Case taught the girls +of Central High. She liked more vigorous exercises. She played a sharp +game of tennis, played hockey well, was a good walker and runner, and +liked basketball as well as she liked anything. + +"And here these Miss Smarties and Mrs. Case want to put me off the +team," thought Hester Grimes, walking down toward the athletic field +and the gym. building after school that day. + +There was little to go to the gym. for just now, with the fixtures cut +up and broken. But Hester felt a curiosity to see the wreck. And there +were other girls from Central High who seemed to feel the same. Some +were ahead of her and some came after. They exclaimed and murmured and +were angry or excited, as the case might be; but Hester mooned about +in silence, and the only soul she spoke to in the building was Bill +Jackway. + +The latter looked very much worried. He was a steady, quiet, +red-haired man, with pale blue eyes and a wandering expression of +countenance at most times. But he was a good and careful worker and +kept the athletic field in good shape and the gym. well swept and +dusted. + +Jackway had never been married; but his sister had married a man named +Doyle and was now a widow with two children. When Jackway got an hour +or two off from the gym. he went to see his sister, and played with +the baby, Johnny. Johnny, who was a sturdy little fellow of three, had +been brought to-day to see his uncle by his gangling big brother, Rufe +Doyle. Rufe was a second edition of his uncle, Bill Jackway, without +Bill's modicum of sense. A glance at Rufe told the pitiful story. As +his Irish father had said, Rufe was "an innocent." But he loved Baby +Johnny and took great care of him. + +"Johnny's growing like a weed, Rufie," said Hester, kindly enough, as +she pinched the little fellow's cheek softly. "You take such good care +of him." + +Rufe threw back his head, opened his mouth wide, and roared his +delight at this compliment. + +"Yes, ma'am!" he chuckled, when his paroxysm was over. "Johnny ain't +much out of my sight when he's awake. Is he, Uncle Bill?" + +"No, Rufus," replied Jackway, sadly. + +"I'm pretty smart to take care of Johnny so well--ain't I, Uncle Bill?" +demanded the weak-minded boy again. + +"You are smart enough when you want to be, Rufus," muttered Jackway, +evidently in no very social mood. + +"You're worried about what happened last night, aren't you?" demanded +Hester, sharply. + +"Yes, ma'am; I be," admitted the watchman. + +"You needn't be. They'll never blame you," returned Hester, brusquely, +and went out. + +She wandered into the park at the foot of Whiffle Street and sat down. +Here Rufus Doyle followed her with Baby Johnny. There had been heavy +rains for the past week--until the day before. The gutters had run full +and the park squad of "white wings" were raking the beaten leaves into +windrows and flushing the sand and debris into the sewers. One basin +cover had been laid back and left an open trap for unwary feet. + +Rufus Doyle was trying to coax a gray squirrel near for Johnny to +admire. But Johnny was not particularly interested in bunny. Hester +saw the toddler near the open hatch of the sewer basin one moment; the +next he had disappeared, and it seemed to her as though a faint cry +rang in her ears. + +She leaped up from the bench. + +"Johnny!" she called. + +Rufus was still engaged with the squirrel. Nobody seemed to have +noticed the disappearance of the baby. Hester dashed to the open basin +and peered down into the swirling brown water. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +"THERE'S GOOD STUFF IN THAT GIRL" + + +Again that cry--that weak, bubbling wail from out the darkness of the +sewer basin. Something swirled past Hester's strained vision in the +dervish dance of the debris floating in the murky water. It was a tiny +hand, stretched forth from a skimpy blue-cloth sleeve. + +It was Johnny Doyle's hand; but the child's body--the rest of it--was +under water! + +The water was not more than six feet below the surface of the ground; +but deep, deep down was the entrance of the big drain that joined the +main sewer taking the street water and sewerage from the whole Hill +section. Johnny was being sucked down into that drain. + +The girl, her mind keenly alert to all this, shrieked unintelligible +cries for help--unintelligible to herself, even. She could not have +told afterward a word she said, or what manner of help she demanded; +but she knew the boy was drowning _and that she could swim_! + +With her clothing to hold her up a bit Hester believed she could swim +or keep afloat even in that swirling eddy. The appealing little hand +had no more than waved blindly once, than Hester gathered her rather +full skirts about her and jumped, feet first, into the sewer-basin. + +That was no pleasant plunge, for, despite her skirts, Hester went down +over her head. But her hands, thrashing about in the water, caught the +baby's dress. She came up with Johnny in her arms, and when she had +shaken the water from her eyes so that she could see, above was the +brown face of one of the street cleaners. He was lowering a bucket on +a rope, and yelling to her. + +What he said Hester did not know; but she saw her chance, and placed +little Johnny--now a limp, pale rag of a boy--in the bucket, and the man +drew him up with a yell of satisfaction. + +Hester was not frightened for herself. She felt the tug of the eddy at +her feet; but she trod water and kept herself well above the surface +until the man dropped the bucket down again. Then she saw the wild +eyes and pallid, frightened face of Rufus at the opening, too; and a +third anxious countenance. She knew that this belonged to Nellie +Agnew's father. + +"Hang on, child!" exclaimed the physician, heartily. "We'll have you +out in a jiffy." + +Hester clung to the rope and was glad to be dragged out of the filthy +basin. She sat on the ground, almost breathless, for a moment. Rufe, +with a wild cry, had sprung to Johnny. But the doctor put the +half-witted lad aside and examined the child. + +"Bless him! he isn't hurt a mite," declared Dr. Agnew, cheerfully. +"Run, get a taxi, Rufe! Quick, now! I'll take you and Johnny, and Miss +Hester, too, home in it." + +Everybody was used to obeying the good doctor's commands, and Rufus +Doyle ran as he was told. Hester was on her feet when the cab +returned, and Dr. Agnew was holding the bedraggled and still +unconscious Johnny in his arms. + +"We'll take you home first, Hester," said Dr. Agnew. "You live +nearest." + +"No, no!" exclaimed Hester. "Go by the way of Mrs. Doyle's house. The +baby ought to be 'tended to first." + +"Why, that's so," admitted the physician, and he looked at her a +little curiously. + +Hester whisked into the cab and hid herself from the curious gaze of +the few passers-by who had gathered when the trouble was all over. The +taxi bore them all swiftly to the Doyles' humble domicile. It was on a +street in which electric cabs were not commonly driven, and Rufe was +mighty proud when he descended first into a throng of the idle +children and women of the neighborhood. + +Of course, the usual officious neighbor, after one glance at Johnny's +wet figure, had to rush into the house and proclaim that the boy had +been drowned in the lake. But the doctor was right on her heels and +showed Mrs. Doyle in a few moments that Johnny was all right. + +With a hot drink, and warm blankets for a few hours, and a good sleep, +the child would be as good as new. But when the doctor came out of the +house he was surprised to find the cab still in waiting and Hester +inside. + +"Why didn't you go home at once and change your clothing?" demanded +Dr. Agnew, sharply, as he hopped into the taxi again. + +"Is Johnny all right?" asked Hester. + +"Of course he is." + +"Then I'll go home," sighed Hester. "Oh, I sha'n't get cold, Doctor. +I'm no namby-pamby girl--I hope! And I was afraid the little beggar +would be in a bad way. He must have swallowed a quantity of water." + +"He was frightened more than anything else," declared Dr. Agnew, +aloud. But to himself he was thinking: "There's good stuff in that +girl, after all." + +For he, too, had heard the whispers that had begun to go the rounds of +the Hill, and knew that Hester Grimes was on trial in the minds of +nearly everybody whom she would meet. Some had already judged and +sentenced her, as well! + + + + +CHAPTER V + +HESTER AT HOME + + +If Hester had arrived at the Grimes's house in two cabs instead of one +it would have aroused her mother to little comment; for, for some +years now, her daughter had grown quite beyond her control and Mrs. +Grimes had learned not to comment upon Hester's actions. Yet, oddly +enough, Hester was neither a wild girl nor a silly girl; she was +merely bold, bad tempered, and wilful. + +Mrs. Grimes was a large, lymphatic lady, given to loose wrappers until +late in the day, and the enjoyment of unlimited novels. "Comfort above +all" was the good lady's motto. She had suffered much privation and +had worked hard, during Mr. Grimes's beginnings in trade, for Hester's +father had worked up from an apprentice butcher boy in a retail +store--was a "self-made man." + +Mr. Grimes was forever talking about how he had made his own way in +the world without the help of any other person; but he was, +nevertheless, purse-proud and arrogant. Hester could not fail to be +somewhat like her father in this. She believed that Money was the +touchstone of all good in the world. But Mrs. Grimes was naturally a +kindly disposed woman, and sometimes her mother's homely virtues +cropped out in Hester--as note her interest in the Doyles. She was +impulsively generous, but expected to find the return change of +gratitude for every kindly dollar she spent. + +They had a big and ornate house, in which the servants did about as +they liked for all of Mrs. Grimes's oversight. The latter admitted +that she knew how to do a day's wash as well as any woman--perhaps +would have been far more happy had she been obliged to do such work, +too; but she had no executive ability, and the girls in the kitchen +did well or ill as they listed. + +Now that Hester was growing into a young lady, she occasionally went +into the servants' quarters and tried to set things right in imitation +of her father's blustering oversight of his slaughter house--without +Mr. Grimes's thorough knowledge of the work and conditions in hand. So +Hester's interference in domestic affairs usually resulted in a +"blow-up" of all concerned and a scramble for new servants at the +local agencies. + +Under these circumstances it may be seen that the girl's home life was +neither happy nor inspiring. The kindly, gentle things of life escaped +Hester Grimes. She unfortunately scorned her mother for her "easy" +habits; she admired her father's bullying ways and his ability to make +money. And she missed the sweetening influence of a well-conducted +home where the inmates are polite and kind to one another. + +Hester was abundantly healthy, possessed personal courage to a +degree--as Dr. Agnew had observed--was not naturally unkind, and had +other qualities that, properly trained and moulded, would have made +her a very nice girl indeed. But having no home restraining +influences, the rough corners of Hester Grimes's character had never +been smoothed down. + +Her friendship with Lily Pendleton was not like the "chumminess" of +other girls. Lily's mother came of one of the "first families" of +Centerport, and moved in a circle that the Grimeses could never hope +to attain, despite their money. Through her friendship with Lily, who +was in miniature already a "fine lady," Hester obtained a slight hold +upon the fringe of society. But even Lily was lost to her at times. + +"Why ain't I seen your friend Lily so much lately?" asked Mrs. Grimes, +languidly, the evening of the day Hester had plunged into the sewer +and rescued little Johnny Doyle. + +"Oh, between dancing school and Purt Sweet, Lil has about got her +silly head turned," said Hester, tossing her own head. + +"My goodness me!" drawled Mrs. Grimes, "that child doesn't take young +Purt Sweet seriously, does she?" + +"Whoever heard of anybody's taking Pretty seriously?" laughed Hester. +"Only Pretty himself believes that he has anything in his head but +mush! Last time Mrs. Pendleton had an evening reception, Purt got an +invite, and went. Something happened to him--he knocked over a vase, or +trod on a lady's dress, or something awkward--and the next afternoon +Lil caught him walking up and down in front of their house, trying to +screw up courage enough to ring the bell. + +"'What's the matter, Purt?' asked Lily, going up to him. + +"'Oh, Miss Lily!' cries Purt. 'What did your mother say when you told +her I was sorry for having made a fool of myself at the party last +night?' + +"'Why,' says Lil, 'she said she didn't notice anything unusual in your +actions.' + +"Wasn't _that_ a slap? And now Lil is letting Purt run around with her +and act as if he owned her--just because he's a good dancer." + +"My dear!" yawned her mother. "I should think you'd join that dancing +class." + +"I'll wait till I'm asked, I hope," muttered Hester. "Everybody +doesn't get to join it. We're not in that set--and we might as well +admit it. And I don't believe we ever will be." + +"I'm certainly glad!" complained her mother, rustling the leaves of +her book. "Your father is always pushing me into places where I don't +want to go. He had a deal in business with Colonel Swayne, and he +insisted that I call on Mrs. Kerrick. They're awfully stuck-up folks, +Hess." + +"I see Mrs. Kerrick's carriage standing at the Beldings' gate quite +often, just the same," muttered Hester. + +"Yes--I know," said her mother. "They make a good deal of Laura. Well, +they didn't make much of me. When I walked into the grounds and +started up the front stoop, a butler, or footman, or something, all +togged up in livery, told me that I must go around to the side door if +I had come to see the cook. And he didn't really seem anxious to take +my card." + +"Oh, Mother!" exclaimed Hester. + +"You needn't tell your father. I don't blame 'em. They've got their +own friends and we've got ourn. No use pushing out of our class." + +"You should have gone in the carriage," complained Hester. + +"I don't like that stuffy hack," said her mother. "It smells of--of +liv'ry stables and--and funerals! If your father would set up a +carriage of his own----" + +"Or buy an automobile instead of hiring one for us occasionally," +finished Hester. + +For with all his love of display, the wholesale butcher was a thrifty +person. + +With Lily so much interested for the time in other matters, Hester +found her only recreation at the athletic field; and for several days +after the mysterious raid upon the girls' gymnasium there was not much +but talk indulged in about the building. Then new basketballs were +procured and the regular practice in that game went on. + +In a fortnight would come the first inter-school match of the fall +term--a game between Central High girls and the representative team of +East High of Centerport. In the last match game the East High girls +had won--and many of the girls of Central High believed that the game +went to their competitors because of Hester Grimes's fouling. + +There was more talk of this now. Some of the girls did not try to hide +their dislike for Hester. Nellie Agnew did not speak to her at all, +and the latter was inclined to accuse Nellie of being the leader in +this apparent effort to make Hester feel that she was looked upon with +more than suspicion. The mystery of the gymnasium raid overshadowed +the whole school; but the shadow fell heaviest on Hester Grimes. + +"She did it!" + +"She's just mean enough to do it!" + +"She said she hated us!" + +"It's just like her--she spoils everything she can't boss!" + +She could read these expressions on the lips of her fellow students. +Hester Grimes began to pay for her ill-temper, and the taste of this +medicine was bitter indeed. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE FIRST GAME + + +It would have been hard to tell how the suspicion took form among the +girls of Central High that Hester Grimes knew more than she should +regarding the gymnasium mystery. Whether she had spoiled the +paraphernalia herself, or hired somebody to do it for her, was the +point of the discussion carried on wherever any of the +girls--especially those of her own class--met for conference. + +Older people scoffed at the idea of a girl having committed the crime. +And, indeed, it was a complete mystery how the marauder got into the +building and out again. Bill Jackway, the watchman, was worried almost +sick over it; he was afraid of losing his job. + +Bobby Hargrew was about the only girl in Central High who "lost no +sleep over the affair," as she expressed it. And that wasn't because +she was not keenly interested in the mystery. Indeed, like Nellie, she +had seen at the beginning that suspicion pointed to Hester Grimes. And +perhaps Bobby believed at the bottom of her heart that Hester had +brought about the destruction. Bobby and Hester had forever been at +daggers' points. + +Bobby, however, was as full of mischief and fun as ever. + +"Oh, girls!" she exclaimed, to a group waiting at the girls' entrance +to the school building one morning. "I've got the greatest joke on Gee +Gee! Listen to it." + +"What have you done now, you bad, bad child?" demanded Nellie. "You'll +miss playing goal guard against East High if you don't look out. Miss +Carrington is watching you." + +"She's always watching me," complained Bobby. "But this joke can't put +a black mark against _me_, thank goodness!" + +"What is it, Bobby?" asked Dorothy Lockwood. + +"Don't keep us on tenter-hooks," urged her twin. + +"Why, Gee Gee called at Alice Long's yesterday afternoon. You know, +she is bound to make a round of the girls' homes early in the term--she +always does. And Alice Long was able to return to school this fall." + +"And I'm glad of that," said Dorothy. "She'll finish her senior year +and graduate." + +"Well," chuckled Bobby, "Gee Gee appeared at the house and Tommy, +Short and Long's little brother, met her at the door. Alice wasn't in, +and Gee Gee opened her cardcase. Out fluttered one of those bits of +tissue paper that come between engraved cards--to keep 'em from +smudging, you know. Tommy jumped and picked it up, and says he: + +"'Say, Missis! you dropped one of your cigarette papers.' Now, what do +you know about _that_?" cried Bobby, as the other girls went off into +a gale of laughter. "Billy heard him, and it certainly tickled that +boy. Think of Gee Gee's feelings!" + +Not alone Bobby, but all the members of the basketball team were doing +their very best in classes so as to have no marks against them before +the game with the East High girls. + +Mrs. Case coached them sharply, paying particular attention to Hester. +It was too bad that this robust girl, who was so well able to play the +game, should mar her playing with roughness and actual rudeness to her +fellow-players. And warnings seemed wasted on her. + +Hester never received a demerit from Miss Carrington. In class she was +always prepared and there was little to ruffle her temper. The +instructors--aside from Mrs. Case--seldom found any fault with Hester +Grimes. + +The game with the crack team of the East High girls was to be played +on the latter's court. The girls of Central High had been beaten there +in the spring; this afternoon they went over--with their friends--with +the hope of returning the spring defeat. + +Bobby had been in the audience and led the "rooting" among the girls +for Central High at the former game. Now she had graduated from a mere +basketball "fan" to a very alert and successful goal guard. + +This was Eve Sitz's first important game, too; but the Swiss girl was +of a cool and phlegmatic temperament and Laura Belding, as captain, +had no fears for her. + +The audience was a large one, and was enthusiastic from the start. The +girls of Central High always attended the boys' games in force and +applauded liberally for their own school team; so Chet Belding and +Lance Darby, with a crowd of strong-lunged Central High boys at their +backs, cheered their girl friends when they came on the field with the +very effective school yell: + + "C-e-n, Central High! + C-e-n-t-r-a-l, Central High! + C-e-n-t-r-a-l-h-i-g-h, Central High! + Ziz-z-z-z---- + Boom!" + +The teams took their places after warming up a little, their physical +instructors acting as coaches, while the physical instructor for West +High School of Centerport was referee. The officials on the lines were +selected from the competing schools. + +It was agreed to play two fifteen-minute halves and the ball was put +into play by the referee. The girls of Central High played like +clockwork for the first five minutes and scored a clean goal. Their +friends cheered tumultuously. + +When the ball was put into play again there was much excitement. +"Shoot it here, Laura! I'm loose!" shouted Bobby, whose slang was +always typical of the game she was playing. + +"Block her! Block her!" cried the captain of the East High team. + +Most of the instructions were supposed to be passed by signal; but the +girls would get excited at times and, unless the referee blew her +whistle and stopped the play, pandemonium _did_ reign on the court +once in a while. Suddenly the ball chanced to be snapped to Hester's +side of the court. Her opponent got it, and almost instantly the +referee's whistle blew. + +"That Central High girl at forward center is over-guarding." + +"No, I'm not!" snapped Hester. + +The lady who acted as referee was a bit hot-tempered herself, perhaps. +At least, this flat contradiction brought a most unexpected retort +from her lips: + +"Central High Captain!" + +"Yes, ma'am?" gasped Laura Belding. + +"Take out your forward center and put in a substitute for this half." + +"But, Miss Lawrence!" cried Laura, aghast. + +"You are delaying play, Miss Belding," said the referee, sharply. + +Laura looked at Hester with commiseration; but she did not have to +speak. The culprit, with a red and angry visage, was already crossing +the court toward the dressing rooms. Laura put in Roberta Fish, and +play went on. + +But the Central High team was rattled. East High got two goals--one +from a foul--and so stood in the lead at the end of the half. The +visiting team did not work so well together with the substitute +player, and the captain of East High, seeing this fact, crowded the +play to Roberta Fish's side. + +"My goodness!" whispered Bobby Hargrew, as they ran off the field at +the end of the half. "I hope that's taught Hester a lesson. And this +is once when we need Hester Grimes badly." + +"I should say we did," panted Laura. + +"We've got to play up some to win back that point we lost, let alone +beating them," cried Jess Morse. + +Nellie Agnew was the first to enter the dressing room assigned to the +Central High girls. She looked around the empty room and gasped. + +"What's the matter, Nell?" cried Bobby, crowding in. + +"Where is she?" demanded the doctor's daughter. + +"Hessie has lit out!" shouted Bobby, turning back to the captain and +her team-mates. + +"She's got mad and gone home!" declared Jess Morse. "Her hat and coat +are gone." + +"_Now_ what will we do?" cried Dorothy Lockwood. + +And the question was echoed from all sides. For without Hester it did +not seem possible that the Central High team could hold its own with +its opponents. