bell notificationshomepageloginedit profileclubsdmBox

Read Ebook: Forward Pass: A Story of the New Football by Barbour Ralph Henry

More about this book

Font size:

Background color:

Text color:

Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page

Ebook has 1463 lines and 74470 words, and 30 pages

FACING PAGE

"He staggered to his feet, stumbled blindly through the doorway" 142

"'Go in for Minturn.... Use your brains,' he added" 232

"Tubby went over backward in his chair" 258

FORWARD PASS

OFF TO SCHOOL

There was a warning clang from the engine bell and a sudden return to darkness as the fireman slammed the furnace door and tossed the slicer-bar back onto the tender. The express messenger in the car behind pulled close the sliding door and hasped it, pausing afterwards to glance questioningly at the cloudy night sky. At the far end of the train, which curved serpent-wise along the track, the conductor's lantern rose and fell, the porter seized his footstool and Dan Vinton, after a final hurried kiss, broke from his mother's arms and ran nimbly up the steps of the already moving sleeper.

"Good-bye, mother," he called down into the half-darkness. "Good-bye, father! Good-bye, Mae!"

They all answered at once, his father in a hoarse growl, his mother softly and tearfully and his sister in a shrill, excited voice as she tripped along beside the car steps, waving frantically. The eastbound express carried ten cars to-night, and for a moment the big engine puffed and grunted complainingly, and the train moved slowly, the wheel flanges screaming against the curving rails. From across the platform Dan heard his father's voice lifted irritably:

"Ma, if you're coming I wish you'd come! Can't expect me to keep these horses standing here all night!"

Dan smiled and choked as he heard. Dear old dad! All the way to the station he had been as cross as a wet hen, holding his face aside as they passed a light for fear that the others would see the tears in his eyes, and trying with his gruffness to disguise the quiver in his voice. Dan gave a gulp as he felt the tears coming into his own eyes. The dimly-lighted station hurried by, there was a flash of green and red and white lanterns as the trucks rattled over the switches and then they had left the town behind and were rushing eastward through the September night, gaining speed with every click of the wheels. There was a sudden long and dismal shriek from the engine, and with that the monster settled down into the stride which, ere morning came, was to eat up three hundred Ohio miles and bring them well into Pennsylvania. The porter, with a muttered apology, closed the vestibule door, and Dan, blinking the persistent tears from his eyes, left the platform and entered the sleeping-car.

"I put your suit-case under the berth, sir," said the porter as he followed the passenger down the aisle. The lights were turned low, and Dan was glad of it, for he didn't want even the colored porter to think him a baby. The green curtains were pulled close at every section and from behind some of them came sounds plainly indicating occupancy.

"Lower eight," murmured the porter. "Here you are, sir. Hope you'll sleep well, sir. Good night."

"Thanks," muttered Dan. "Good night."

"We take the diner on at Pittsburg, sir, at seven. But you can get breakfast any time up to ten, sir."

Dan thanked him again and the porter took himself softly away. When he was finally