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +THE SECOND HALF + + +The dressing room buzzed like an angry beehive for a minute. It was +Laura Belding, captain of the team, who finally said: + +"Hester surely can't have deserted us in this way. She knows that +Roberta is not even familiar with our secret signals." + +"She's gone, just the same," said her chum, Jess. "That's how mean +Hester Grimes is." + +"Well, I declare! I don't know that I blame her," cried Lily +Pendleton. + +"You don't blame her?" repeated Nellie. "I don't believe you'd blame +Hester no matter what she did." + +"She hasn't done anything," returned Lily, sullenly. + +"How about the gym. business----" + +Bobby Hargrew began it, but Laura shut her off by a prompt palm laid +across her mouth. + +"You be still, Bobby!" commanded Nellie Agnew. + +"You're all just as unfair to Hessie as you can be," said Lily with +some spirit. "And now this woman from West High had to pick on her----" + +"Don't talk so foolishly, Lil," said Dora Lockwood. "You know very +well that Hester has been warned dozens of times not to talk back to +the referee. Mrs. Case warns her almost every practice game about +something. And now she has got taken up short. If it wasn't for what +it means to us all in this particular game, I wouldn't care if she +never played with us." + +"Me, too!" cried Jess, in applause. "Hester is always cutting some +mean caper that makes trouble for other folk." + +"We can't possibly win this game without her!" wailed Dorothy. + +"I'll do my very best, girls," said Roberta Fish, the substitute +player at forward center. + +"Of course you will, Roberta," said Laura, warmly. "But we can't teach +you all our moves in these few moments--Ah! here is Mrs. Case." + +Their friend and teacher came in briskly. + +"What's all this? what's all this?" she cried. "Where is Hester?" + +"She took her hat and coat and ran out before we came in, Mrs. Case," +explained Laura. + +"Not deserted you?" cried the instructor. + +"Yes, ma'am." + +"But that is a most unsportsmanlike thing to do!" exclaimed the +instructor, feeling the desertion keenly. That one of her girls should +act so cut Mrs. Case to the heart. She took great pride in the girls +of Central High as a body, and Hester's desertion was bad for +discipline. + +"You must do the best you can, Laura, with the substitute," she said, +at last, and speaking seriously. "I will inform Miss Lawrence that you +will put in Roberta for the second half, too. Nothing need be said +about Hester's defection." + +"I am afraid we can't win with me in Hessie's place," wailed Roberta. + +"You're going to do your very best, Roberta," said Mrs. Case, calmly. +"You always do. All of you put your minds to the task. Your opponents +are only one point ahead of you. The first five-minutes' play in the +first half was as pretty team work on your part as I ever saw." + +"But we can't use our secret signals," said Laura. + +"Play your very best. Do not put Roberta into bad pinches----" + +"But the captain of the East High team sees our weak point, and forces +the play that way," complained Jess Morse. + +"Of course she does. And you would do the same were you in her place," +said Mrs. Case, with a smile. "But above all, if you can't win +gracefully, _do_ lose gracefully! Be sportsmanlike. Cheer the winners. +Now, the whistle will sound in a moment," and the instructor hurried +away to speak to the referee. + +"Oh, dear me!" groaned Roberta. "My heart's in my mouth." + +"Then it isn't where Sissy Lowe, one of the freshies, said it was in +physiology class yesterday," chuckled Bobby Hargrew. + +"How was that, Bobby?" queried Jess. + +"Sissy was asked where the heart was situated--what part of the +body--and she says: + +"'Pleathe, Mith Gould, ith in the north thentral part!' Can you beat +those infants?" added Bobby as the girls laughed. + +But they were in no mood for laughter when they trotted out upon the +basketball court at the sound of the referee's whistle. They took +their places in silence, and the roars of the Central High boys, with +their prolonged "Ziz--z--z--z----Boom!" did not sound as encouraging as it +had at the beginning of the first half. + +Basketball is perhaps the most transparent medium for revealing +certain angles of character in young girls. At first the players +seldom have anything more than a vague idea of the proper manner of +throwing a ball, or the direction in which it is to be thrown. + +The old joke about a woman throwing a stone at a hen and breaking the +pane of glass behind her, will soon become a tasteless morsel under +the tongue of the humorist. Girls in our great public schools are +learning how to throw. And basketball is one of the greatest helps to +this end. The woman of the coming generation is going to have +developed the same arm and shoulder muscles that man displays, and +will be able to throw a stone and hit the hen, if necessary! + +The girl beginner at basketball usually has little idea of direction +in throwing the ball; nor, indeed, does she seem to distinguish fairly +at first between her opponents and her team mates. Her only idea is to +try to propel the ball in the general direction of the goal, the +thought that by passing it from one to another of her team mates she +will much more likely see it land safely in the basket never seemingly +entering her mind. + +But once a girl has learned to observe and understand the position and +function of team mates and opponents, to consider the chances of the +game in relation to the score, and, bearing these things in mind, can +form a judgment as to her most advantageous play, and act quickly on +it--when she has learned to repress her hysterical excitement and play +quietly instead of boisterously, what is it she has gained? + +It is self-evident that she has won something beside the mere ability +to play basketball. She has learned to control her emotions--to a +degree, at least--through the dictates of her mind. Blind impulse has +been supplanted by intelligence. Indeed, she has gained, without +doubt, a balance of mind and character that will work for good not +only to herself, but to others. + +Indeed, it is the following out of the old fact--the uncontrovertible +fact of education--that what one learns at school is not so valuable as +is the fact that he _learns how to learn_. Playing basketball +seriously will help the girl player to control her emotions and her +mind in far higher and more important matters than athletics. + +To see these eighteen girls in their places, alert, unhurried, +watchful, and silent, was not alone a pleasing, but an inspiring +sight. Laura and her team mates--even Roberta--waited like veterans for +the referee to throw the ball. Laura and her opposing jumping center +were on the _qui vive_, muscles taut, and scarcely breathing. + +Suddenly the ball went up. Laura sprang for it and felt her palms +against the big ball. Instantly she passed it to Jess Morse and within +the next few seconds the ball was in play all over the back +field--mostly in the hands of Central High girls. + +They played hard; but nobody--not even Roberta--played badly. The East +High girls were strong opponents, and more than once it looked as +though the ball would be carried by them into a goal. However, on each +occasion, some brilliant play by a Central High girl brought it back +toward their basket and finally, after six and a half minutes, the +visiting team made a goal. + +The Central High girls were one point ahead. + +The ball went in at center again and there was a quick interchange of +plays between the teams. Suddenly, while the ball was flying through +the air toward East High's basket, the referee's whistle sounded. + +"Foul!" she declared, just as the ball popped into the basket. + +A murmur rose from the East High team. Madeline Spink, the captain, +said quietly: + +"But the goal counts for us, does it not, Miss Lawrence?" + +"It counts as a goal from a foul," replied the referee, "which means +that it is no goal at all, and the ball is in play." + +The East High girls were more than a little disturbed by the decision. +It was a nice point; for on occasion a goal thrown from the foul line +counts one. It broke up, for the minute, the better play of the East +High team, and the instant the Central High girls got the ball they +rushed it for a goal. + +There was great excitement at this point in the game. If Central High +won two clean points it would hardly be possible for East High to +recover and gain the lead once more. Laura signalled her players from +time to time; but she was hampered whenever the ball came near +Roberta, or the time was ripe for a massed play. The substitute did +not know all the secret signals. + +Had Hester Grimes only been in her place! Her absence crowded the +Central High team slowly to the wall. In the very moment of success, +when a clean goal was about to be made, they failed and their +opponents got the ball. Again it was passed from hand to hand. One +girl bounced the ball and a foul was called. Again the Central Highs +rushed it, and from the foul line made another goal. + +Two points ahead, and the boys in the audience cheered madly. No +harder fought battle had ever been played upon that court. + +"Shoot it over, Jess!" roared Chet, at one point, rising and waving to +his particular girl friend, madly. "Look out! they'll get you!" + +"Look out, Laura! don't let 'em get you----Aw! that's too bad," grumbled +Lance Darby, quite as interested in the work of Chet's sister on the +court. + +"Hi! no fair pulling! Say! where's the referee's eyes?" demanded Chet, +the next moment, in disgust. + +"Behind her glasses," said his chum. "I never did believe four eyes +were as good as two." + +The ball came back to center again and there was little delay before +it was put in play. Only three minutes remained. The eighteen girls +were as eager as they could be. Madeline Spink and her team mates were +determined to tie the score at least. A clean goal would do it. + +They rushed the play and carried the ball into Roberta's country. +Roberta never had a chance! In a moment the ball was hurtling toward +the proper East High girl, and no guarding could save it. + +A cheer from the audience--those interested in the East High +girls--announced another clean goal. The score was tied and two minutes +to play! + +"Do not delay the game, young ladies!" warned the referee. + +They were in position again and the ball was thrown up. No fumbles +now. Every girl was playing for all that there was in her! A single +point would decide the rivalry of the two schools at the beginning of +the playing season. To lead off with this first game would encourage +either team immeasurably. + +East High led off first; but quickly Laura and her team mates got the +ball again and pushed it toward the basket. There was no rough play. +The umpires, as well as the referee, watched sharply. It was a sturdy, +vigorous, but fair game. This was a time when Hester's hot temper +might have brought the team disgrace; and for a moment Laura was, +after all, glad that the delinquent had gone home. + +Then, suddenly, from full field and a fair position, the ball rose and +flew directly for the basket. While in mid-air the whistle was blown. +Time was called and the game was ended. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +THE ROUND ROBIN + + +The spectators, as well as the players, held their breath and watched +the flying ball. Although the whistle had blown, the goal--if the ball +settled into the basket--would count for the visiting team. This one +unfinished play would give the girls of Central High two clear points +in the lead if all went well. + +The course of the flying ball was watched by all eyes, therefore. Chet +Belding and his mates began their chant, believing that the ball was +sure to go true to the basket. + +But they began too soon. The ball hit the ring of the basket, hovered +a moment over it, and then fell back and rolled into the court! Chet's +chant of praise changed to a groan. The game was over--and it was a +tie. + +Disappointed as the girls of Central High were, they cheered their +opponents nobly, and the East High girls cheered them. The audience +had to admit that the game had been keenly fought and--after Hester was +put out of it--as cleanly as a basketball game had ever been played on +those grounds. + +Miss Lawrence, the referee, came to the Central High girls' dressing +room and complimented Laura and her team on their playing. + +"I was sorry to put off your forward center, Miss Belding, in the +first half. If you had brought her into the field in the second half +your team, without doubt, would have won," said the referee. "That +girl is a splendid player, but she needs to learn to control her +temper." + +"That's always the way!" cried Nellie Agnew, when the West High +instructor was gone. "Hester spoils everything." + +"She crabs every game we play," growled Bobby, both sullen and slangy. + +"She ought to be put off the team for good," said one of the twins. + +"That's so," chimed in her sister. + +"We'll never win this season if Hessie is included in this team," +declared Jess Morse. + +Even Lily Pendleton could find nothing to say now in favor of her +chum. She hurried away from the others girls, and the seven remaining +seriously discussed the situation. It was Nellie, despite her promise +to her father, who came out boldly and said: + +"Let's put her off the team altogether." + +"We can't do it," objected Laura. + +"Ask Mrs. Case to do it, then," said Jess. + +"But who'll ask her? Hester will be awfully mad," said Eve Sitz. + +"I wouldn't want to be the one to do the asking," admitted the bold +Bobby. + +The seven regular members of the basketball team were alone now. +Dorothy Lockwood said: + +"I wouldn't want to be the one to sign a petition. But that is what we +ought to do--sign a petition to Mrs. Case asking her to remove Hester." + +"What do you say, Mother Wit?" demanded Jess Morse of Laura. + +"I vote for the petition," said Laura, gravely. + +"And who'll sign it?" cried Dorothy. + +"All of us." + +"Not me first!" declared Dora. + +"We'll make it a 'round robin,'" said Laura, smiling. "All seven of us +will sign in a circle, but nobody need take the lead in making the +request. If we are all agreed Jess can write the petition to Mrs. +Case." + +"I'll do it!" declared Jess Morse. + +With some corrections from her chum, Josephine finally prepared and +presented for their signatures the petition, and having read it the +girls, one after the other, signed her name in the manner Mother Wit +had suggested. The petition and Round Robin was as follows: + +"We, the undersigned members of Basketball Team No. 1, of Central +High, Girls' Branch Athletic League, after due and ample discussion of +the facts, conclude that the retention of Hester Grimes as a member of +the said team is a detriment thereto, and that her membership will, in +the future, as in the past, cause the team to lose games in the Trophy +Series of Inter-School Games. We therefore ask that the aforesaid +Hester Grimes be removed from the team and that some other player be +nominated in her stead." + +[Illustration: Josephine Morse, C. Hargrew, Dora Lockwood, Eve Sitz, +Nellie Agnew, Laura Belding, Dorothy Lockwood] + +In signing the paper in this fashion no one girl could be accused of +leading in the demand for Hester's removal. Lily had gone, so that +nobody would tell Hester just what each girl said, or who signed +first. That Nellie Agnew had taken the lead in this petition against +her schoolmate the doctor's daughter herself knew, if nobody else did. +She felt a little conscience-stricken over it, too, for she had told +Daddy Doctor that she would be guided by his advice in the matter of +Hester Grimes. + +And after supper that night her father said something that made Nellie +feel more than ever condemned. + +"Do you know, Nell," he said, thoughtfully, pulling on his old black +pipe as she perched as usual on the broad arm of his chair. "Do you +know there is good stuff in that girl Hester?" + +"In Hester Grimes?" asked Nellie, rather flutteringly. + +"Yes. In Hester Grimes. I guess you didn't hear about it. And it +slipped my mind. But when I was over to see little Johnny Doyle again +to-day I found Hester there and the Doyles think she's about +right--especially Rufus." + +"Rufus isn't just right in his mind--is he?" asked Nellie, her eyes +twinkling a little. + +"I don't know. In some things Rufe is 'way above the average," +chuckled her father. "He is cunning enough, sure enough! But to get +back to Hester. I never told you how she jumped into the sewer-basin +and saved Johnny's life?" + +"No! Never!" gasped Nellie. + +The physician told her the incident in full. He told her further that +Hester had done a deal, off and on, for the Widow Doyle and her +children. + +"Oh, I wish I had known!" cried Nellie, in real contrition. + +"What for?" demanded the doctor. + +But she would not tell him. She knew that the petition had been mailed +to Mrs. Case that very evening. Her name was on it, and in her own +heart Nellie knew that she had had as much to do with the scheme to +put Hester Grimes off the basketball team as any girl. + +"Perhaps, if the girls had known what Hester did for Johnny they +wouldn't have been so bitter against her," thought the doctor's +daughter. "I know _I_ would never have signed that hateful paper. Oh, +dear! why did Daddy Doctor have to find out that there was some good +in Hester, and tell _me_ about it?" + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +ANOTHER RAID + + +Hester Grimes, as the doctor said, had appeared late that afternoon at +the Doyles' little tenement. She had gone there from the basketball +game instead of going directly home. + +To tell the truth, she did not wish to be questioned by her mother, +nor did she want to meet Lily. If she had felt hatred against her +mates in Central High before, that feeling in her heart was now +doubled! + +For, as all anger is illogical (indignation may not be) Hester turned +upon the girls and blamed them for the referee's decision. Because +Miss Lawrence had put her out of the game Hester would have been glad +to know that her team mates had gone to pieces and been defeated. + +She had managed to recover outwardly from her disappointment and +anger, however, when she arrived at the domicile of her humble +acquaintances. Mrs. Doyle knitted jackets, and Hester had ordered one +for her mother. + +"Ma is always lolling around and complaining of feeling draughts," +said Hester. "So I'll give her one of these 'snuggers' to keep her +shoulders warm. She's always snuffing with a cold when it comes fall +and the furnace fire is not lit." + +"Lots o' folks are having colds just now," complained Mrs. Doyle. +"Johnny's snuffling with one." + +"Oh, he'll be all right--won't he, Rufie?" said Hester, chucking the +baby under his plump little chin, but speaking to his faithful nurse. + +"In course he will, Miss Hester," cried Rufus, and then opened his +mouth for a roar of laughter, that made even the feverish Johnny crow. + +"Rufus never gets tired of minding Johnny," said the widow, proudly. +"But he does miss his Uncle Bill." + +Rufe's face clouded over. "He ain't never home no more," he said, +complainingly. + +"But you can go over to see him at the gymnasium," said Hester. + +"Not no more he can't, Miss," said the widow. "Rufus used to go over +to see Uncle Bill evenings; but Uncle Bill can't have him there no +more." + +"Why not?" asked Hester, quickly; and yet she flushed and turned her +own gaze away and looked out of the window. + +"Bill's had some trouble there. He's afraid the Board of Education +would object. Somebody got into the building----" + +"I heard about it," said Hester, quickly. + +"Wisht Uncle Bill had another job," grumbled Rufus. + +"Rufie's real bright about some things," whispered his mother. "And +sharp ain't no name for it! He is pretty cute. You can't say much +before him that he don't remember, and repeat." + +"Wisht that old gymnasium building would burn up; then Uncle Bill +could come home," muttered Rufe. + +Mrs. Doyle went to see to her fire. Hester beckoned the boy to the +window and whispered to him. Gradually Rufe's face lit up with one of +his flashes of cunning. Money passed from the girl's hand to that of +the half-witted youth. + +Just then Dr. Agnew appeared and Hester took her departure. + +On the following morning Franklin Sharp, the principal of Central +High, called a conference of his teachers at the first opportunity. He +was very grave indeed when he told them that another raid had been +made upon the girls' gymnasium. + +"Not so much damage is reported as was done before. But, then, the +paraphernalia before destroyed was not all removed. But this time the +scoundrel--or scoundrels--tried arson. + +"A fire was built in a closet on the upper floor. Bill Jackway smelled +smoke and got up to see what it was. He found no trace of the +firebug--can discover no way in which he got out----" + +"But how did he get in?" asked one of the teachers. + +"That is plain. It had rained early in the evening. Footprints are +still visible leading across a soft piece of ground from the east +fence to a window. The window was open, although Bill swears it was +shut and locked when he went to bed at ten o'clock. That is how the +marauder entered the building. How he got out is a mystery," declared +the principal. + +"It is a very dreadful thing," complained Miss Carrington. "I do not +see what we can do about it." + +"We must do something," said Miss Gould, with vigor. + +"Suppose you suggest a course of procedure, Miss Gould?" said the +principal, his eyes twinkling. + +"I think it would be well," said Miss Gould, "to sift every rumor and +story regarding this matter. There is much gossip among the girls. I +have heard of a threat that one girl made in the gymnasium----" + +"That is quite ridiculous, Miss Gould!" cried Miss Carrington, with +some heat. "You have been listening to a base slander against one of +my very best pupils." + +"You mean this Hester Grimes, Henry Grimes's daughter?" said the +principal, sternly. + +"That is the girl," admitted Miss Gould. "I know little about her----" + +"And I know a good deal," interposed Mrs. Case, grimly. "Miss +Carrington finds her good at her books, and her deportment is always +fair in classes. I find her the hardest girl to manage in all the +school. She has a bad temper and she has never been taught to control +it. It has gone so far that I fear I shall have to shut her out of +some of the athletics," and she related all that had happened at the +basketball game with the East High girls the afternoon before. + +"I do not approve of these contests," said Miss Carrington, primly. +"They are sure to cause quarreling." + +"If they do, then there is something the matter with the girls," +declared Mr. Sharp, briskly. + +"And I have received this request from the girls of the team--seven of +them--this morning," continued Mrs. Case, producing the "round robin." +"The only girls beside Hester who did not sign it is a girl who always +chums with her--the only really close friend Hester has to my knowledge +in the school. + +"Now, I should like very much to be instructed what to do about this? +The girls are perfectly in the right. Hester is not dependable on the +team. There should be another girl in her place----" + +"Oh, but it is quite unfair!" cried Miss Carrington. "And remember her +father is quite an important man. There will be trouble if Hester is +put down in these tiresome athletics; or if this story that is going +about is repeated to Mr. Grimes I can't imagine what he _would_ do." + +"Mr. Grimes does not run the Board of Education, nor does he control +_our_ actions," declared Mr. Sharp. "We must take cognizance of these +matters at once. I believe you should remove Hester from the team, as +requested, Mrs. Case. You have ample reason for so doing. And this +matter of the attempt to burn the gymnasium must be investigated +fully." + +"But no girl could do these things in the gymnasium," cried Miss +Carrington, with considerable asperity. + +"But she could get somebody else to do them--especially a girl who is +allowed as much spending money as Hester Grimes," said the principal. +"I can imagine no sane person committing such a crime. It is wilful +and malicious mischief, and could only be inspired by hatred, or--an +unbalanced mind. That is my opinion." + + + + +CHAPTER X + +MOTHER WIT AND THE GRAY MARE + + +For some reason, that lively young "female Mercury," as Jess Morse +sometimes dubbed her, Bobby Hargrew, did not hear of this new raid +upon the girls' gym. early that morning; so, like the other pupils of +Central High, she could not visit the athletic building until after +school. She went then with Nellie and Laura and Jess, and the +quartette were almost the first girls to enter the building that day. + +"It's a dreadful thing," said Laura, in discussing the affair. + +The girls were all noticeably grave about the matter this time. There +was little excitement, or talk of "how horrid it was" and all that. +There was a gravity in their manner which showed that the girls of +Central High were quite aware that the case was serious in the +extreme. + +One of their number was accused of being the instigator of these raids +on the gymnasium. True, or false, it was an accusation that could not +be lightly overlooked. Laura Belding was particularly grave; and +Nellie Agnew had cried about it. + +The four friends went out into the field and examined the footprints +in the earth. + +"Those were never Hessie's 'feetprints,' for, big as her feet are, she +never wears boots like _those_!" giggled Bobby. + +"He was a shuffler--that fellow," said Jess. "See how blurred the marks +are at the heel?" + +"And he shuffled right up to this window--And how do you suppose he +opened it, if, as Mr. Jackway says, it was locked on the inside?" + +"Mystery!" said Bobby. + +"Give it up," added Jess. "What do you say, Mother Wit?" + +"That is the way he opened it," said Laura, softly, looking up from +the foot prints. + +"What's that?" cried Jess. + +"Why--I hear you talking, but you don't say anything!" laughed Bobby. +"_How_ did he open it?" + +"From the inside," said Laura. + +"Why, Laura!" gasped Nellie. "You do not distrust Mr. Jackway?" + +"Hush! Of course not," cried Jess, in a lower tone. + +"No, I do not distrust him," said Laura Belding. + +"What do you mean, then, by saying that the fellow opened the window +from the inside?" + +"And that's ridiculous, Laura!" cried Jess. "He walked up to the +window from across the field--you can see he did. And there's no mark +showing how he went away. He did not leave by the window. He could not +have been inside when he came from outside----" + +"Hold on! Hold on!" warned Bobby. "You're getting dreadfully mixed, +Jess." + +"But I don't see what Laura's driving at," declared her chum. + +"Why," said Mother Wit, calmly, "the person who made those shoe prints +walked backwards. Don't you see? That is what makes the shuffling mark +at the heel. And see! the step is so uneven in length. He escaped by +the window; he didn't enter by it." + +"Well!" cried Nellie Agnew. "That explains without explaining. The +mystery is deeper than ever." + +"Why is it?" demanded Jess. + +"Don't you see? Before, we thought we knew how the fellow got in. It +seems to be an easier thing to get out of the gym. than into it. But +now Laura knocks that in the head. The mystery is: How did he get in?" + +"Oh, don't!" cried Bobby. "It makes my head buzz. And Laura is a +regular lady detective. She's always finding out things that 'it would +be better, far, did we not know!'" + +She said this to Nellie Agnew, when they had separated from Laura and +Jess, and were walking toward home. + +"Say! do you know how Laura explained that canoe tipping over with +Purt Sweet and Lily Pendleton?" pursued the lively one. + +"I didn't know that they had an accident," laughed Nellie. "Those +canoes are awfully ticklish, I know." + +"I should say they were! Well, Purt and Lil borrowed Hessie's canoe +and they no more than got started before they went head first into the +water--and Lil, of course, helpless as usual, had to be 'rescued.' The +number of times that girl has been 'rescued' this season is a +caution!" + +"I do admire your elegant language," said Nellie, reprovingly. "But +what did Laura say?" + +"She explained it all for them. Both Purt and Lil were trying to tell +how such a wonderful thing chanced to happen as an overturn, when +Laura said she could explain it satisfactorily to all hands. She said +that Purt had made a mistake and parted his hair too far on one side, +and that had overbalanced the canoe!" + +"Well, they do swamp awfully easy," laughed Nellie. "I guess Laura has +found the right explanation of how the villain left the gym. But there +is one explanation that I would like to have--a much more important +one," concluded Nellie. + +"What's that?" + +"_Who_ did it?" + +"I thought that was pretty well understood," growled Bobby. + +"No girl could have climbed over that fence, that's sure!" + +"Oh, I grant you that!" cried Bobby. "But she paid to have it done. +There are plenty of tough fellows from down at the 'Four Corners' who +work at the slaughter house. They could be hired to do it." + +"Hush, Bobby!" commanded the doctor's daughter. "I feel terribly +condemned. I am afraid we are accusing Hester wrongfully. A girl +couldn't have two such very opposite sides to her character," and she +promptly told her friend what Dr. Agnew had related regarding Hester's +rescue of little Johnny Doyle from the sewer basin. + +"Gee! that was some jump, wasn't it?" demanded the admiring Bobby. +Then she shook her head slowly. "Well," she remarked, "nobody ever +said Hester wasn't brave enough. She was brave enough to slap your +face!" and then she giggled. + +"I don't care," said Nellie, slowly. "I fear we went too far when we +asked Mrs. Case to take her off the team. And I'm _sure_ it isn't +right for us to accuse her of being the cause of the trouble at the +gym.--without further and better evidence." + +"Oh, dear, Nell! you're a great fuss-budget!" cried the effervescent +Bobby. "Are you sure that your Daddy Doctor saw quite straight when he +saw Hester save the kid? You know, he's getting awfully +absent-minded." + +Nellie smiled at her, taking Bobby's jokes good naturedly. + +"I know father is absent-minded," she admitted. "But not as bad as all +that." + +"I don't know," returned Bobby, with apparent seriousness. "The other +day when he put the stethoscope to me before practice, I expected to +see him take the receiver away from his ear and holler 'Hello, +Central!' into it." + +"I'll tell him that!" promised Nellie. + +"All right. Do your worst," giggled Bobby. "It will be a month old +before he gets around to sound my heart action again, and he will have +forgotten all about it by then." + +The Saturday following a crowd of the girls went out to visit Eve +Sitz, and Nellie and Bobby were included in the automobile load that +left the Beldings' house right after luncheon. Saturday mornings Laura +always helped in her father's jewelry store, while Chet was behind the +counter as an extra salesman in the evening; so the Beldings' +chauffeur drove the car to the Sitz farm for the girls. + +There were chestnut and hickory woods on, and near, the Sitz farm, and +the girls had in mind a scheme for a big nutting party just as soon as +Otto Sitz--Eve's brother--should pronounce the frost heavy enough to +open the chestnut burrs and send the hickory nuts tumbling to the +ground. + +There was always plenty to do to amuse the young folk--especially young +folk from the city--on the Sitz place. This day Otto and the hired men +were husking corn on the barn floor, and Nellie, and Bobby, and Jess +and the Lockwood twins were supplied with "corn pegs" and sat around +the pile, helping to strip the golden and red ears. + +Eve had an errand down at the nearest country store, so she put the +old gray mare into the spring cart with her own hands, and Laura rode +with her. + +"We had a nice colt from old Peggy last year, and two weeks ago it was +stolen. Otto had just broken her to saddle, and she was a likely +animal," Eve said. "Old Peggy misses her, and whinnies for her all the +time," she added, as the mare raised her head and sent a clarion call +echoing across the hills. + +"Hasn't your father tried to find the thief--or the colt?" queried +Laura. + +"Yes, indeed. He's over to Keyport to-day to see the detective there." + +"But the colt may be outside the county," urged Laura. + +"That's so, too. We haven't any idea where Jinks went. That was her +name--Jinksey. She doesn't look much like Old Peggy; but she was worth +a hundred and fifty dollars, if she was worth a cent! More than father +could easily afford to lose. And then--Otto really owned her--or would +have owned her when he came of age. Father had promised Jinks to him." + +"It's a shame!" cried Laura, always sympathetic. "And you have no +suspicion as to who could have taken her?" + +"No. Down beyond the store--beyond Robinson's Woods, you know--there is +a settlement of people who have a hard name. They rob the gardens and +orchards on the edge of town----" + +"Toward Centerport, you mean?" + +"Yes." + +"The Four Corners' crowd!" cried Laura. + +"Yes." + +"Oh, that gang are a bad lot. Once Chet and I motored through there +and an ugly fellow named Pocock came out and fired a charge of +bird-shot into a rear tire. He said an auto had been through there the +week before and killed his pig, and he was going to shoot at every +machine he saw. We've never taken that road again." + +"That Hebe Pocock is an awfully bad fellow," said Eve, seriously. "He +tried to work for us once, but father wouldn't keep him more than a +day. And he's been mad at us ever since." + +"Maybe some of those fellows in that gang stole your Jinksey." + +"How are we going to know? Father or Otto wouldn't dare go down there +and look around. And I guess the police are afraid of those fellows, +too." + +"Let's drive down past the store," suggested Laura, thoughtfully, +after the old mare had again lifted up her voice. + +"Oh, my, Laura! What for?" + +"Something might come of it." + +"I guess nothing but trouble." + +"I've got what Chet and Lance call 'a hunch,'" said Laura, slowly. + +"We--ell----here's the store." + +"Just a little farther, Eve," said Laura, taking the reins herself, +and clucking to the old mare. + +They passed the store on the trot. Around the first bend they came in +sight of the little hollow where the roads crossed, making the +renowned "Four Corners." Coming up the road was a boy on a bay colt. +Instantly the old mare whinnied again, and the colt answered her. + +"It's Jinksey!" gasped Eve. + +"We're going to get her--if you're sure!" declared Laura. + +"Of course I'm sure. I'd know her anywhere--and so would Old Peggy." + +The colt snorted again, and the boy riding her tried to pull her out +into a side path, to cut across the fields. Eve stood up and shouted +to him. Laura urged the gray mare on, and she went down the hill at a +tearing pace. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +HEBE POCOCK + + +"Oh, Laura!" gasped Eve. "That boy will never give the colt up." + +"Why not? See him?" exclaimed Mother Wit. "He knows he is riding a +stolen horse. There! he's sliding out of the saddle." + +The fact was, the colt--still but half broken under the saddle and with +its eyes on its mother--would not move out of its tracks. The boy +jumped off and tried to lead Jinks. + +"Get away from that horse, boy!" commanded Laura, bringing the old +mare down to a more moderate pace as they approached the stolen colt. + +"I'll tell my brother!" yelled the youngster. "I'll set him on ye! +This critter is his'n." + +"And he came by it just as dishonestly as you came by such grammar as +you use," said Laura, laughing, while Eve hopped over the wheel on her +side of the cart and grabbed the reins out of the boy's hands. + +"Let that horse alone!" cried the youngster, kicking at Eve with his +bare foot. + +But Eve Sitz wasn't afraid of any boy--not even had he been of her own +size and age. Her open palm smacked the youngster's head resoundingly +and he staggered away, bawling: + +"Lemme erlone! Hebe! Hebron Pocock! I wantcher!" + +Laura was already backing the mare, preparatory to turning about. + +"Come on with the colt, Eve!" she cried. + +The boy they had unhorsed continued to bawl at the top of his voice. +But for the moment nobody appeared. Eve lengthened the bridle rein for +a leading strap and then essayed to climb into the cart again. The boy +ceased crying and threw a stone. The colt jumped and tried to pull +away, for the stone struck her. + +"Whoa, Jinks!" cried Eve. "If I could catch that boy! I'd do more than +box his ears--so I would!" + +"Come on, Eve!" called Laura, looking over her shoulder. "Here come +some women from the shanties. They will do something to us beside +calling us names----or throwing stones," as she dodged one that the boy +sent in her direction. + +"Whoa, Jinksey!" commanded Eve, again, trying to lead the frightened +colt toward the cart. + +"Hebe Pocock! Yi-yi! You're wanted!" yelled the small boy again, +sending down a perfect shower of stones from the bank above them, but +fortunately throwing them wild. + +Eve managed to climb up into the cart, still holding the snorting, +pawing colt by the strap. + +"Drive on! drive on!" she gasped, looking back at the several +ill-looking and worse dressed women who were running toward them. + +"Go on!" urged Laura to the mare, and Old Peggy started back up the +hill, while Eve towed Jinks behind. Suddenly, however, the bushes +parted, and a roughly dressed fellow, with a red handkerchief tied +around his head in lieu of a cap, stepped out into the road. He +carried a gun in the hollow of his arm, the muzzle of which was turned +threateningly toward the cart and the two girls in it. The two barrels +looked as big around as cannon in the eyes of Laura and Evangeline +Sitz! + +"Hey, there!" advised the ugly looking fellow. "You ladies better stop +a bit." + +"It's Pocock!" whispered Laura. + +"I know it," returned Eve, in the same tone. + +"That horse you're leadin' belongs to me," said Pocock, with an ugly +scowl. + +"You know better, Hebron," exclaimed Eve, bravely. "It belongs to my +father." + +"It may look like your father's colt," said Pocock. "But I bought her +of a gypsy, and it ain't the same an--i--mile." + +"The old mare knows her," said Laura, quickly, as the colt nuzzled up +to Peggy and the gray mare turned around to look upon the colt with +favorable eye. + +"That don't prove nothing," growled Pocock. "Drop that rein." + +"No, I won't!" cried Eve. "Even the bridle is father's. I recognize +it." + +By this time the women from the shanties had arrived. They were +dreadful looking creatures, and Laura was more afraid of them than she +was of Pocock's shot-gun. + +"What's them gals doin' to your brother Mike, Hebe?" demanded one of +the women. "They want slappin', don't they?" + +"They want to l'arn to keep their han's off'n my property," growled +Pocock. "Come! let the little horse go." + +"No!" cried Eve. + +"Yes," cried Pocock, shifting his gun threateningly. + +"You bet she will!" cried the woman who had spoken before, and she +started to climb up on Laura's side of the cart. + +Laura seized the whip and the woman jumped back. + +"Shoot her, Hebe!" she yelled. "She'd a struck me with that thing!" + +But Laura had no such intention. She brought the lash of the whip down +upon the mare's flank. With a snort of surprise and pain the old horse +sprang forward and had not Hebe Pocock leaped quickly aside he would +have been run over. + +But unfortunately neither Eve nor the colt were prepared for this +sudden move on Laura's part. The colt stood stock-still and Eve lost +her grip on the bridle rein. + +"Go it!" yelled Pocock, laughing with delight. "I got the colt!" + +He sprang at the head of Jinks. The women were laughing and shrieking. + +"That's the time I did it!" gasped Laura, in chagrin, pulling down the +old mare. + +And just then the purring of an automobile sounded in their ears and +there rounded the nearest turn in the road a big touring car. It +rolled down toward the cart and the group about the colt, with +diminished speed. + +"Oh! we mustn't lose that colt after coming so near getting it away," +cried Laura. + +"But father can go after it with a constable," declared Eve, +doubtfully. + +"But Pocock will get it away from here----" + +"Why, Laura Belding!" exclaimed a loud, good-natured voice. "What is +the matter here?" + +"Mrs. Grimes!" gasped Laura, as the auto stopped. The butcher's wife +and daughter were sitting in the tonneau. Hester looked straight ahead +and did not even glance at her two school-fellows. + +"Isn't that young Pocock, that used to work for your father, Hester?" +demanded Mrs. Grimes. "That's a very bad boy. What's he been doing to +you, Laura?" + +"He has stolen that little horse from Eve's father," cried Laura. "And +now he won't give it up." + +"'Tain't so!" cried Hebe Pocock, loudly. "Don't you believe that gal, +Mis' Grimes. I bought this horse----" + +"Hebe," said the butcher's wife, calmly, "you never had money enough +in your life to buy a horse like that--and you never will have. Lead it +up here and let the girl have her father's property. And you women, go +back to your homes--and clean up, for mercy's sake! I never did see +such a shiftless, useless lot as you are at the Four Corners. When I +lived there, we had some decency about us----" + +"Oh, Mother!" gasped Hester, grasping the good lady's arm. + +"Well, that's where we lived--your father an' me," declared Mrs. +Grimes. "It was near the slaughter houses and handy for him. And let +me tell you, there was respectable folk lived there in them days. Hebe +Pocock! Are you goin' to do what I tell you?" + +The fellow came along in a very hang-dog manner and passed the strap +to Eve Sitz. + +"'Tain't fair. It's my horse," he growled. + +"You know better," said Mrs. Grimes, calmly. "And you expect Mr. +Grimes to find you a good job, do you? You wanted to get to be +watchman, or the like, in town? If I tell Henry about this what chance +do you suppose you'll ever have at _that_ job?" + +"Mebbe I'll get it, anyway," grinned Pocock. + +"And maybe you won't," said Mrs. Grimes, calmly. + +Meanwhile Laura and Eve, after thanking the butcher's wife, drove on. +But Hester never looked at them, or spoke. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +"OUT OF IT" + + +For on that Saturday morning Mrs. Case had called at the Grimes house +and asked to see Hester. The girl came down and, the moment she saw +the physical instructor of Central High, seemed to know what was +afoot. + +"So you've come to tell me I'm not on the team any more, I s'pose, +Mrs. Case?" she demanded, tossing her head, her face growing very red. + +"I am sorry to tell you that, after your actions at the game with East +High Wednesday afternoon, it has been decided that another girl +nominated to your position on Team Number 1 would probably do better," +said Mrs. Case, quietly. + +"Well!" snapped Hester. "You've been wanting to get me off ever since +last spring----" + +"Hester! although we are not at school now, we are discussing school +matters, and I am one of your teachers. Just as long as you attend +Central High you must speak respectfully to and of your instructors, +both in and out of school. Do you wish me to report your language to +Mr. Sharp?" + +Hester was sullenly silent for a moment + +"For I can assure you," continued Mrs. Case, "that if I were to place +the entire matter before him, including your general deportment at the +gymnasium and on the athletic field, I feel sure your parents would be +requested to remove you from the school. Do you understand that?" + +"I don't know that I would be very sorry," muttered the girl. + +"You think you would not," said Mrs. Case; "but it is not so. You are +too old to be taken out of one school and put in another because of +your deportment. Wherever you went that fact would follow you. It +would be hard work for you to live down such a reputation, Hester." + +"I wish father would send me to a boarding-school, anyway." + +"And I doubt if that would help you any. You will not be advised, +Hester. But you will learn yet that I speak the truth when I tell you +that you will be neither happy, nor popular, wherever you go, unless +you control your temper." + +"What do I care about those nasty girls on the Hill?" sputtered the +butcher's daughter. "They're a lot of nobodies, if they _are_ so +stuck-up." + +"There is not a girl in your class, Hester, who puts on airs over +you--or who attempts to," said Mrs. Case, warmly. "And you know that is +so. Deep in your heart, Hester, you know just where the trouble lies. +Your lack of self-control and your envy are at the root of all your +troubles in school and in athletics." + +Hester only pouted; but she made no reply. + +"Now I am forced to remove you from this team where--if you would keep +your temper--you could be of much use. You are a good player at +basketball--one of the best in Central High. And we have to deny you +the privilege of playing on the champion team because----" + +"Just because the other girls don't want me to play with them!" cried +the girl, angrily. + +"And can they be blamed?" demanded the teacher, quite exasperated +herself now. "If you had any loyalty to Central High you would not +have acted as you did." + +"I don't care!" flashed out Hester. + +At that Mrs. Case arose to go. "You are hopeless," she said, +decisively. "I had it in mind to offer you a chance to win back your +position on the team. But such consideration would be thrown away on +you." + +"I don't want to play with the horrid, stuck-up things!" cried Hester, +quite beside herself now with rage and mortification. "I hate them +all. I don't want any of them to be my friends. And as for your old +athletics--I'm going to tell father that they're no good and that I +want to withdraw from the League." + +"You may be saved the necessity for that if you haven't a care, +Hester," warned Mrs. Case, taking her departure. + +It was because of this visit from the physical instructor, perhaps, +that Hester fairly bullied her father at luncheon time into allowing +her mother and herself to try out an automobile that an agent had +wanted to sell the wholesale butcher for some time. If automobiles had +been uncommon on the Hill Henry Grimes would have had one long before +for his family, for he loved display, just as Hester did. But nearly +every family at their end of Whiffle Street had a car. + +However, Mrs. Grimes woke up enough to show interest in the matter, +too, for she really liked riding in a car that ran smoothly and +rapidly over the macadamized roads about Centerport; so she added her +complaint to Hester's and finally the butcher telephoned for the car +to be sent up. But he would not give any time to it himself. Therefore +it was that Hester and her mother appeared on the Hill road just above +the Four Corners in season to extricate Laura Belding and Eve Sitz +from their very uncomfortable session with Hebe Pocock and his crowd. + +"We ought to have gone along and left those girls to get out of it as +best they could," snapped Hester, when the car rolled on and Laura and +Eve, with the mare and colt, were out of sight. + +"Why, I declare for't!" ejaculated Mrs. Grimes. "You certainly do hate +that Belding girl--and I don't see a living thing the matter with her. +She's smart an' bright--remember how she found my auto veil that you +lost last spring?" + +Hester had very good reason for remembering that occasion. She had +always been afraid that Laura would circulate the story connected with +that veil; and because Laura had kept silence Hester hated her all the +more. + +And now Hester allowed bitter thoughts against Mother Wit and the +other members of the basketball team to fester in her mind, until she +was actually insanely angry with and jealous of them. + +When her mother that evening at dinner told Mr. Grimes about the +actions of Hebron Pocock, who sometimes worked for the butcher at the +slaughtering plant near the Four Corners, Hester tried to smooth the +matter over and suggest that Hebe was "only in fun" and was just +scaring two silly girls. + +"Well, I suggested him for watchman at the gymnasium," said Mr. +Grimes. "But he isn't likely to get it. The Board has every confidence +in this Bill Jackway, despite the fact that somebody seems to get into +the gym. and damage things without his knowing how they do it. Bill is +an easy-going fellow. That's why I suggested Hebe Pocock. If Hebe was +on the job, he'd eat a fellow up who tried to monkey around the gym." + +Hester was silent thereafter until the subject of conversation was +changed. + +The following week she found herself "out of it" with a vengeance. If +Lily Pendleton had been absenting herself from Hester's side more than +usual since the fall term opened, now she was still more away. Lily +did not wish to lose her membership in the basketball team. To be a +member of the champion nine of Central High gave her a certain +prestige that that young lady did not wish to lose. + +Besides, Lily was one of the largest girls in the Junior class, was +vigorous physically, and loved the game. So Hester was thrown back +upon her own resources more than ever. And her own company did not +please Miss Hester Grimes. + +She could, of course, have found associates among some of the younger +girls, or among those who are always willing to play the courtier to a +girl who spends her money freely. Yet there were few of these latter +at Central High, and not many of the younger girls--the sophs and +freshies--liked Hester well enough to chum with her. + +And now that the whispered accusations against the wholesale butcher's +daughter had gone about the school regarding the gymnasium mystery, +many girls looked askance at Hester when she passed by, and some even +ignored her and refused to speak to her. + +Ordinarily this would have troubled her but little. She was often "not +on speaking terms" with dozens of girls--especially with those of her +own class. But this was different, and she began to notice it. Girls +who had heretofore nodded to her on the street or in the yard of the +school, at least, walked right by and did not turn their eyes upon +her. + +Furthermore, when Hester approached a group of her classmates they +often hushed their animated discussions and broke up the group +quickly. They were speaking of her. She could not imagine what they +said, but her heart burned with anger against them. + +Hester kept away from the gym. She told herself she did not care what +happened to the "old place." She hated it. She would not go there and +see another girl practice in her place on the basketball team. + +A game with the West High girls was scheduled for Wednesday afternoon. +It was not until after that that her mother learned that she no longer +played on the Central High team. And Mrs. Grimes wanted to know _why_. + +"Never you mind!" snapped Hester, who was not above being saucy to her +mother at times. "It doesn't concern you." + +"Don't you _want_ to play any more?" insisted Mrs. Grimes. + +"No, I don't! Now, that's finished!" cried Hester, and flounced out of +the room. + +Her father had agreed to buy the new auto, and she telephoned for the +man at the garage to bring it up. Nobody ever crossed Hester, if he +could help it, and when she said to the man that she wanted to learn +to run the car he supposed that her father was willing. + +He did not ask her age, although the Centerport Board of Aldermen had +established a rule that no person under sixteen should be given a +license or be allowed to run a motor car. At any rate, he did not +expect to be requested to let her run the car without his guidance. + +But this is exactly what Hester demanded when they were out of town. +It was a warm, smoky fall day. There were brush fires somewhere over +the ridge to the south of Centerport; or else some spark from a +railroad locomotive had set the leaves in the ditches afire. It had +been dry for a week and the woods were like tinder. + +They had run far out the road past the entrance to Robinson's Picnic +Grounds, and there Hester demanded to manage the car alone, while the +man sat in back. + +"You make me nervous!" she exclaimed. "I'll never learn anything with +you nudging my elbow all the time. There! get along with you." + +She really was a very capable girl, and she was not unfamiliar with +motor cars; but the chauffeur doubted. + +"I don't believe I can do it, Miss," he said. "I'll sit here----" + +Suddenly the car stopped. The engine was still running, but the car +did not move. + +"_Now_ what's the matter?" snapped Hester. "Hop out and see, Joseph." + +The man did so and immediately she turned the switch again and the +machine darted ahead, leaving the chauffeur in the middle of the road. + +"I'll be back after a little!" she called to him, coolly, over her +shoulder, and the next moment rounded a turn safely and shut the +amazed and angry chauffeur out of view. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE WIND VEERS + + +The car purred along so easily and it was such a delight to manage the +wheel without the interference of the chauffeur that Hester did not +note the distance she traveled. Nor was she at first aware of the +speed. Then she suddenly realized that she had shifted the gear to the +highest speed forward, and that a picket fence she passed was merely a +blur along the roadside. + +But this was a road on which there were few houses, and most of them +were back in the fields, in the middle of the farms that bordered the +pike. + +"This will never do," thought Hester, and she began to manipulate the +levers and finally brought the car to a stop. The roadway was narrow +and she would have to back to turn. But this was one of the very +things she desired to learn how to do; and that officious Joseph was +always fussing when he was beside her. + +"How many miles have I come, I wonder?" she asked herself, looking +about. + +She was on a ridge of land overlooking a narrow valley. At the end of +the valley the road seemed to dip from the ridge, and it disappeared +in a thick haze of blue smoke. + +"The fire must be over that way," she thought. "Shall I run that far +and see what it means? The wind is not blowing toward me." + +She started the car once more. The auto rolled on, but she noticed +that it wasn't firing regularly. + +"Hullo! Is it going to kick up rusty now and here?" muttered Hester, +and she stopped. Having learned that much, she opened the carburetor +to see if the gasoline was flowing all right. Then she tried a dozen +times to start the car, without success. Suddenly she stood up with a +jerk. In the distance she heard a growing roar--the oncoming rush of a +powerful car. + +Fortunately she had stopped on the side of the road. There was room +for another car to pass. And out of the blue smoke ahead it appeared +with startling suddenness, hurled like a missile from a gun directly +up the road toward her. + +She knew the car almost instantly. It was the Beldings' auto and it +was crowded with young folk. She knew where they had been. The next +week the girls of Central High had been invited to Keyport to play the +first team at basketball of the High School in that town. + +Hester had heard all about the game the day before with the West High +girls. With Roberta Fish in Hester's old position at forward center, +the girls of Central High had swept all before them. They had beaten +their opponents with a good lead. Of course, the West High team was +not as strong as the East High had been; but Roberta had done well and +victory had, for the first time in months, perched upon the banner of +Central High. + +A committee had been appointed to go over and see the Keyport +managers, and now it was returning. The big car was driven by Chet +Belding, with Launcelot Darby beside him. Laura, Jess, Bobby, Nellie, +and the Lockwood twins filled the tonneau comfortably. + +Hester hoped that the Belding car would wheel right by and that her +school fellows would not notice her. But Chet saw the car stalled, and +Laura's quick eye detected the lone girl standing with her back to +them, looking off across the valley. + +"What's the matter with that girl and her car?" demanded Lance, as +Chet slowed down. + +"It's Hester. Mr. Grimes has bought a car at last, I understand," said +Laura, leaning over the back of the seat and speaking to the boys. "Is +she in trouble, do you think?" + +"I'll bet she is!" exclaimed Lance. + +"And out on this road alone. Where's the chauffeur?" said Chet. + +"And if the wind should change!" cried Nellie Agnew. + +"By Jove, that's so!" ejaculated Chet, bringing his car to a full stop +right beside the stalled auto. + +"Hullo, Miss Grimes!" he sang out. "Can we help you? What's the matter +with your car?" + +Hester saw it was useless to refuse to see them then. Besides, she did +not want to be stalled there for hours. + +"That's what I've been trying to find out," she said, pointedly +speaking to the boy, not to the girls. + +"Great machines," drawled Lance. "When you think you know all about +'em they kick up and give you a lot of trouble. Isn't that so, Chet?" + +Chet was getting from under the wheel, and grunted. But Laura hopped +out before him, came to Hester's side of the car, and asked: + +"Did it stop of itself?" + +"No. It wasn't firing regularly. I looked at the carburetor to see if +it was all right. Then I tried to start her and couldn't," said +Hester, ungraciously. + +Laura was going over the wiring to see if there were no loose contacts +before Chet came to them. She turned the fly wheel far enough to get +the buzz of the spark coils. + +"Go ahead, Sis!" chuckled Chet. "You know so much you'll be taking our +old mill to pieces pretty soon, I reckon." + +Hester stood by and bit her lip with vexation. She was almost on the +point of driving Laura away from the car, rather than have her +enemy--for so she considered Mother Wit--help her out of her trouble. +But night was coming on and she did not want to stand there much +longer, if the car could be started. + +Laura removed a plug, grounded it on a cylinder and turned the wheel +to a sparking point to note the quality of the spark and the strength +of the battery. Then she ticked the carburetor and opened the small +cock at the bottom. + +"You're getting your gloves all messy, Laura!" called Jess from the +other car. + +"Hush!" commanded Chet, grinning, and holding up his hand. "Do not +disturb the priestess of automobiling at her devotions. There will be +something 'didding' in a minute--now watch." + +But Laura was serious--and interested. She closed the cock and felt +along the gasoline pipe to the valve rod. This seemed to interest her +particularly. In a moment she straightened up and stood back, saying +to Hester: + +"You try the engine. Maybe she'll work now." + +Hester scrambled into her seat and tried the starter. The engine began +to buzz like a saw-mill. + +"Great Scott, Laura!" cried her brother. "What did you do to it?" + +"Turned on the gasoline," said his sister, drily. "When Hester looked +at her carburetor she turned it off. No wonder the engine wouldn't +run." + +"Thanks," muttered Hester, in a choked tone, while the crowd in the +other auto smothered their laughter, and she prepared to start the car +when Chet should have stepped aside. + +"Hold on!" said young Belding. "This isn't any way to be traveling, +Miss Hester." + +"Why not?" she snapped at him, for the situation was getting on her +nerves now. + +"The wind is likely to change. If it veers around it will drive the +fire directly up this road," said Chet. + +"What's burning?" demanded the girl, sharply. + +"The whole forest back yonder through the cut. We came through a big +cloud of smoke." + +"If you got through I guess I can," Hester said, ungratefully, and the +next moment started her car, which rolled swiftly away along the +turnpike. + +The fact was, she did not want to try to turn the machine while they +were watching her. She knew she should be awkward about it. And Laura +Belding had displayed her superiority over her once already--and that +was enough! + +The big car purred again joyously, and the roadway slipped behind like +a ribbon running over a spool. In half a minute Hester and her car had +dipped into the valley and were running through the cut between the +hills. The Belding car was out of sight. + +But suddenly she became aware that the smoke was thick here. This deep +cut was filled with it. And the fumes were not only choking; there was +heat with the smoke. + +A shift of wind drove a thick cloud out of the forest and she had to +shut her eyes. This was dangerous work. She knew better than to try to +run the car on high speed when she could not see twenty feet beyond +it. + +When she reduced speed she was cognizant of a roaring sound from the +forest. For a moment she thought a big wind was coming. + +Then she knew better. It was the fire. Not far away the flames were +devouring the forest hungrily--and the wind was behind the flames! + +There must have already been a change in the air-current, as Chet had +prophesied. The forest fire was driving right into this narrow cut +between the hills. To be caught here by the flames would not only mean +the finish of this brand new car, but Hester knew that there would be +no escape for her from such a situation. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +RACING THE FLAMES + + +Hester's car jarred down to a complete stop. The smoke stung her eyes +and it began to be difficult for her to breathe. She knew that she had +come too far on this road. She should have heeded Chet Belding's +warning. + +But now she needed all her courage and coolness to get her out of the +hot corner into which she had so heedlessly driven the automobile. The +road was not more than thirty feet wide and the thick woods bordered +it on either hand. Out of the covert dashed a flash of rusty brown +that was gone in an instant. Hester knew it to be a fox. Already she +had seen the rabbits running, and not a bird was in sight. + +The fire was coming--and coming by leaps and bounds! + +It smote upon Hester Grimes's mind that not alone were she and the +innocent animals of the wood in peril; but there were lonely farms, +deep in the forest, where the houses were so near the woods that the +fire was sure to destroy them. + +Who would warn those squatters and small farmers of the danger down +here in the cut? When once the flames rose over the ridge, with the +wind behind them, they would descend the other side with the swiftness +of an express train. + +Crops, orchards, outbuildings, and dwellings would all be sacrificed +to the demon of flame. And some of the families along that far road on +which the Sitz farm lay would scarcely have time to flee. + +But Hester, as she often said herself, "was no namby-pamby girl." She +made a deal of fun of her chum, Lily, because the latter was always so +helpless--or appeared to be--in time of trouble. + +She was alone, at the edge of this burning forest, with this big car. +It had to be turned around, and then she must run it out of the line +of the fire. Her father would have something to say--and that to much +purpose--if she lost this brand new car, which he had not even paid for +as yet. + +She started the car on the reverse, and twisted the wheel. The car +backed, and shook, and she stopped it just as a rear tire collided +with a stump. She must go ahead, and back, and go ahead again, and +reverse once more, and repeat the operation half a dozen times before +the car would be headed in the proper direction. + +The smoke grew thicker and thicker--and more choking. Her eyes were +half blinded by tears, for the smoke stung them sadly. But soon she +was free. The car could fly back over the road which it had lately +descended, and once out of the cut her peril would be past. + +But on the very moment of starting ahead again Hester heard a great +crashing in the bushes. Out into the road ahead of the car sprawled on +hands and knees a man--or the semblance of one. For the instant Hester +scarcely knew what to make of the figure sprawling there before the +car. But she shut down again so as not to run over it. + +Then the individual arose to his knees and waved his arms weakly. His +clothing was in rags. Indeed, he had only half a shirt and the remains +of his overalls left upon his body, besides his shoes. His hair had +been singed from his head. A great angry burn disfigured one side of +his face, while the beard was crisped to cinders on the other side. He +was without eyebrows and eyelashes, and his eyes stared from deep +hollows in his face--or so it seemed. + +"For heaven's sake, help me!" he gasped. "Take me aboard! Take me away +from here!" + +He struggled to his feet and fell again. He had come as far as he +could. Had the road not been right where it was, the man must have +fallen in the woods and been swept again by the flames. + +Hester sprang up, caught him around the waist and half dragged him to +the car. She was thoroughly scared now; but she was courageous enough +to aid this man who was more unfortunate than herself. + +"Get in! Get in!" she cried, flinging open the door of the tonneau. +"We must hurry." + +"You bet we gotter hurry!" gasped the man, as he crawled into the car +and she banged to the door so that he would not fall out. + +Into her own seat Hester sprang. The car was jarring with the throb of +the engine. If it should balk now, what would become of them? + +The frightened girl turned the switch carefully. The car rolled on. It +moved faster and faster along the narrow road. The smoke was now so +thick that she was running the car blindly. At any moment the wheels +might hit a stump at the side of the road, for she could not be sure +that she was keeping in the main-traveled path. + +While they were in the cut she heard nothing from the man behind. But +when the car shot up the hill out of the cut to the ridge-ground, and +left the smoke behind, the man struggled up into the seat and leaned +over to speak to her. + +"You air a brave gal!" he gasped. "Woof! my lungs is burnt to a +crisp--I swallered so much smoke. Ye jest erbout saved my life, Miss." + +Hester made no reply. She was winking the tears out of her eyes, and +the pressure in her own lungs hurt. + +"But there air a lot of folks goin' to be caught similar over the +ridge, if we can't warn 'em." + +"What's that?" she demanded, quickly, but without looking around at +him. + +"My name's Billson. I live back in the bottoms yonder. I got an acre +or two cleared around my cabin; but the bresh warn't burned up. It is +now, by jinks!" added Mr. Billson, with a grim cackle. + +"When the wind veered thar so suddent, it caught me. I had to run +through a wall of fire at one place. Then I got acrost the crick and +that saved me for a while. But the fire would have caught me again if +it hadn't been for you. I am sure mighty much obleeged to ye." + +"I--I'm glad I was there with the car," faltered Hester. + +"And we've got to warn those other folks over the hill," cried the +man, coughing. "Gee! I guess I'll never get this smoke out o' my +lungs." + +"But how can we get to those other farms?" gasped Hester. + +"I'll show ye. There's a crossroad along here a spell. An automobile +can git through it on a pinch. And there's two families live on that +road, too." + +"Do you s'pose they'll be in danger?" asked Hester, slowly. + +"In course they are. Say! you ain't afraid, are you?" demanded the +man. "I tell ye the fire is coming. It's going to sweep this whole +ridge." + +"Won't--won't they see it?" + +"Did _I_ see it?" demanded the squatter. "Not soon enough, you bet. +Drive on, Miss. Surely you ain't goin' to show a yaller streak now?" + +"But my--my chauffeur is waiting for me along the road here toward +town." + +"Let him wait. He's out of danger. There are plenty of open fields in +that direction. _He_ won't get into no trouble. You drive through this +side road like I tell you, and we'll get clear around by Sitz's farm +ahead of the fire. But drive hard!" + +Inspired by the man's excitement, Hester did as she was told. They +came to the crossroad, which she remembered, and turned into it. There +was little smoke here beyond the ridge. Nobody would have suspected +the raging pit of flame down there in the cut to the southeast. + +Yet the flames were advancing on the wings of the wind. Hester had +seen enough to assure her that the case was serious indeed. Once the +fire topped the ridge the whole northern slope would be swept by a +billow of flame! + +The picture of these farmsteads burning and the people being unable to +escape with their livestock and sundry possessions began to take form +in Hester's mind. She speeded up the car and it rushed through the +gathering twilight like a locomotive of a fast express. + +At the first house they stopped for only a moment. Hester turned on +the car lamps, for the shadows were gathering in the narrow places +along the road now. The squatter did not have to urge the danger upon +the farmers. A look at his condition told its own story. A forest fire +is a terrible thing, and once it gets under way usual means of +fire-fighting are of no avail. + +On and on raced the motor car. Along the summit of the wooded ridge +behind them the glow of the fire spread to a deep rose--then to a +crimson--against the sky. It was an angry light and the smoke that +billowed up from it began to canopy the heavens. + +From certain heights Hester could see far down into the city of +Centerport, with its countless twinkling lights. The forest fire must +burn out long before it reached the edge of the city; but detached +houses, here and there, were in peril--and many farmers got out their +teams and ploughed fresh furrows around their stacks and buildings. + +They rushed through Tentorville at a speed that made the dogs howl and +the women run to the doors of their houses, leaving their suppers to +burn. Beyond this straggling little settlement there were better +farms. The village was not endangered by the flames, for there were +open fields all around it. + +At the next house the occupants had been warned by telephone; for news +of the advancing fire had been wired from beyond the ridge, toward +Keyport. + +The better class of farmers were supplied with 'phones, and they were +warned; but the man who had been burned out of his own place was +interested in the other poor people--the tenant farmer and squatter +class. + +"Them fellers can't stand the expense of telephones," he told Hester. +"And they work moughty hard and will go to bed airly. If they haven't +kalkerlated on the veering of the wind they won't know anything about +it till the fire's upon 'em." + +Thirty-seven of such farmers and settlers did the rushing auto visit. +Hester and her comrade must have startled some of these people +dreadfully, for the auto dashed up to the little farmsteads with the +noise of an express train, and the scorched man yelled his loudest to +the inmates: + +"Git up! Git up! The fire's comin'. It'll be over the ridge before +midnight and this hull mountainside'll crackle in flames. Git out!" + +Then, at the first word in reply from the aroused inmates, the girl +and her companion rushed on in their car, and sometimes before the +people in the house realized what had passed, the car was out of +sight. + +For nearly two hours from the time Hester had helped the man into her +car did she speed about the country. By that time both he, and the +girl--and the gasoline--were about exhausted. + +They pulled up at a country store where they sold gasoline, and Hester +refilled her tank. There she telephoned home to her family, too. +Joseph had come in on another auto and Hester's father was about to +send out a general alarm for his absent daughter. + +"What in thunder are you doing, riding over the country alone?" her +father demanded over the telephone. + +"Now, don't you mind. I'm all right," said Hester, tartly. "I'm coming +home now--by the way of the Sitz place and Robinson's Woods. We've done +all we can to rouse up the farmers." + +And she shut her angry father off before he could say more, and ran +out to the car--to find her companion senseless in the bottom of the +tonneau, and a local doctor bending over him. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +THE KEYPORT GAME + + +"These are bad burns," said the physician, looking up at the wide-eyed +crowd. "And I believe he is hurt internally. Where did he come from?" + +"This gal brought him in her car, Doc," said the storekeeper, who had +forgotten trade for the moment. + +"Who is he?" asked the physician, with his hand on the man's pulse, +but looking curiously at Hester. + +"I don't know--oh, yes! I remember! He said his name was Billson." + +"Jeffers-pelters!" ejaculated the storekeeper. "I'd never ha' knowed +him. His whiskers is burned off, that's a fac'." + +"Then you know all about him, Carey?" pursued the medical man. + +"Not much! not much!" exclaimed the storekeeper, hastily. "He's jest a +squatter. Come from one of the lower counties, I b'lieve. +Holler-chested. Bad lungs, he said. Goin' to live in the open an' cure +'em." + +"He ought to go to the hospital at once," growled the doctor. + +"I can take him," said Hester, quietly. "He's a very brave man, I +believe. He warned all the people through the section back of +Tentorville----" + +"I guess you druv the car, Miss," cackled Carey, the storekeeper. + +"But I should have driven it home in a hurry after finding him on the +road without knowing anything about the people in danger," said the +girl, honestly. "He did it." + +"No matter who did it. I want to get him to the hospital. I'll go to +Centerport with him, Miss, if you'll take us." + +"Of course," said Hester. + +"You know him, Carey," said the doctor, turning to the storekeeper. +"Can I use your name at the hospital in Centerport?" + +"No, you can't," said the other, quickly. "I can't stand no 'nearest +friend' game for a man that never spent fo' bits a week in my store +for groceries. No. I dunno him." + +"We'll stand sponsor for him, sir," said Hester, hastily. "Come on. +You'll have to tell me how to drive. I don't know these roads very +well." + +"What's your name, Miss?" asked the physician, climbing into the car +as Hester touched the electric starter. + +Hester told him, and the medical man nodded. "Henry Grimes's gal, eh?" +he said. "Well, he's well able to be sponsor for this poor fellow. +Drive on." + +He was a shabby old man, this country doctor. His name was Leffert, +and he seemed none too blessed with this world's goods. But he was +kindly and he eased the senseless man into a comfortable position in +the tonneau with the gentleness of a woman. + +The car started on the long run to Centerport with a plentifully +filled tank. And the engine worked nicely. When they passed the Sitz +place Hester saw that the farmer and Otto were out ploughing along the +edge of the woods by lantern light. But the sky above the ridge glowed +like a live coal. The forest fire was sweeping on. + +When they came down the hill past Robinson's Woods the doctor nudged +Hester from behind. + +"Hadn't you better take that left-hand turn, Miss?" he demanded. + +"What for? This is the nearest way," returned the girl, slowing down a +bit. + +"But it goes through the Four Corners. They have a habit of setting on +automobiles there." + +"They won't dare bother us," declared Hester. "Most of those people +work for father." + +"Aw--well," said the doctor, and sat down again. + +The car roared through the settlement of shacks about the Four Corners +like a fast express. Nobody tried to bother them. In twenty minutes +thereafter the car stopped at the City Hospital. The patient was +carried in on a stretcher, and one of the interns took Hester's name +and address. Dr. Leffert evidently had no standing at the institution, +and he merely handed the patient over to the hospital authorities and +hurried away. Hester drove the car home and found both her mother and +father excitedly awaiting her coming. + +"Now, don't you bother about me--or the car!" she said, sharply, when +her parents began to take her to task for worrying them so. "I haven't +had a bite to eat, and I'm tired, too. Your old car isn't hurt any----" + +"But you can't ride that car all over this country alone, Hess! I +swear I won't have it!" + +"But I _did_ drive it alone, didn't I? And it isn't hurt any. Neither +am I," she replied, and it was several days before her parents learned +the particulars of their daughter's wild ride over the mountainside +with the squatter, Billson, warning the small farmers of the coming +fire. + +"I declare for't!" her mother then said. "You're the greatest girl, +Hess! The folks say you're a heroine." + +"They say a whole lot beside their prayers, I reckon," snapped Hester. + +"But one of the country papers has got a long article in it about you +and that Mr. Billson. Only they don't know your name." + +"No. I told Doc. Leffert to keep still about it," said Hester. "Now! +there's been enough talk. I want two dollars, Ma. I want to send that +Billson some jelly and some flowers. He's having a mighty hard time at +the hospital. And there isn't a soul who cares anything about +him--whether he lives or dies." + +"Ain't that just like you, Hessie?" complained her mother. "You throw +that poor fellow good things like you was throwing a bone to a dog! +I--I wish you wasn't so hard." + +But events were making Hester seem harder than usual these days. She +was completely cut off from the society of her school fellows. She had +no part in the after-hour athletics. Nobody spoke to her about the +fine time expected at Keyport when the basketball team went over to +battle with the team of the Keyport High. + +And when that day arrived, fully a carload entrained at the Hill +station of the C. K. & M. Railroad, bound for the neighboring city. +These were all the girls of Central High interested in the game and +their friends among the boys. + +It was not a long run by train to Keyport, but they had a lot of fun. +Chet and Lance were full of an incident that had occurred in Professor +Dimp's class that morning, and Chet was telling his sister and a group +of friends about it. + +"Short and Long got one on Old Dimple again to-day," said Chet. "You +know he's forever hammering the Romans into us. We ought to call him +'The Old Roman'--we really had! There's that Roman lad who was such an +athlete and all-around pug----" + +"'Pug!'" gasped Laura. "Wait till mother hears you say _that_." + +"Ha! I'm going to watch to see that she doesn't hear me, Sis," +returned her brother. "Well, Old Dimple was telling us about this lad +who used to swim across the Tiber three times before breakfast. And +when he'd expatiated on the old boy's performance, Short and Long put +up a mitt----" + +"'A mitt!'" groaned Laura again. + +"Aw, well! His hand, then. Dimple perked right up, thinking that Short +and Long was really showing some interest, and says he: + +"'What's your question, Mr. Long?' + +"And Billy says: 'What's puzzling me, is why he swam it _three_ +times?'" + +"'Eh?' says Dimple. 'How's that, young man?'" + +"'Why didn't he swim it _four_ times,' says Billy, grave as a judge, +'and so get back to the bank where he'd left his clothes?' And not a +smile cracked Short and Long's face! Dimple didn't know whether to +laugh or get mad, and just then the gong sounded 'Time' and Dimple got +out of it without answering Billy's question." + +"Tickets!" cried Lance, as the girls laughed at the story. "Here comes +the conductor. Get your pasteboards ready." + +"Who says that's the conductor, Lance?" demanded Chet. + +"Huh! It's Mr. Wood, isn't it? He's the conductor of this train." + +"Impossible," sighed Chet "Wood is a non-conductor." + +But the crowd wouldn't stand for puns like that and shouted Chet down. + +When they debarked at the Keyport station they formed in marching +order and, the boys with canes and the girls with flags, marched two +by two to the Keyport girls' athletic field. The game was called for +four o'clock, and Mrs. Case got her team out and "warmed them up" with +ten minutes' practice before the referee called both teams to the +court selected for the match game. + +The boys in the audience droned out the Central High yell, with its +"snap-the-whip" ending of, "Ziz--z--z--z----Boom!" and the ball was thrown +into play. Right at the start the home team got the best of the +visitors. There were excellent players on the Keyport team. Indeed, in +all athletics the Keyport girls had excelled for years. Our friends +from Central High were outmatched at several points. + +But they fought hard. Laura and her mates battled every moment, and +when the whistle ending the first half sounded, the Keyport team was +only two points ahead. But the visitors ran to their dressing room in +no hopeful frame of mind. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +UPHILL WORK FOR THE TEAM + + +"I declare!" ejaculated Bobby Hargrew; "we're being whipped out of our +boots!" + +"I'm doing the best I can!" wailed Roberta Fish. + +"Nobody's blaming you, child," Jess Morse hastened to say. + +"Not at all," added Laura. "I haven't a single complaint to make about +your work, Roberta." + +"But there's something lacking somewhere," declared Dorothy Lockwood. + +"We might as well admit that these Keyport girls are better at +basketball than we are," said her twin. + +"My gracious!" cried Bobby. "They're better than we ever _dared_ to +be!" + +"No!" cried Laura. "That is not so." + +"What's the answer, then, Miss Captain?" demanded the irrepressible. + +"We must play up to each other, that's all," said the captain. "Our +playing is loose." + +"We're weak in spots," admitted Nellie Agnew, slowly. + +"And I'm the worst spot," groaned Roberta. + +"Pshaw! you're not, either," said Eve Sitz, kindly. + +"You do your very best, Roberta," said Laura, again. + +"But that isn't as good as Hester's best," responded Roberta, quickly. + +"Hessie is certainly one mighty good player," grumbled Bobby. + +"And we got rid of her rather hastily," sighed Nellie. + +"Don't wail about that now!" cried Josephine Morse, with some +asperity. "My goodness! I'm only glad she's out of it. And I reckon +Laura is." + +"I am sorry it seemed best to ask her to get out," admitted the +captain. + +"Bah! she was more trouble than she was good," declared Jess. "Let's +not weep and wail over what we did." + +"But have you heard what she did last week, girls?" asked the doctor's +daughter, earnestly. + +"What now?" returned Bobby, with curiosity. + +"Remember the day we found her broken down in that new car of her +father's on the Keyport road?" + +"Sure!" cried several of the team together. + +"That was the day of that big forest fire. You know, Chet warned her +that the wind was likely to change and blow the fire across the road. +Well, she rescued a man from the burning woods and then ran that car +all over the hill country up there, warning farmers and other people +that the fire was coming. She is a very brave girl," concluded Nellie, +softly. + +"Pshaw! don't you weep over Hess Grimes," exclaimed Bobby. "You're too +tender-hearted, Nell." + +"But she _is_ brave," said Laura, hastily. + +"And just as ill-tempered as she can be," put in Jess Morse. "We're +well rid of her." + +"I guess nobody in this world is quite perfect--nor all bad, either," +suggested the doctor's daughter. "And as for Hester, she never let us +see her good points." + +"But some mighty mean ones!" exclaimed Dora Lockwood. + +"Just the same," sighed Laura, "if she had only stuck to the rules of +basketball in playing she would have been a great help to us right +now!" + +Lily had been "prinking up" at the other end of the room while this +conversation was going on. Now she flung them one malicious "I told +you so!" as the gong rang and they hurried out to their places in the +basketball court. + +"All ready?" cried the referee. + +"Do your best, girls!" begged Laura. + +The whistle sounded long and loud at the toss-up and the game was on. +At first, although the play was fast and furious, neither side scored. +Then came the umpire's shout: + +"Foul on Central High for over-guarding!" + +It rattled Laura and her team mates. Their opponents got the ball and +shot it basketward. Right from the field Keyport made a basket. And +then, in little over half a minute they made another! + +"Break it up, guards! Break it up!" begged Laura. + +But although the girls of Central High fought hard, and there were +some brilliant plays on the part of Laura and Jess, it was all to no +avail. Nor did the "rooting" of their boy friends help. The Keyport +team forged ahead steadily and at the end of the game they were six +points in the lead. It was as bad a beating as the girls of Central +High had ever received in a trophy game. + +Roberta was in tears in the dressing room when Mrs. Case came in to +cheer them up. + +"Now, now! what have I told you about being good losers?" she +demanded, briskly. + +"Tha--that's all right," stammered Roberta. "We cheered 'em, didn't we? +But I feel it's my fault. I fumble dreadfully. You know, I always did +when I was on the team before. Get somebody else in my place, Mrs. +Case--do!" + +Naturally Lily Pendleton told all this to Hester; but it only added to +Hester's bitterness of spirit. Deep down in her heart she felt the +sting of Central High's defeat--only she wouldn't admit it. The team +had lost--she believed it, too--because she wasn't there in her place at +forward center! + +And Mrs. Case had tried to show her how she might win back, if she +would, and Hester had refused. Her bad temper had cut her off from the +instructor's help entirely. She was a pariah--and she felt it. + +So she told Lily she was glad the team was having up-hill work and was +so nasty about it that Lily, who was feeling bad, too, about the +affair, almost got mad herself, and went home early. + +"That Hester Grimes _can_ be awfully exasperating when she wants to +be," Lily admitted to her mother. + +"Bless me, child! I don't really see why you associate so much with +her. She does come of such common people. Why, Mrs. Grimes is +impossible!" sighed Mrs. Pendleton. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +HEBE POCOCK IN TROUBLE + + +The big frost came soon after the Keyport game and Eve excitedly +informed her particular friends when she came in to school that the +nuts were falling in showers. It was toward the end of the week when +this happened and it had already been arranged that a nutting party +should take an entire Saturday for the trip to Peveril Pond, some +miles beyond the Sitz place. + +The Beldings' car and one of Mr. Purcell's sight-seeing autos were to +carry the party from the Hill, with two seats reserved for Eve and her +brother Otto, whom they would pick up at the farmhouse. Prettyman +Sweet and Lily Pendleton were invited--indeed, Eve had insisted upon +all the basketball team being of the party--and Purt was dreadfully +exercised in advance regarding what would be the proper costume to +wear. + +"Oh," said Bobby Hargrew, "when folks go fox-hunting in the fall they +wear red coats, because the fox is red, I suppose. Now, you ought to +wear a nut-brown suit, hadn't you?" + +"Yes, Purt," drawled Lance Darby, "something nutty will suit you, all +right, all right!" + +The girls wore sweaters and old caps and old skirts and lace up +boots--all but Lily. She came "dressed to the nines," as Bobby +declared. + +"What under the sun are you supposed to represent, Lil?" demanded Jess +Morse. "You--you look like a fancy milkmaid." + +"Well, I'm going into the country; I shall look the part," said Lily, +demurely. + +"Oh, say!" continued Jess, in a whisper, "you've got altogether too +much red on your cheeks for a milkmaid, young lady." + +At that Lily flushed deeper than the "fast color" on her cheek. + +"Is that so, Miss?" she snapped. "I guess a milkmaid ought to be +rosy-cheeked." + +Chet, going by, overheard this. He glanced at the red spots in Lily's +naturally pale cheek, and laughed. + +"On the contrary," he said, winking at Jess. + +"What's on the contrary?" demanded Lily, sharply. + +"Milkmaids shouldn't be rosy-cheeked, you know," said Chet, gravely. + +"Why not, Mr. Funny?" + +"Because a milkmaid is naturally a pail girl," chortled Chet. + +Lily was rather angry for a while because they joked her about the +rouge. She was the only girl in all the Junior class who used +cosmetics and, as Chet laughingly said once, "painting the Lily was a +thankless job--it didn't improve her looks!" + +They piled into the two autos and started off with much laughter and +blowing of horns. Nellie Agnew was almost the last one to board the +Beldings' car. + +"I had to run down to Mrs. Doyle's for Daddy Doctor," she explained. +"Poor little Johnny is dreadfully sick. He never really recovered from +the shock, or the cold, when he fell into the sewer basin. He's such a +poor, weak little thing now. It would make your heart ache to see him, +Laura." + +"Lil says that Hester goes there all the time, and that she's always +doing something for Rufe, or the rest of them," Jess Morse said. + +Laura shook her head. "I know," she said. "I saw Hester and Rufie in +the park together the other day. They seem to be very good friends. +And I'm sorry." + +"Why--for pity's sake?" demanded Nellie. + +"Why, father is on the Board of Education this year, you know, and he +told us--but you mustn't repeat it!--that Bill Jackway had admitted that +the night the gym. was first raided Rufus slipped into the building +unbeknown to him early in the evening, and was there until after +midnight. Then he cried to go home, being afraid, he said. But Jackway +let him out without ever making the rounds of the gym., and so he +doesn't know for sure whether the damage to the apparatus was done +while Rufe was there, or afterward." + +"My goodness me!" gasped Nellie. "How awful!" + +"Could it be that half-foolish boy, do you suppose?" cried Jess. + +"He isn't so foolish. Rufe is dreadfully cunning about some things," +replied Laura. "Think of those footprints in the athletic field. I +_know_ the person who made them walked backwards. Maybe Rufe got into +the gym. again unknown to his uncle; and he'd be just sharp enough to +get out of that window backward and so reach the fence." + +"And he could be hired to do that for a little money," said Jess, +confidently. + +"Oh, I wouldn't say that!" exclaimed Nellie. "It's too dreadful." + +"But Mr. Jackway can't make Rufe admit it. The boy won't speak. And +the Board doesn't know what to do about it," Laura said. "Now, I've +told you girls this; don't let it go any farther." + +They promised--and they were girls who could keep their word. Lance and +Chet on the front seat of the machine, with Bobby between them, hadn't +heard it at all. + +When the cars reached the Sitz place Eve and Otto were taken into the +tonneau of the Beldings' car, and they went on, down the leaf-strewn +road, toward Peveril Pond. The forest fire that had threatened all +this side of the ridge had burned out without crossing the wide +highway known as "the State Road" and so the lower slope of the ridge +and all the valley had been untouched. + +They passed the district school which Eve attended before she came to +Central High. + +"And we had a splendid teacher at the last," sighed Eve. "But when I +first went to it--oh! the boys acted so horrid, and the girls gabbled +so. It wasn't a school. My mother said it was 'a bear garden!' + +"You see, there were some dreadfully bad big boys went to the school, +off and on. The Four Corners isn't so far away, you know. Hebe +Pocock--Laura will remember him?" + +"I guess so!" cried Laura. + +"Well, he was one of the big boys in school when I first came here. We +had a new teacher--we were always having 'new' teachers. Sometimes +there would be as many as four in one term. If they were girls they +broke down and cried and gave it up; and if they were young men they +were either beaten or driven out of the neighborhood. + +"But I can remember this particular young man pretty well, little as I +was," laughed Eve. "He wasn't very big, but he didn't look puny, +although he wore glasses. But when he opened school he took off the +glasses and put them in his desk. He was real mild mannered, and he +had a nice smile, and the big girls liked him. But Hebe and the other +big boys said they were going to run him off right quick!" + +"And did they?" asked Jess, interested. + +"Well, I'll tell you. He was taking the names of all us children, and +he got along all right till he came to Hebe. Hebron was the ring +leader. He always gave the sign for trouble. When the master asked his +name Hebe leaned back in his seat, put his feet up on the desk, and +looked cross-eyed at the new teacher. Of course, all the little +follows thought it was funny--and some of the girls, too, I guess. + +"'Please tell me your name,' said the master, without seeming to +notice Hebe's impudence. + +"'Wal,' drawled Hebe, 'sometimes they call me Bob, and sometimes Pete, +and sometimes they call me too late for dinner. But don't you call me +nothin', Mister!' + +"The teacher listened until he got through," said Eve, her eyes +flashing at the remembrance of the scene, "and then he doubled his +fist and struck Hebe a blow between the eyes that half stunned him. +Hebe was the bigger, but that teacher was awfully strong and smart. He +grabbed Hebe by the collar and hauled him headlong over the desks and +seats, stood him up before the big desk with a slam, and roared at +him: + +"'What is your name?' + +"'He--Hebe Pocock,' exclaimed the fellow, only half sensing what had +happened to him. + +"'Hebe?' repeated the master, with a sneer. 'You look like a 'Hebe.' +Go take your seat.' + +"And do you know," laughed Eve, "that Hebe was almost the best behaved +boy in the school all that term?" + +"Oh!" laughed Jess, "it must be lots of fun to go to an ungraded +school like that one." + +"It's all according to the teacher," Eve said. "When we had a poor +teacher it was just a scramble for the scholars to learn anything. The +big ones helped the little ones. But our present teacher, Miss Harris, +is a college girl and she is fine. But some funny things happen +because we have the old-fashioned district system of government, with +'school trustees' elected every year. This year at the far end of the +district they put in old Mr. Moose, a very illiterate man, for +trustee. And one of the girls was telling me about the day he visited +school to 'examine' it. That is the method, you know; each trustee +makes an official visit and is supposed to find out in that visit how +the teachers are getting along." + +"Tell us about it, Eve," urged Laura. + +"Why," laughed Eve, "Mr. Moose came in and sat on the teacher's +platform for a while, listening and watching, and showing himself to +be dreadfully uncomfortable. But he thought he had to make some +attempt to examine the school, so when Miss Harris called the spelling +class he reached for the speller and said he'd put out a few words. So +he read to the first boy: + +"'Spell "eggpit."' + +"'E--double g--p--i--t,' says the boy. + +"'Nope,' says Mr. Moose. 'Next.' + +"Next scholar spelled it the same way and that didn't suit Mr. Moose, +and so it went on down the line, everybody taking a shy at 'Eggpit.' +Finally Miss Harris asked to see the book. + +"'These young 'uns of yourn air mighty bad spellers,' said Mr. Moose. + +"'But they have all spelled 'eggpit' right,' said Miss Harris. 'Where +is the word?' + +"And what do you suppose Moose pointed out?" chuckled Eve. + +"Give it up!" was the chorus of her listeners. + +"'Egypt!'" + +"My goodness!" cried Jess, choked with laughter. "Can you beat that +for a school trustee?" + +They arrived at the sloping hollow at the end of Peveril Pond, where +they proposed to picnic, very soon after this. It was a pretty glade, +and the smooth road went down to the shore and skirted it for half a +mile. + +Off on a rocky point were several boys or men fishing; but they were +not near enough to disturb our friends. Of course the boys clamored +for lunch at once; but while the girls prepared it the boys were +shooed off to begin the nut gathering. + +Lance Darby, with a perfectly solemn face, set Pretty Sweet to work +thumping an oak tree with a huge club to "rattle off the nuts;" and he +might have been whaling away at the trunk of the tree until luncheon +had not Chet taken pity on him and showed him that neither chestnuts +or shell-barks grew on oak trees, and that that particular oak didn't +even have an acorn on it! + +Suddenly, just as the girls had the good things spread on the seats of +the two cars, a chorus of screams arose from the fishermen. There were +three of them, and when our friends' gaze was attracted by the shouts +they saw that the bigger one was down in the water and the other two +were leaping about on the sands. + +"Guess they've caught a whale," said Chet. + +"They are in trouble--serious trouble," declared his sister, leaving +the car herself to start for the scene of the difficulty. + +"That's little Mike Pocock," said Eve, grabbing her arm. "And I +believe the fellow in the water is Hebe." + +"Never mind. He's in some difficulty. See! he can't stand up," cried +Laura. + +"But weally!" gasped Prettyman Sweet. "The lunch is just weady----" + +"Come on, you cannibal!" ejaculated Lance. "Let's see what's wanted +over there." + +The whole party, girls as well as boys, trooped along the shore of the +pond toward the rock where the fishermen had been standing. They saw +in a moment that this boulder had rolled over--probably while Hebe +Pocock was standing upon it to make a cast--and that Hebe was caught by +the rock and held down to the bottom of the pond. He was barely able +to keep his head out of water as the boys and girls of Central High +approached. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +MOTHER WIT TO THE RESCUE + + +The young ruffian who was so notorious about the Four Corners was +really in a serious predicament. In making a long cast the boulder had +rolled under him and, being precipitated into the pond, he was pinned +to the bottom by his legs. The two boys with him had sprung into the +pond, and were now wet to their necks; but they could not roll back +the heavy boulder. + +Just as Laura and Chet, with their school mates, arrived Hebe sank +back with a gurgle, and the water went over his head. He had been +barely able to keep his mouth and nostrils out of water until that +moment. + +"Hebe's gettin' drowned! Hebe's gettin' drowned!" yelled Mike, the +victim's young brother, dancing up and down on the shore. + +"Get in there at once and hold his head up!" commanded Laura Belding. +"Then we'll roll away the stone. But he _will_ drown if you don't hold +him up." + +Mike did as he was bid. When Hebe got his breath again he began to use +language that was unfit for the girls to hear, at least. + +"Say!" exclaimed Chet, his eyes blazing, "you stop that or I'll hold +your head under the water myself. What kind of a fellow are you, +anyway?" + +Hebe gasped and kept still. Perhaps he had scarcely realized who the +people were about him. Laura said: + +"Can't you boys, all together, roll away that stone?" + +"We'll try," said Lance, already beginning to strip off his shoes and +stockings. "Come ahead, Chet." + +They made even Purt Sweet join them, bare-footed and with their +trousers rolled up as far as they would go. They waded in and got +around the rock. Hebe was in a sitting posture, and the weight of the +stone bore both his legs down into the muddy bottom. But there was +hard-pan under the mud, and it was impossible to drag the victim from +beneath the huge rock. + +But the boys couldn't even jar the rock. It had slipped from the bank +and rolled a little, and now it was settling slowly into the ooze, +bearing Hebe's legs down under it. + +The situation was serious in the extreme. Slowly, as Hebe settled +beneath the rock, the water was creeping up about his lips and nose. +Although he held his head back the water would, in time, rise above +his mouth. And the rise was as steady as a tide. + +Again and again Chet Belding and his comrades tried to push the huge +rock over. But, as at first, they could not even budge it. Mike began +to cry again. Hebe said, gruffly: + +"I reckon I gotter croak, eh? This ain't no nice way to die, you bet!" + +"Die--nothing!" cried Laura. + +She ran back to the car and tore the piece of rubber pipe away from +the bulb of the horn. Handing this to Hebe, she showed him how he +could lie back in a more comfortable position, if he wished, and +breathe through the tube. She produced some cotton, too, so that he +could stop his ears and nostrils. + +"Now, you keep up your courage," Mother Wit told him. "We'll soon find +a way of getting you out of this. You're not dead yet." + +Hebe said nothing, but he watched her, when his eyes were above water, +with a grateful air. + +"But I tell you, Laura, we can't begin to start this stone even," +growled Chet, in her ear. "You will have to think of something better +than _this_." + +"So I will," cried Laura. "I'll think of a rope." + +"A rope?" + +"Yes. A good, strong one. One that will go around that rock and then +be plenty long enough to hitch to one of the cars--the big car. I +believe we can start the rock that way." + +"Hurrah!" cried Lance. "She's got the idea! What do you say, Chet?" + +"Looks like it. But how about the rope? Where'll we get it?" + +"We got a goot one at our house," said Otto, who was sitting down, +puffing, after having strained at the rock. "Dot hay rope, he be juist +de t'ing." + +"The hay rope for ours, then," cried Chet. "Come on, Otto. We'll go +after it!" + +He started for the machines, the Swiss youth after him. They got in +the Belding car immediately and started the engine. Purt Sweet sprang +up with a yell and ran along the shore of the pond after the car. + +"Oh, oh! Stop!" he shrieked. + +But Chet did not hear him. Lance caught Pretty by the arm and demanded +to know what he was yelling about. + +"Why," gasped Purt, "they've driven off with a whole lot of the lunch +the girls spread on the seats. And look at them go! Why! it'll all be +joggled onto the floor of the tonneau before they get back." + +"Oh--_you_!" exclaimed Lance, balked for words with which to express +his contempt. + +The Belding car was quickly out of sight. The boys and girls gathered +around the spot where Hebe Pocock had met with his accident. Nobody +could help him, and he began to be in extreme pain. His head was under +water a good deal of the time; but the piece of rubber pipe allowed +him to breathe, and Mike, or the other smaller boy from the Four +Corners, held Hebe's face above water as much as possible. + +Chet and Otto were not gone an hour; but it seemed, as Lance said, "a +creation of time." Pocock was pretty weak when the rope was brought. +Meanwhile the chauffeur had run the big car along the road and backed +it near the rock and headed in the proper direction. They passed the +heavy cable around the boulder and then wrapped it around the car so +that the strain would not come in any one place and perhaps do the car +damage. + +"You bigger boys get in there," said Laura, "and take Hebe under the +arms. As soon as the rock moves pull him out. For the rope may slip +and the rock slide back deeper into the water than it is now. That +would kill him, perhaps." + +"You're right, Laura," said her brother, gravely. "We'll take care." + +Chet and Lance went to the aid of the unfortunate youth. Otto managed +the rope. The chauffeur started his engine and got into his seat. + +"Ready! start easily," called Laura, when the boys were placed +directly behind Hebe. + +The car lurched forward; the rope strained and creaked; then--slowly +but surely--the rock began to move. + +"Easy, boys!" commanded Laura. + +Hebe shrieked with pain. The boulder rolled and the rope slipped. But +the two boys darted back into deeper water, dragging the victim of the +accident with them. + +It was all over and Hebe was released in a few seconds. But he had +lost consciousness and they carried him out and put him into the +Belding car. + +"Shall we take him home?" Chet demanded. + +"He ought to have a doctor at once," said Laura. "Better still, he +ought to be taken to the hospital." + +"That's what we'll do," said Chet, quickly. "Lance, you and Purt come +with me. We'll make him easy in the tonneau. And gee! here's the +luncheon all in a jumble." + +"What did I tell you?" wailed Prettyman. + +"Oh, get in! get in!" exclaimed Chet. "You can stuff your face with +all those goodies while we ride into town. And maybe this poor fellow +will come to his senses and try Nellie's lemon meringue pie--it's a +dandy, Nellie!" + +By the shortest road they could take--through the Four Corners--the ride +to the City Hospital was bound to occupy an hour--and another to +return. Meanwhile the remainder of the party had their lunch and then +went after the nut harvest. Despite the incident of the wounded +Pocock, the day ended happily enough and they went home at dusk with +stores of chestnuts and shellbarks. + +The Beldings were late, of course, and Mammy Jinny, their old black +cook, held back dinner for them, but with many complaints. + +"It's jest de beatenes' what disher fambly is a-comin' to," she +grumbled, as she helped wait at table when the family had gathered for +the belated meal. "Gits so, anyhow, dat de hull on youse is out 'most +all day long. Eberything comes onter Mammy's shoulders." + +"That's all right, Jinny. They're good and broad," said Mr. Belding, +for she was a privileged character. + +"Ya--as. Dat's wot youse allus say, Mars' Belding. Den dere was de +watah man come ter bodder we-uns. Sech a combobberation I never do +see. I tol' him we nebber drink no tap watah, but has it bro't in +bottles, same as nice fo'ks does----" + +"The water man?" repeated Mrs. Belding, curiously. "I can't imagine +who that could be." + +"Ya--as, ma'am!" exclaimed Mammy Jinny, who certainly loved the sound +of long words, and hard words. "He come yere enquiratin' erbout de +tuberculosis in de watah." + +"Crickey jacks!" gasped Chet, choking. "What's that?" + +"My son!" begged his mother. "Please do not use such awful +expressions. You are worse than Jinny." + +"Ain't nothin' de matter wid wot I sez!" declared the old black woman. +"Dat's wot he wanted ter know erbout--de tuberculosis in de watah." + +Mr. Belding recovered his breath. "Was by chance the man asking about +the _consumption_ of water, Jinny?" he asked. + +"Dat's it," said the black woman. "Same t'ing, ain't it? Miss Laura +say so. 'Consumption' an' 'tuberculosis' jes de same--heh?" + +"That's one on you, Laura!" shouted Chet, as Mammy Jinny indignantly +waddled out. "Shouldn't teach Mammy words of more than one 'syllabub.' +You've been warned before. + +"By the way," he added, for they had told their parents about the +adventure of the afternoon, "that Pocock is in the ward with the man +Hester Grimes saved from the forest fire--right in the next bed to +Billson. Pocock had both legs broken, the doctors told me--one above +the knee and the other below. He's going to have a bad time of it." + +"Pocock, eh?" said Mr. Belding. "Hebron Pocock is the name of the +person who applied to the Board of Education for the job of watchman +at the girls' gymnasium. I believe he gave Henry Grimes as reference. +But I think we shall keep Jackway. He's a faithful soul and, whoever +got into the gym. and did that damage, I am convinced that it was not +Jackway's fault." + +"No; it wasn't Jackway's fault," muttered Chet to Laura. "But I guess +we could find the person at fault pretty easily, eh?" + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +AT LUMBERPORT + + +The girls of Central High were not neglecting other athletic work +through their interest in basketball; but just as the boys were giving +most of their spare time to football, so their sisters, during the +fall weather, were mainly interested in their own game. + +As a whole, the girls' classes of Central High were given practice at +the game at least twice a week; and of course the representative team, +to which our particular friends belonged, was on the court almost +daily. There were games between the less advanced teams, too, which +brought the parents of the girls to the athletic field; and as the +season advanced the courts were marked out in the large upper room of +the gymnasium building, so that the game could be played under cover +on stormy days. + +With the handicap against it at the beginning, of having been roughly +played in the city clubs, and the record of several girls having been +hurt who played without the oversight of a proper instructor, the game +gradually grew in favor at Central High until even such old-fashioned +folk as Mrs. Belding spoke approvingly of the exercise. + +The girls themselves, even the "squabs" and "broilers," as Bobby +Hargrew called the freshmen and sophomores, were more and more +enthusiastic over basketball as the days passed. Although their +champion team was being beaten or tied in the trophy inter-school +series, they went to see each game, from week to week, and cheered the +Central High team with unflagging loyalty. + +The very next week Laura's team went to Lumberport, a small steamboat +being chartered. It was filled with Central High girls and their +friends, and they went over to the game, intending to have a collation +aboard after the game and return down the lake by moonlight. + +"Whether you girls beat the Lumberport girls, or not," chuckled Chet, +"we're bound to have a fine time. But I _do_ hope you'll lead your +team to victory at least _once_ this season, Laura. It looks as if you +girls couldn't beat an addled egg!" + +"Nor anybody else, Mr. Smartie!" snapped Jess Morse. "You don't know +much about eggs, I guess." + +"Nor you girls don't seem to know much about basketball," chuckled +Chet. + +"What's the fight about?" demanded Bobby, coming up to the group on +the upper deck of the steamer. + +"We ought to all pitch into him," said Jess, pointing to Chet. "He is +maligning the team." + +"All right I'll help--if it's to be 'battle, murder, and sudden +death,'" chuckled Bobby. "We ought to get our hands in, anyway, for +to-morrow." + +"What's to-morrow?" cried the girls. + +"Didn't you hear what Gee Gee said to the English class to-day when +the gong rang?" + +"Go on, Bobby. What's the joke?" urged Dora Lockwood. + +"Why, Gee Gee said, 'Now, young ladies, that we have finished this +present subject, to-morrow we shall take the life of Carlyle. Come +prepared.' If Jess really wants us to help her draw and quarter Chet, +it might be good practice for what we're going to do to Mr. Carlyle." + +"Poor Gee Gee," said Nellie, shaking her head. "She has her hands full +just now. Some of the squabs are as bad as ever you were, Bobby, when +you were a freshie." + +"I like that!" exclaimed the irrepressible. "Me bad!" + +"But what's happened to Miss Carrington?" asked Laura. + +"She's got some mighty smart scholars in the freshman class," said +Nellie. "The other day she asked them what two very famous men were +boys together, and what do you suppose was the answer she got?" + +"Give it up!" exclaimed Jess. "What was it?" + +"One of those fresh squabs put up her hand and when Gee Gee nodded to +her, she squeals: 'Oh, I know, Miss Carrington! The Siamese Twins!'" + +There were enough old folk aboard the steamboat to keep the exuberance +of the boys and girls within bounds. Short and Long had brought with +him his famous piratical wig and whiskers, and with these in place and +an old red sash-curtain draped about him, he looked more like a gnome +than ever, he was so little. The girls dressed up a stateroom for him, +into which he retired and told fortunes. And as Billy Long did not +lack in wit he told some funny ones. + +This was one of the few occasions when Alice Long, Billy's busy +sister, had escaped from her manifold home duties to join in the "high +jinks" of her schoolmates. When they were all laughing at Billy's +antics and prophecies, Laura said to Alice: + +"How do you ever manage to get along with those children, Alice? Tommy +is as full of mischief as Billy, isn't he?" + +"He's worse," sighed the big sister; yet she smiled, too. "Tommy's +pretty cute, just the same. He had a birthday last week, and Dr. Agnew +came through our street going to see Johnny Doyle. + +"'Hullo, Doctor!' Tommy called to him. 'I gotter birfday.' + +"'You have!' exclaimed the doctor, apparently very much +astonished.'How many birthdays does that make?' + +"'I'm five, I am,' says Tommy. + +"'Five years old! Well,' ruminated the doctor, stopping at the gate as +though he contemplated coming in, 'what had I better do to a boy +that's got a birthday?' + +"And Tommy speaks right up promptly: 'You can't! I'm sitting on it!'" + +They had a lot of fun on the boat; but when the basketball team of +Central High got into their gymnasium suits in the Lumberport High +School dressing-room, they came down to serious thoughts again. + +"We really _must_ beat these girls," said Laura, Mrs. Case being out +of the room. "It's all right to talk about being 'good losers' and all +that. But we don't want to be either good, or bad, losers all the +time. We've lost enough in the past. It's up to us to put Lumberport +on the shelf!" + +"Hear! hear!" cried Bobby. "That's the talk." + +"We have usually been able to handle Lumberport at basketball," +continued Laura. "Let's not make this an exception to a good rule." + +Even Roberta felt the inspiration of coming success before the game. +The team had been practicing faithfully and there was no real reason +why every member of it should not make a good showing. Mrs. Case +encouraged them as they went on to the court, and the Central High +crowd lined out the "yell" to greet them. There was a big audience, +for the Lumberport school had a good field and the parents of the +girls engaged were enthusiastic over basketball. + +The ball was tossed up and Laura shot it over to Lily. Lily was a +pretty sure player when she was not excited. It was safe to trust her +during the first of any game. She now passed it quickly according to +her captain's signal, and to the right girl. The girls of Central High +kept the ball in play for a couple of minutes, and entirely away from +their opponents. Then Nellie got it for a good throw and--pop! the ball +went into the basket. + +"First goal--hurrah!" yelled the boys from Central High. + +For despite the insistence of the League rules, and the advice and +preachments of physical instructors, there was bound to be a spirit of +rivalry in the games. How else would the interest be kept up? Playing +for the sake of the game is all right; but the personal desire to win +is, after all, what inspires any player to do his, or her, best. + +There was no ugly playing, however; tense as was the interest, the +opposing teams played fair and there was not an unpleasant word or +look indulged in by a member of either. With Hester Grimes off the +team from Central High there could be no complaint that they played +too hard, or unfairly. The whistle in this first half sounded very +seldom for fouls. And the game was played with a snap and vigor that +was delightful. + +Central High had somewhat the best of it from that very first goal. +They won point after point. Half way through the first half Central +High was three points in the lead. When there were five minutes still +to go they made another clean goal, putting them up two more points. + +But the Lumberport girls played well, too; they did not "go to pieces" +because the visitors' efforts were crowned with success. They fought +steadily and made a goal during that last five minutes. + +Then the girls of Central High got the ball and made a run with it +down the field. Nellie seized it again and turned swiftly to throw. As +she did so her ankle turned under her and she came down upon one knee +with a little cry. The umpire was about to sound the whistle for time; +but the doctor's daughter sprang up instantly and threw the ball +straight into the basket. As she did so the timekeeper sounded her +whistle. The half was over. + +Two of the girls ran to help Nellie, who stood, as Bobby said, "on one +leg like a stork!" She hobbled to the dressing-room between them. + +"Oh, dear me! who'll we put in, Laura?" wailed Jess. + +"You sha'n't put in anybody," cried Nellie, gritting her teeth to keep +back a cry of pain as she set the injured foot to the floor again. +"This will be all right in a moment." + +"Looks like it!" cried Dorothy. + +"You're knocked out, Miss," said Dora. "You know you are." + +"I'm not!" replied Nellie. + +Mrs. Case came hurriedly in. "You'll have to rest that ankle, child" +she said. "Captain Belding will have to put in a substitute." + +"No, Mrs. Case. I'm going to play out the game," declared Nellie. "You +must not forbid it. I've only twisted my ankle. It will be all right +to-morrow. I'll show you!" she cried, and began stripping off her shoe +and stocking. + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +WINNING ALL ALONG THE LINE + + +"I Can't allow you to take risks, Nellie Agnew," cried the physical +instructor. "What would the doctor say to me?" + +"I'll tell you what Daddy Doctor would say," returned Nellie, grinning +grimly to answer the shoot of pain that went through the injured +ankle. + +"And what is that, Miss?" + +"He'd say: 'Grin and bear it! Play up!'" laughed Nellie, yet with a +choke in her voice. "Bring me my bag, Bobby. I want my 'first-aid' +kit." + +"Nellie!" gasped Laura, amazed to see the gentle girl so firm. "We can +find somebody else to put in instead of you----" + +"Yes, but you're not going to," cried Nellie. "Give me that bandage, +Bobby. There, Mrs. Case! you know how it ought to be used. +Tight--tight, now! That will hold me up. And, really, half an hour's +rest would cure the ache, anyway. Daddy Doctor admires pluck. He +admires Hester's bravery. I guess I wouldn't be his daughter if I +didn't have just a bit of pluck myself." + +"Hurrah for Nell!" squealed Bobby, waving a second bandage over her +head, and the pin coming out, the strip of muslin soon became a tangle +of ribbon-like cloth. + +"Can she do it, Mrs. Case?" asked the doubtful Laura. + +"She _shall_ do it!" returned the instructor. "It won't hurt the +ankle--bound up like that. Now, on with her stocking--and her shoe. Does +it hurt, Nellie?" + +"It's all right," declared the doctor's daughter. + +"Does the shoe hurt it?" + +"It's all right, I tell you," insisted Nellie, standing up. + +Then the gong rang. The girls started for the door. Nellie was not the +last one to reach her position. At first the audience was amazed to +see her in place after she had hobbled off the field between two of +her mates. Then, understanding, they cheered her--the boys deafeningly. + +"You're all right, Nellie Agnew!" yelled Chet from where the boys of +Central High were massed. + +And how those girls of Central High played! Perhaps it was the +inspiration of Nellie's courage. Perhaps it was the inspiration of the +cheering spectators. But never before had Laura and her team-mates +played better basketball than in that second half with the Lumberport +team. + +Nor did the latter team "go to pieces." Every point was fought for. + +Suddenly the ball reached Nellie's hands again. Her guard was in front +of her. She dashed quickly back, as light of foot as she had been +before her injury. Her guard was after her, but Nellie dodged to the +right and then caged the ball from almost the center line! + +"Good for you, Nell Agnew!" shouted the spectators. + +Again the ball was at center and was tossed up. + +"Shoot it to Nell, Laura!" advised some boy in the audience. "She'll +know what to do with it!" + +"Quick, there, center! don't be all night!" yelled another. + +But the girls of Central High kept their heads about them. They +watched their captain's signals. The Lumberport jumping center threw +the ball the wrong way. Again Nellie jumped for it, and almost fell +again; but she shot the ball true and fair to the basket. + +By this time Nell was the heroine of the whole crowd. Her opposing +guard was putting up a splendid game, but she was always just a breath +too late. Laura saw that the doctor's daughter was keyed up for fine +work, and she let her have the ball once more. + +Nell dashed first to the left, then to the right; she completely lost +her guard, and the guard from the other side ran in to intercept her. +This is not altogether good basketball, and it gave Nell a splendid +opening. + +"Shoot it here, Nell!" cried Laura. + +The ball passed through the hands of three Central High girls--a triple +play often practiced on their own court--and then--plop! into the +basket! Another goal to their score. + +Time and again the Lumberport team came near to making a goal; but at +the end the tally stood with the visitors eight points ahead of their +opponents, after a fifteen-minute session that abounded in good plays +and vigorous action. + +The crowd from Central High certainly were in fine fettle when they +marched down to the dock and went aboard their steamer. There was a +fine spread in the cabin and Chet Belding made a speech. That was +arranged for beforehand and most of Chet's speech dealt with "Why +Prettyman Sweet Eats So Much." Pretty was used to being joked, and +didn't mind it much as long as Chet was talking and _he_ could +continue to graze at his pleasure upon the good things on the table. + +"Only, I say!" he exclaimed, when Chet's speech was concluded, "I +don't see why I am always selected to point a mowal and adorn a tale. +Weally, I don't eat so much more than anybody else--according to my +height." + +"That's right, Purt!" cried Lance. "There's a lot of you--lengthwise!" + +"And just think what a thin shell you've got," cackled Billy Long. +"That's why it takes so much to fill you up, old boy." + +"Don't carp and criticise, Billy-boy," said his sister, Alice. "I +notice that a good deal goes onto your plate, too--and you haven't +arrived at Purt's age yet." + +"Don't talk to Billy about ages," giggled Bobby. "He can't remember +anybody's age. I bet he couldn't tell how old Methuselah was." + +"Give it up! Didn't know the gentleman. What team did _he_ play on?" +asked Billy, with his mouth full. + +"Methuselah was 969 years old," declared Purt, seriously. + +"Pshaw, Purt! was that it?" demanded Billy. + +"I always thought that was his telephone number." + +The moon was up in all her October glory when the young folk crowded +upon the upper deck. There was a big gramophone on the boat and they +had music, and singing, and the trip home was as enjoyable as it could +be. The day, too, was a red letter one for the basketball team of +Central High. From that time they began to win all along the line in +the inter-school series. + +They won from both East and West Highs during that month, and tied +Keyport when that team came to the Hill to play them. The score of +games played that fall showed Central High third on the list at the +end of October, whereas they had been fifth. Keyport was in the lead +and East High second; for in playing with other teams these two +schools almost always won. + +Chet Belding kept in touch with Hebe Pocock's condition at the +hospital and occasionally sent the injured fellow some fruit and other +delicacies. Once when he went to ask after Hebe the doctor told the +boy to go up to the accident ward and see him. + +"He's been asking after you. Wants to thank you for the stuff you've +sent in. He's a pretty tough citizen, is Hebe," laughed the doctor. +"But he has some gratitude in his make-up." + +Chet went up and found that Hebe and the man Billson were pretty good +friends, being in neighboring beds. In fact, Billson was now up and +about the ward and would soon be allowed to leave the hospital; but it +would be some time yet before Hebe could walk. + +"It jest dishes me about gittin' that job at the young ladies' +gymnasium, heh?" said Hebe. "Did they put that Jackway out?" + +"Why, no," said Chet, puzzled a bit by the young man's manner and +look. "Why should they?" + +"He warn't no good," grunted Hebe. "You bet, if I'd had his job, +nobody would have got in there and cut up all that stuff without my +knowin' who did it." + +"Perhaps he _does_ know who did it," said Chet, slowly. + +Pocock flashed him a sudden look of interest. "He ain't said so, has +he?" + +"Well--no." + +"And they ain't give him the bounce?" + +"My father says he doesn't think Jackway is to blame." + +"Huh!" grumbled Hebe. "Maybe I'll git that job yet." + +"How do you expect to do it?" demanded Chet. + +"Never you mind. Henry Grimes has got some influence, I reckon, an' he +said I should have it." + +"I guess they'll keep on Jackway. I wouldn't think of it, if I was +you," said Chet, seriously. + +"Say! that fellow's a dub!" growled Hebe, and became silent. + +Chet talked with the squatter, Billson, as they walked down the long +ward together. + +"He's always goin' on about that job at the gym.," chuckled Billson, +with a hitch of his shoulder toward Hebe's bed. "He was talkin' to +Miss Grimes about it when she was in to see me the other day. That's a +fine gal--Miss Grimes." + +"I'm glad you find her so," returned Chet, but with considerable +surprise. + +"Nobody really knows who did that mean job in the girls' gymnasium, +eh?" + +"Well--some of us suspect pretty hard," said Chet, slowly. + +Billson looked at him, screwing up his eyes tight. "Mebbe I could find +out, Mr. Belding." + +"How could you?" demanded Chet, quickly. + +"That's telling. Perhaps I know something. I'd do a good deal to clear +Miss Grimes of all this suspicion. Oh, I've heard the doctors and +nurses talking about it." + +"Say! do you think it would help clear her of suspicion if you found +out the truth?" demanded Chet, in wonder. + +"Huh! why not?" returned Billson. "I guess you're one of these crazy +folk that think she did it?" + +"No. But I bet she knows who _did_ do it," blurted out Chet. + +"Good-day, young man!" snapped Billson. "I guess you ain't interested +in what I know," and he turned on his heel and limped away up the +ward. + +But Chet went out, feeling very much puzzled, and proceeded to take +Mother Wit into his confidence. If Hester was innocent of even the +smallest part in that affair, the whole school--and people outside the +school, too--were treating Hester very unfairly. + +For by this time Hester Grimes scarcely had a speaking acquaintance +with the other girls of Central High, and she was welcome only at Lily +Pendleton's home. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +WHAT HESTER DID + + +Dr. Agnew was very much troubled over his little patient down in the +tenements, and he told Nellie about it one evening after supper. + +"I have had to insist that the child be taken to the hospital," said +the good doctor. "That almost broke his mother's heart; but their +rooms were not sufficiently airy. And then, the child is suffering +from pernicious anaemia, and unless he mends he will die, anyway." + +"That is an awful hard name to call little Johnny, Daddy Doctor," said +Nellie. + +"It is awfully hard for little Johnny, that's a fact," said the +doctor, thoughtfully. "It is awfully hard for his mother, who, like +the plucky widow she is, has struggled so hard to bring those children +to where they are. Bill, of course, has helped her; but Bill isn't +much smarter in some ways than silly Rufe. The widow's done it all; +and she's just wrapped up in Johnny." + +"How cruel for anything to happen to him!" sighed Nellie. + +"It looks so. We can't see things in their true light very often, I +suppose. It takes a Divine Eye to see straight," and the doctor wagged +his head. "Here's this poor woman would give her heart's blood--that's +the expression she uses--to save the little fellow. But her blood won't +do. She is not in a healthy condition herself. And Johnny needs +perfectly healthy, normal blood----" + +"My goodness, Daddy Doctor!" exclaimed Nellie, with a shiver. "How you +do talk!" + +"Eh?" + +"As though anybody's blood could help poor Johnny." + +"Ah! but that's just it, Nellie. Somebody's blood _would_ help poor +little Johnny. A pint or so of somebody's healthy, red blood----" + +"How horrid!" cried the girl, trying to jump off the chair; but her +father's big hand held her. + +"Wait. Don't be a ridiculous Miss Nancy!" he said, with a chuckle. +"You are as much a surgeon's daughter as a doctor's daughter, I hope." + +"I'm proud that you heal folk of diseases, Daddy Doctor," she said, +laughing faintly. "But you talk now just like a butcher." + +"No. The transfusion of blood is one of the most wonderful and blessed +discoveries of recent years. Perhaps not a discovery; but the proper +way to do it is a recent discovery. And that is what we want to try on +little Johnny at the hospital." + +"Oh, Daddy!" gasped Nellie, at last seeing that he was in earnest. + +"Johnny's condition is such that he needs good, red corpuscles pumping +through his veins, and without a proper amount or a proper quality of +blood, he cannot live. The nourishment he can take is insufficient to +make this blood. What he must have is now in the possession of some +other person. We must find that person very quickly--or not at all." + +"Oh, Daddy Doctor!" she whispered. "_I_ could never do a thing like +that!" + +"I should say not," responded her father, quickly. "Don't make this a +personal matter, Kitten. You need every ounce of blood you've got for +yourself. You have been perilously near the anaemic state yourself in +times past. This athletic business and the resultant hearty appetite +you maintain has been the salvation of you, Nellie girl. + +"Ah! we need a robust, healthy young person who would be willing to +give a quantity of blood and not miss it. And I venture to say it's +healthy blood that gives her that color, despite the fact that you +Miss Namby-pambies consider it 'coarse' and 'horrid' to have a red +face." + +"Hester!" exclaimed Nellie. + +The doctor nodded, then fell into silence again. + +It was the next afternoon that they proposed taking little Johnny +Doyle to the hospital. The good doctor was at the widow's waiting for +the ambulance when Hester Grimes came in. The widow was wailing as +though her heart were broken; for with people of this degree of +intelligence, to take a patient to the hospital is equal to signing +his death warrant. + +"Ochone! Ochone! I'll never see me little Johnny runnin' around the +flure again," she said to Hester. "He's goin' jest like his poor +feyther." + +"What nonsense you're talking, Mrs. Doyle!" cried Hester, cheerfully. +"He'll come back to you as chipper as a sparrow. Won't he, Dr. Agnew?" + +"So I tell her--if God wills," added the physician in a lower tone. + +Hester glanced at him sharply and then walked to the front room window +where Dr. Agnew sat. + +"What is it he needs, Doctor?" she asked, in a low voice. "His +mother's always talking so wild I cannot make head nor tail of it. She +says you want to put new blood in him." + +"That is it exactly," said Dr. Agnew, his eyes twinkling. "A pint of +blood such as your veins carry in such abundance might save Johnny's +life." + +"Do you mean that, Doctor?" + +"Yes, Miss Hester." + +"Then he can have it," returned the girl, quietly. "You can take it +now, for all I care." + +The doctor jumped up and walked back and forth across the room. Then +he saw Hester stripping up her sleeve. + +"No, no," he said. "It isn't as easy as all that. And I'm not sure I'd +be doing right to let you do it----" + +"I guess you're not _my_ conscience, Dr. Agnew," said Hester, in her +usual brusque way. + +"No; but I have a conscience of my own," said the doctor, grimly. +"This isn't a thing to be done in a minute, or in a corner, young +lady. It includes one of the very nicest of surgical operations. It +will keep you out of school for some time. It will keep you at the +hospital. It will, indeed, keep you in bed longer than you care to +stay, perhaps." + +"Is it dangerous?" + +"To you? No. Not in any appreciable degree. You are a full-blooded +girl. You can spare much more than Johnny needs----" + +"Then let it be done," said Hester, firmly. + +"We'll have to see what your mother and father say." + +"You leave that to me," said Hester. "I know how to manage them." + +Dr. Agnew looked at her for a moment with his brow wrinkled and his +lips pursed up. "I'm not sure whether, if you were my daughter, I +should be most proud of you, or afraid for you," he said. + +She only looked puzzled by his speech. "What do you want me to do?" +she asked, finally. + +"Come here to the light," the doctor said, rummaging in his kit for a +tiny instrument. He held her thumb firmly. "It will only be a needle +prick." + +"Go ahead," said Hester. + +He shot the needle into the ball of her thumb and drew out a drop or +two of blood in the glass bulb of the syringe. + +"We'll just find out what _this_ tells about you in the laboratory," +said the doctor. "I'm much mistaken if it doesn't tell a good story, +Hester Grimes. Then I'll come and see your father and mother this +evening." + +"You needn't bother if you're going to be busy," observed Hester, +coolly. "They will give their permission. When will you want me at the +hospital?" + +"You will sleep there to-night under the care of one of our very +nicest nurses--Miss Parraday," said the doctor, smiling again. "And our +little boy here--God willing--shall have a chance for life." + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +WHAT MR. BILLSON COULD TELL + + +The champion basketball team of Central High was holding its own, and +even gaining a point or two now and then in the trophy series; but it +seemed impossible for the hard-working girls to change their standing +in the schedule of the teams. They remained Number 3. + +They could beat West High and Lumberport High School teams every time +they played with them; but it was a hard struggle for Laura and her +mates to break even with East High or Centerport, and the Keyport +girls almost always downed them. + +"It's a boiling shame!" cried Bobby Hargrew, one day at Laura's, when +some of the team were talking matters over. "We're getting swiped----" + +"Goodness me, Bobby!" gasped Laura. + +"_Don't_ let poor mother hear you use such dreadful language. It +positively hurts her to have Chet use slang; and you are worse than he +is." + +"One would think that you had never been under the benign influence of +Miss Carrington," chuckled Jess Morse. + +"Bah!" retorted Bobby. "I don't know but I feel a good deal like my +little cousin Effie about education. You know, Effie is only six. The +other day her mother had company and her mother and the other lady +were talking about something that they didn't want 'little pitchers' +to understand. So they spelled some of the words instead of speaking +them out, and Effie listened with both eyes and mouth wide open. But +she couldn't catch the meaning of the spelled words. Finally she got +mad and went out to her papa on the porch and says she: + +"'Daddy, there's altogether too much education in this house!' + +"And I'm getting so saturated with Gee Gee's English and Dimple's +Latin, and Miss Gould's French, that positively I _have_ to let off +steam by using slang," concluded Bobby. + +"Just keep your slang for other places then, Bobby," said Laura. +"Mother is likely to overhear you----" + +"And Laura's pretty prim and particular herself," laughed Dora +Lockwood. + +Jess began to giggle. "She's getting literary, I understand," she +said. "So Mammy Jinny says. I heard her grumbling to herself only this +morning when Jinny was 'ridding up' the living room here. She says: + +"'Dese yere literary folk is suah a trouble. Leabin' books, an' +papers, an' pen an' ink eroun' fo' odder folks to pick up.'" + +"'Is Laura literary, Mammy?' I asked her. + +"'Suah is,' says Mammy Jinny. 'Littahs t'ings all ober de house!'" + +When the laugh against her had subsided, Laura said: + +"But what good is it to boil, Bobby, if we can't win games? To reach +the top and win the trophy, we must win every game of the series from +now on." + +"And a fat chance we've got to do that!" exclaimed Bobby, scornfully. + +"Four of them are as good as won," said Dora, confidently. "Those with +the West High and Lumberport teams." + +"Don't be too sure of the Lumberport team," advised Laura. "It +improves all the time." + +"We can beat it if Roberta keeps up her end," declared Jess. + +"But how about Keyport and East High?" + +"Keyport has outplayed us all but one game," complained Dorothy +Lockwood. "East High has beaten us two games and one was a draw. But +we _have_ beaten them and we ought to be able to do it again." + +"That's when Hester was on the team," said Laura, quietly. + +Bobby stood up and smote her two hands together loudly. + +"If we only had Hester back!" she cried. + +"Why, Bobby!" cried Jess. + +"I don't care. It's so. I don't like Hester; but I hate to see Central +High lose the trophy for the need of another good player." + +Nellie Agnew was just coming in and she heard part of what Bobby said. + +"Oh, girls!" she cried. "Do you know where Hester is?" + +"She wasn't at school to-day," said Dora. + +"Nor yesterday," added her twin. + +"Nor the day before that," cried Laura. "What's happened to her?" + +"She is in the hospital," said Nellie, solemnly. + +"My goodness me! what for?" gasped Bobby Hargrew. + +Nellie told them. Indeed, she expatiated on the affair to the full. +Hester had displayed a quality of courage that appealed strongly to +the doctor's daughter. It was no brave act inspired by impulse, and +"of the minute." It took right down moral courage to do what Hester +had done. + +"The transfusion of blood was accomplished yesterday. The operation +was entirely successful. Hester and Johnny are side by side in little +narrow beds in the children's ward of the hospital. Daddy Doctor let +me in to peek at them," said Nellie, her eyes full of tears. + +"That girl's just splendid! Johnny is going to live and be strong +again, the doctors say. Oh! I feel so _little_ when I think of Hester. +I'm so sorry I signed that round robin, or said anything against her +being on the team. I--I wish we had her back." + +"So--so do I," exclaimed Dora, and Dorothy echoed her twin's desire. + +"I wouldn't mind if old Hess was playing with us," said Bobby, with a +grin. "Huh! I guess I was the first one to say so." + +And this last incident marked the further--and stronger--interest the +boys and girls of Central High had centered in the City Hospital. + +Laura and Chet had not forgotten Mr. Billson's odd remarks about the +gymnasium mystery and Chet had gone again and again to the hospital to +sound the man who had been so badly injured in the forest fire. But +Billson was hard to approach. He considered Chet one of those who +believed Hester Grimes guilty of instigating the raid on the +gymnasium. Billson had acquired a fierce admiration for Hester, and it +made him angry with anybody who expressed a doubt of her entire +innocence of the crime which Rumor laid at her door. + +But suddenly public opinion veered clear around. The story of little +Johnny Doyle's necessity and how Hester had volunteered to come to his +aid spread about the Hill section of Centerport almost as quickly as +had the story of the gymnasium mystery. + +"What do you think?" Billson asked Chet Belding, when the boy visited +him and Hebe Pocock again--but this was out of Hebe's hearing. "What do +you think--that a girl like this would hire a foolish boy to do such +dirty work? If Miss Grimes had wanted to bust up that gymnasium, you +bet she'd have had the pluck to go and do it herself! That's my +opinion." + +"Well, Rufe was there," said Chet, quietly. + +"Where?" + +"In the gym. The first night the things were disturbed. Bill Jackway +admits that. They've got time-clocks for him and he goes all over the +building several times a night, now; and they have let him hire +another man to help him on the field during the day. But he says that +he let Rufe out at midnight because the boy was scared and wanted to +go home. And the second time, Rufe could have slipped in when Bill had +the door ajar, and afterward got out of the window and walked backward +to the field fence. Oh, he could have done it." + +"But why mix Hester Grimes up with it?" growled Billson. + +"Rufe would never have thought of the thing himself, I don't believe. +And Hester threatened to 'fix' all the girls, and said she hated them, +and the gym., and the whole thing." + +"Guess she was mad," said the man. + +"Quite likely. She sure wasn't _glad_," returned the boy, drily. + +"And I suppose you think," said Mr. Billson, scowling, "that she is +doing all this for the Doyles to pay Rufus for his monkey-shines, eh?" + +"No I never said such a thing," cried the indignant Chet. + +"Then what? If folks have really got anything against Miss Hester, why +don't they come out square and say so? This hinting at things--going +'all 'round Robin Hood's barn'--gets my goat--it does so!" + +"I guess the girls of Central High feel a whole lot differently toward +Hester than they did," admitted Chet. "At least, they talk +differently." + +And it was a fact. While Chet and Billson were talking the basketball +team had gathered at the Belding house and had concocted another +"round robin." But this one was couched in quite different language +from the first that had been presented to their physical instructor. +This time both Lily Pendleton and Roberta Fish signed the paper, which +was an unequivocal request that Hester Grimes be invited to take her +old position on the team. + +Hester had not come back to school yet; the doctor would not allow it. +But she was taking her lessons at home. Johnny Doyle was well on the +way to recovery and all Hester needed was a little rest, the doctor +said, to put her in as good condition as usual. + +The round robin went to Mrs. Case and, after an interview with the +principal, Mrs. Case went again to call on Hester at her home. + +"Ain't she the greatest girl you ever heard of, Mis' Case?" demanded +Mrs. Grimes, fluttering about as she ushered the teacher into Hester's +presence. "Me and her father can't do a thing with her when Hess is +set on doing anything she wants to do. And this at the hospital--well, +if we say a thing about it she gets that mad!" + +"How-do, Mrs. Case?" yawned Hester, who had been reading, curled up in +the window-seat. "Do take that easy chair. Mother! I declare--you have +got a grease spot on that wrapper." + +"Oh, excuse me!" exclaimed the simple Mrs. Grimes. "I'll go change it +for a fresh one." + +Thus her daughter got her out of the room before Mrs. Case began to +talk. And, indeed, it was Hester herself who began the conversation in +her usual abrupt way. + +"I don't know how you feel towards me, Mrs. Case, but I know I was +impudent to you when you were here before. But you said you could show +me how to get back on the basketball team, and I guess I _do_ want to +get back--if it isn't too late?" she concluded, wistfully. + +"That's what I've come to talk about," said Mrs. Case, promptly. "The +girls want you back----" + +"Oh, no!" exclaimed Hester, in surprise. + +"Oh, yes!" returned the teacher, smiling, and bringing out the paper +the members of the team had signed. She put it into Hester's hand; the +girl read it quickly and then turned her face away so that Mrs. Case +should not see her eyes for a moment. + +"They say they need me!" Hester said, in a choked tone. + +"Yes," returned the teacher, simply. + +"That they can't win the trophy without me," added Hester, devouring +the writing again. + +"Yes." + +"And they don't say a word about that foolish business at the +hospital. Folks talk too much about that," said Hester, recovering her +usual manner. "If these girls really want me to help the team, I'll +play." + +"They want you, Hester, for just that purpose. If they have more +kindly feelings toward you than they have had of late, that is between +them and you. But as for your joining the team again----" + +"Yes, Mrs. Case?" + +"You must remember the rules and play the game in a sportsmanlike +manner," declared the instructor firmly. "You understand me?" + +"Yes, Mrs. Case," returned the girl, hanging her head. + +"Then I shall expect you to appear for practice just as soon as Dr. +Agnew allows you to take up that work," said the teacher, rising +briskly. "And I shall be glad to have you back on the first team," she +added, giving Hester's hand a hearty squeeze. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +CLIMBING UP + + +By the middle of the next week Hester was playing regularly in her old +position on the basketball team. Roberta Fish had dropped back into +the second team with all the grace of the sweet-tempered girl she was. + +"I'm only too glad she's come back," said Roberta, referring to Hester +Grimes. "It's much more important that Central High should win that +beautiful silver trophy than for _me_ to have the honor of playing on +the champion team." + +"You're a good sort, Roberta," said Bobby Hargrew, admiringly. "Now, +I'd be _mad_ if they'd asked me to step down and let somebody take my +place." + +"No," said Laura. "You'd be loyal, too, Bobby." + +"And that's the A. B. C. of athletics, child," said Nellie Agnew, +remembering very clearly what the doctor had said to her weeks before +on the subject. + +"'A. B. C.,' indeed!" sniffed Bobby. "You make me feel like a primary +kid again, I declare!" + +Jess Morse began to laugh. "Some of these primary kids, as Bobby calls +them, are pretty smart. Allison Mapes--you know her?--who teaches the +first grade, was telling of a little Bohemian boy in her class. He is +smart as a whip, but English is quite a paralyzing language to him. +She asked him the other day: + +"'Ivan, what is a calf?' + +"And the boy answered: 'Missis, that's the child of a cow and the back +of your leg!'" + +When the laugh over this had subsided Laura spoke seriously. They were +talking in one of the small offices of the school, having retired to +discuss the forthcoming games. + +"It isn't all plum cake and lemonade, girls, even to beat West High +and Lumberport----" + +"Oh, my!" croaked Bobby. "See what we did to West High last time +without Hester." + +"That was a fluke," declared the captain. + +"Why, they're babies!" said Josephine Morse, confidently. "And +Lumberport as well." + +"Don't get the idea in your head that we are going to whip any team so +easily. That's when we are going to lose," urged Laura. "Being too +sure is as bad as being careless in your play." + +"Now she is hitting _me_," grumbled her chum. + +"Well, Jess, if the cap fits, put it on." + +"But do let us encourage ourselves, Mother Wit," cried one of the +twins. "Goodness knows, we need it." + +"That's right," said her sister. "We've had _such_ bad luck!" + +"Aw, she's a regular old croaker!" shouted Bobby, dancing up and down. +"We are going to win every game from now on!" + +"Hush!" exclaimed Laura. "We're making too much noise. Somebody will +come and put us out." + +"Nope. Nobody here but John, the janitor. Gee Gee's gone home, you +bet. I wish those other girls would come and we could get down to +business." + +"You look out, Bobby. If you get black marks again maybe _you'll_ be +taken off the team for the rest of the term." + +"Oh, oh!" cried the irrepressible. "Don't say such a thing." + +"That would be too mean!" cried Dora. + +"Indeed it would!" added her sister. + +They were all making a deal of noise. As Laura said, "one could +scarcely hear one's self think." And noise was not allowed in the +school building, whether in classes, or out. Suddenly, at the height +of the revelry, there came a stern knock on the door. Behind the thick +oak the startled girls heard a sharp voice exclaim: + +"Young ladies!" + +"Oh, gee!" gasped Bobby. + +"Hush!" commanded Laura. + +"Shucks! Somebody's fooling us," cried Bobby, springing to the door. +"Who's there?" she shouted. + +"It is me--Miss Carrington," said the muffled voice. + +For a breath the other girls were stricken dumb when the name of the +strict disciplinarian of the school was spoken. But it was Bobby who +recovered her speech first, and she broke into a loud laugh. + +"Go 'way!" she cried. "You can't fool us. If it was Gee Gee she would +have said: 'It is I'!" + +"Oh, my goodness! suppose it _should_ be Miss Carrington?" gasped +Nellie, in horror. + +But the sounds outside the door ceased. Bobby, after a trembling +moment, snapped open the lock and unlatched the door. The corridor was +empty. But in a moment Hester Grimes appeared from the stairway and +approached the meeting place of the team. + +"You said you wanted everybody here, Laura," she said. "But did you +have Miss Carrington at your meeting?" + +"Miss Carrington!" they shrieked in chorus. + +"Yes. I just met her. And she had the funniest look on her face. What +was the matter with her?" demanded Hester. + +"Oh, my soul!" groaned Jess. "I can tell you what the matter is. Bobby +just corrected Miss Carrington's English. What do you know about +_that_?" + +But the occasion was not one for laughter or joking now. That had +surely been Miss Carrington at the door, and the reckless Bobby had +called her "Gee Gee" to her face, and been saucy into the bargain! + +"We're done for!" Dora Lockwood groaned. "Wait till assembly +to-morrow. Bobby will be called out before the whole school." + +"Oh! she'd never be mean enough for that!" almost wept Dorothy. + +"But something dreadful will happen to Bobby," urged Nellie. + +"She'll be forbidden after-hour athletics, as sure as shooting!" +declared Jess Morse. + +Bobby, for once, was stricken dumb. She saw in an instant all the +horrid possibilities of her reckless speech. Barred from the team for +the rest of the term would be the lightest punishment she could hope +for. + +"And Gee Gee is always lying in wait for a chance to spoil our +athletics," wailed Lily Pendleton, who for once felt the sorrows of +her fellows. + +Hester wanted to know what it all meant, and they told her. + +"She certainly _did_ look funny when I met her on the stairs," +admitted the butcher's daughter. "And you told her she couldn't be +herself because she said, 'It is me?' My! that must have been a shock +to her. One of her pupils correcting Miss Carrington's use of the +English language!" + +"It isn't any laughing matter!" flared up Bobby. + +"And I don't see that crying over it will help any," returned Hester, +grimly. + +The team as a whole, however, was worried a good deal by Bobby's "bad +break." To be obliged to break in a new girl at Bobby's place would be +almost ruinous now. Just having gotten the team into shape once more, +it seemed an awful thing to contemplate. + +But assembly passed the next morning without Mr. Sharp saying a word +about Bobby. The session dragged on till closing time without Gee +Gee's speaking to Bobby Hargrew. That very day East High was to come +to play the girls of Central High on their court. + +The uncertainty, however, made Bobby less sure in classes, and she +came near to being held to make up her Latin. But she slipped through +somehow and ran away from the school building as hard as she could +run, for fear that Gee Gee would send for her at the last moment. + +"Something's happened to her. She's had a change of heart. I'm afraid +she isn't well," gasped Bobby, once safely in the dressing room of the +gym. "She is _never_ going to overlook that awful break of mine--is +she?" + +"You'd better walk a chalk line from now to the end of the term," +advised Jess. "If she ever _does_ get you on any other matter she will +double your punishment. I believe she is ashamed to call you up for +what you said to her yesterday, because you caught her using language +unbecoming a purist." + +"Be thankful, Bobby--and be good," advised Laura. "You have certainly +escaped 'by the skin of your teeth,' as the prophet has it. No, that +is not slang; it is Scripture. And do, _do_ be good for the rest of +this half." + +"Oh, I'll be a lamb--a little, woolly lamb," groaned Bobby. "You see if +I'm not!" + +The girls of Central High played a splendid game of basketball that +afternoon. They beat the East High team fairly and squarely, and their +winning this game put them up a notch in the series. They took East +High's place as Number 2. There was still the Lumberport and Keyport +teams to whip before Central High could win the trophy. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +HESTER WINS + + +The final games of the trophy series between the girls of the High +Schools of Centerport, Lumberport, and Keyport were played on the +grounds of Central High. It was verging on winter. Thanksgiving was at +hand, and the first basketball series must be out of the way before +the boys' big football games on Thanksgiving eve. + +Although school athletics was much in the minds of the girls, those +who participated in the games had to stand well in their classes to +retain their positions on the teams. Books first, athletics afterward. +That was the iron-bound rule of the Girls' Branch Athletic League. + +But most of the girls on the team of Central High were bright +scholars. Miss Grace G. Carrington was never "easy" on the athletic +girls. That wouldn't be her way. She usually seemed glad to put +obstacles in the way of those who she knew were so deeply interested +in athletics. + +But aside from Bobby Hargrew, that last fortnight she had no chance to +demerit any of the basketball team. And--to the wonderment of the girls +themselves--she never said a word to Bobby regarding what had happened +when she, Miss Carrington, rapped on the office door. + +Having whipped East High so decisively, Captain Laura and her mates +went at the Lumberport team with greater confidence. Lumberport was +not the weakest team in the league; but Central High had managed to +beat them in every previous game, and in this last one the home team +played such snappy basketball that the visitors never came near them +after the first toss-up. + +It was a great game and the enthusiasm of the spectators increased +with every play. How the boys cheered! There was a big crowd of +spectators from Lumberport and they "rooted" for their home team. +Despite the excitement, however, there was not a moment's rough play. + +Mrs. Case had watched Hester narrowly during these final games. There +had been moments when the big girl was crossed by circumstances, or by +her opponents, when--in the past--she might have flared up and said, or +done, something unpleasant. But Hester seemed to have gained some +control of her temper, and the hard places in the games were passed +over successfully. + +It was a fact that Hester had very little in common with the rest of +her team-mates, save Lily. She did not put herself forward, and as +none of them had been her close friends before she was put off the +team, she still kept her distance now that she was back in harness +again. + +At home Hester's mother was determined to make a heroine of her. Many +of the ladies of the Hill, who seldom before this had called on +easy-going, slip-shod Mrs. Grimes, came to see her now and praised +Hester's courage and her kindness to Johnny Doyle and his widowed +mother. Mrs. Grimes was, naturally, pleased at all this praise. + +"I've a mind to give a party, so I have!" she said to Hester, one day. +"Your father could easy pay for as nice a party as was ever given on +the Hill. He needn't be stingy. And we could get to be friends with +all these nice folks----" + +"Oh, Mother!" sighed Hester. "Don't be foolish. These people don't +really care a thing for us. They'd only laugh. Their houses are not +even furnished like ours----" + +"I should say not!" cried Mrs. Grimes. "We have some of the most +expensive furnichoor you could buy at Stresch & Potter's----" + +"Yes. At a department store. Nice people do not furnish their homes in +that way. The varnish smells too new on our chairs and tables. We are +too new. We never should have come to live on the Hill when father +made money." + +"How ye talk!" exclaimed the astonished Mrs. Grimes. "Where would ye +have us live--at the Four Corners still?" + +"Perhaps we wouldn't be so much like fish out of water there," +grumbled Hester. + +"I'm no fish, I'd have ye understand!" exclaimed Mrs. Grimes. "And +Mrs. Belding axed me to join a club--the New Century 'tis called. 'Tis +all women and our husbands haven't a livin' thing to say in it. I'm +goin' to join." + +"The New Century!" exclaimed Hester, indeed surprised. + +"Yes. I'd be glad to be in something that Henry couldn't poke his +finger into and boss," sighed the much harassed lady. + +"But it's never the New Century?" cried Hester. + +"Why not?" + +"That's the most select club on the Hill. Lily's mother belongs, and +Mrs. Agnew, and all those folk." + +"And why not _me_?" demanded her mother. "We've got as much money----" + +"Hush! Stop talking about money if you want to be popular in the New +Century Club," said her daughter, who had learned a thing or two +herself of late. "That is what is the matter with us--we're proud of +our money." + +"And why not? When Henry began with a shoestring." + +"Well, don't be telling of it!" cried Hester. "These other people got +their money so long ago that they've forgotten how they got it. We +want to forget, too." + +But Hester was learning lessons fast. It had amazed her to see how +people--and nice people, too--thought that what she had done for Johnny +Doyle was of serious importance; while her lavish expenditure of money +among her mates had heretofore won her few friends. + +The fact that she had saved a man from the burning woods and carried +the warning of the forest fire, had made her friends, too. When she +had jumped into the sewer-basin after Johnny, Dr. Agnew seemed for the +first time pleased with her. + +_It was unselfishness that counted!_ + +Hester Grimes had never thought of it before. She had never thought +out logically why Laura Belding was so popular, why Nellie Agnew was +liked so well, and what made the other girls cluster about +harum-scarum Bobby Hargrew. They were all unselfish girls, thoughtful +in their several ways for the comfort of others. + +Hester was learning what really paid in life--especially in the life of +school and athletics. A good temper, a tongue without a barb to it, +and thoughtfulness for the comfort of others. Those attributes won out +among the girls of Central High--as they are bound to win out in every +walk in life. + +And Hester Grimes had begun to conduct herself accordingly. + +The final game of the series for the cup was slated for a certain +Friday afternoon. Colonel Richard Swayne--Laura Belding's very good +friend, and a liberal supporter of girls' athletics--had invited the +contesting basketball teams from all five High Schools to partake of a +collation in the big upper hall of Central High's new gymnasium, after +the final game. _That_ was to be played between the Keyport and +Central High teams. + +Whichever of the two teams won would stand highest in the schedule of +the league, and to such winning team would be presented the trophy by +the president of the Board of Education. + +There would be such a crowd to see the game that tickets had to be +issued, and those tickets went mostly to the girls who had competed in +the basketball series, for distribution among their parents and +friends. There was not so much cheering by the spectators at this +game, for the boys were cut out of it. There wasn't room for the +regular "rooters." + +Many parents, however, who had not been attentive to the game before, +were in the seats provided now, to criticise the sport of which they +had heard so much. And everybody admitted that the two best teams of +the schools were now struggling for the trophy. + +From the first toss-up the girls played with a snap and vigor that +amazed and delighted even their instructors. Trained as they had been +all the fall, there were few fouls to record, and very little +retarding of the game. The signals were passed silently and the girls +indulged in little talking. Unnecessary talking and laughter mars +basketball. + +It was a pleasure to watch the lithe, vigorous young girls. They were +untrammeled by any foolish fashions, or demands of dress. Their bodily +movements were as free as Nature intended them to be. They jumped, and +ran, and threw, with a confidence that none but the well trained +athlete possesses. + +The first half included a series of fierce rushes upon the Keyport +side for baskets; but Central High held them down. Hester played +brilliantly. Not once did she lose her temper, nor foul her opponent. +She blocked the attempts of the Keyport players to make goals, but the +referee did not catch her over-guarding or otherwise playing foul +basketball. + +She really won the onlookers with her splendid form in playing. They +began cheering her particularly. Where Roberta Fish had been weak in +the mass plays, Hester was strong. The Keyport captain, remembering +that weak place in the former Central High line-up, forced the play +into Hester's territory. + +"Oh, you Hester!" yelled Bobby, beside herself at last, with +enthusiasm. "You're a bear! Shoot it, Hessie! Let it come!" + +But each time that the ball was shot for the basket, something +intervened. Once it went straight for the basket, rolled around the +rim, and dropped--to the floor without entering the receptacle! + +The Central High rooters met this failure with a groan. But it was not +Hester's fault. She had done her best, and her shooting was as clean +as it could be. + +The timekeeper's whistle called the play at the end of the half +without either side having made a point. + +It had been a rasping game. Many times Hester Grimes had been tempted +to say something or do something that would be counted as "rough +play"; but she had restrained herself, and when she walked to the +dressing room she found Mrs. Case walking beside her with a hand upon +her shoulder. + +"Good girl!" exclaimed the physical instructor of Central High. "Keep +it up, my dear, and you'll be the best player we have on the roll." + +"But I didn't get a chance to do a thing!" grumbled Hester, shaking +her head. + +"That is why I am praising you," said Mrs. Case, drily. "For what you +_didn't_ do. Keep it up. Restrain yourself as well for the rest of the +game. Your chance may come for a brilliant play; but if it doesn't, +keep a grip on yourself just the same." + +Hester was secretly strengthened by this praise. She went out into the +field at the call of the gong for the second half with the +determination to deserve Mrs. Case's good word, whether the team won +or lost. And almost at first chance came Hester's way and she was +permitted to display a brilliant bit of play. It brought a goal for +Central High--the first scored in the game. + +But the girls could not stop to cheer her. Laura nodded and smiled at +her, however, as the ball was brought back from the basket to be +tossed up. For some reason Hester began to feel a warm glow about her +heart. Her captain's commendation had never meant much to her before. + +Up went the ball and Laura and the other jumping center did their best +to get it. The ball went from girl to girl, first in the hands of one +team, then in the other. The Keyport team almost made a goal; but they +were foiled by good guarding on Central High's part. + +Up and down the field went the ball and the excitement grew moment by +moment. Two to nothing in favor of the home team! That was a situation +bound to create excitement both in the field and on the benches. + +Suddenly the captain of the visiting team got the ball. She passed it +swiftly to her back center. Signaling one after the other of her +team-mates, the Keyport captain sent the ball from hand to hand +until--to the startled amazement of her opponents, the ball was in hand +for a clear throw. In another moment it was in the basket and the +score was tied again! + +Four minutes more to play! + +When the referee threw the ball up again every one of the eighteen +girls playing was on the _qui vive_. The subordinate players watched +their captains for signals. Central High got the ball. They rushed it +down the field. But the guarding of the Keyport team was too much for +them. They could not reach the basket. + +Again and again was the ball passed back and forth. Once more the +Keyport captain shot it back for a clear throw. But Hester managed to +halt it. There were but a few moments of play left. It is not good +basketball to oppose other than one's immediate opponent; but for once +Hester went out of her field to stop the ball. + +A side swipe, and the ball was hurtled directly into Laura's hands. +She turned and threw it swiftly, making the signal for the famous +massed play which was the strongest point in the game as played by +Central High. + +Down the field the ball shot, from one to the other. Hester's quick +break in the Keyport plan had rattled the latter team for a moment. +And before the visitors recovered, the ball was hurtling through the +air straight for the basket. + +The whistle blew. But the ball sped on. It struck the edge of the +basket; but the next breath it slid in and--_the game was won_! + +Central High had outstripped its strongest opponent. The game won, so +was the series, and the beautiful cup would remain in the possession +of Central High. + +"And all because of you, Hessie!" shouted Bobby, when they got back to +the dressing room. "You're a bully good sport! Isn't she, girls?" + +"She won the game," declared Laura, coming forward to shake Hester's +hand. + +They all had something nice to say to her. Hester couldn't reply. She +stood for a moment or two in the middle of the room, listening to +them; then she turned away and sought her own locker, for there were +tears in her eyes. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV + +THE MYSTERY EXPLAINED + + +The boys, as has been said, were shut out from seeing the last +basketball game of the series. Chet Belding was at the hospital that +afternoon, having taken up some fruit to Hebe Pocock and Billson. The +latter would soon go out and would return to his burned-over clearing +in the woods. + +"Guess that fire helped me as much as it hurt me. I'll have to build a +new shanty; but Doc Leffert was in here and said he'd rode over my +piece, and that my heaps of rubbish had burned clean and all I'd have +to do to clear my acres for corn would be to tam-harrow it." + +"Hebe isn't getting along as fast as you do, Mr. Billson," said Chet, +in a low voice, for the Four Corners fellow was having a hard time to +even move about on crutches. + +"Dunno as he deserves any better than he's got," said Billson, +grumpily. + +"What you so cross about?" laughed Chet. "Surely you're not sore over +the way folks are treating Hester Grimes _now_? She comes pretty near +being the heroine of the Hill section." + +"Ya-as. They praise her because she done what she did for little +Johnny Doyle. But many of 'em still think she set that foolish boy +onto raiding the girls' gymnasium." + +"I don't know about that," confessed Chet, slowly. "Although we may +believe that Rufe had something to do with it, perhaps he did it, +after all, because he's not quite right in his head." + +"Oh, shucks!" exclaimed Billson. "All because he was crying to be let +out of the gym. the night of the first raid?" + +"Well, Jackway admits he was there," repeated Chet. + +"And Jackway is a good deal of a fool, too," snarled Billson. "Say! +there's Rufe and his mother in the corridor now, going to see Johnny +in the children's ward. You bring Rufe into this ward for a minute. I +want to show you something." + +Much puzzled, Chet Belding did as he was bid. + +"Come here, Rufie," said Billson, beckoning to the gangling youth. "I +want to show you somebody. Come here." + +Billson swung back a section of the screen that hid Hebron Pocock's +bed. The big fellow was lying there with his eyes closed, but he +opened them quickly when Rufe appeared, and scowled. + +"Watcher want here, gooney?" he demanded. + +Rufus sprang back and looked about for escape, his weak face working +pitifully. But Chet and Billson barred the way of escape. Rufe began +to snivel. + +"What's the matter with you?" demanded Chet. + +"Are you afraid of this man?" asked Billson. + +Rufe nodded, and tried to crowd farther away from the bed. + +"What you doing to that kid?" demanded Hebe, sitting up. "What's the +matter? Why! that's the softy I saw----" + +"He's a bad man. He said he'd kill me if I told!" gasped Rufus. + +"Where was that?" asked Billson, with his hand on the boy's arm. "Tell +us all about it. He sha'n't touch you, Rufie." + +"Aw! I wouldn't have really hurt the gooney," growled Hebe. + +"He was in the place where Uncle Bill watches. I hate that old +gymniasium! I wish it would burn down, so I do." + +"And when you were in there that night this fellow was there?" asked +Billson, shaking the boy a little by the arm. + +"Yes. And he broke things. And Uncle was worried afterward. But I +never told," Rufe urged, looking fearfully at Hebe. "I said I +wouldn't----" + +"Aw, drop it! You've told on me now, haven't you?" demanded the fellow +from the Four Corners. "Well, it don't much matter, I reckon. I wanted +to queer that Jackway so he'd lose his job. Henry Grimes told me that +if he was discharged he'd speak a good word for me and I'd get it. +That's what I was after." + +"Yah!" said Billson, with scorn. "You certainly are one mean +scoundrel, Pocock. And lettin' folks think mebbe Miss Hester was mixed +up in it. Nice feller, you are!" + +"Well! I don't see where it's any of _your_ funeral," growled Pocock. +"You make me tired!" + +But the result of Rufe's confession and Pocock's admission changed the +latter's place of abode rather suddenly. Both Chet and Billson decided +that the truth about the gymnasium raids should be made known at once, +and the Board of Education took the matter up promptly. Pocock found +himself in the infirmary of the county prison, with the chance of +serving three months at hard labor when the prison doctors pronounced +him able to work. + +His attempt to work Jackway out of the job of watchman, so that he +could be appointed to the position, had acted like a boomerang. Hebron +Pocock was most thoroughly punished. + +And Chet Belding hurried to spread the tidings of the discovery among +the girls of Central High, too. He got hold of Laura before the spread +the basketball teams were to enjoy, and she told Principal Sharp, who +was present. When he made his usual speech of welcome, he tacked onto +it a paragraph regarding the gymnasium mystery. + +"Which is," said Mr. Sharp, "a mystery no longer. As I said when first +the matter was brought to my attention, no pupil of Central High, +either male or female, could be guilty of such an abominable crime. +Such a malicious piece of mischief had to be originated in a perverted +mind; and we have no such minds at Central High." + +"But it has furnished excitement enough for us all to last for the +rest of the winter," said Laura, later, to her immediate friends. "I'm +so glad for Hester! But we've all been stirred up enough about it, I +guess. No more excitement this term, girls!" + +Whether Laura's wish came true, or not, the reader will be able to +find out for herself in the perusal of the next volume of this series, +entitled "The Girls of Central High on the Stage; Or, The Play That +Took the Prize." + +None of them looked forward to a really "tame" winter, however. There +would be other basketball games, and plenty of out-of-door sports as +well. As Bobby Hargrew said: + +"It's all right to say that school takes up all our time; but it's the +fun we get out of school that makes Latin, and French, and +mathematics, and--and--Gee Gee bearable! My! suppose we didn't have +athletics at all?" + +"That would certainly be a state of existence perfectly unbearable--for +you, Bobby," Nellie Agnew said, gravely. "You'd burst, wouldn't you?" + +"Into flinders!" agreed Bobby. "Athletics is the 'scape-valve for +me--and I guess it is for some of the rest of you. Now, tell the +truth!" + +And her friends had to admit the truth of her declaration. + +THE END + + + + +THE NAN SHERWOOD SERIES + +By Annie Roe Carr + +12 mo, cloth, illustrated, and colored jacket + +In Annie Roe Carr we have found a young woman of wide experience among +girls--in schoolroom, in camp and while traveling. She knows girls of +to-day thoroughly--their likes and dislikes--and knows that they +demand almost as much action as do the boys. And she knows +humor--good, clean fun and plenty of it. + + NAN SHERWOOD AT PINE CAMP + or The Old Lumberman's Secret + + NAN SHERWOOD AT LAKEVIEW HALL + or The Mystery of the Haunted Boathouse + + NAN SHERWOOD'S WINTER HOLIDAYS + or Rescuing the Runaways + + NAN SHERWOOD AT ROSE RANCH + or The Old Mexican's Treasure + + NAN SHERWOOD AT PALM BEACH + or Strange Adventures Among the Orange Groves + + + + +Transcriber's notes: + +Original publication data: + Publisher: The World Syndicate Publishing Co., Cleveland, O. + Copyright: 1914, by Grosset & Dunlap + Printer: The Commercial Bookbinding Co., Cleveland, O. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Girls of Central High at Basketball, by +Gertrude W. 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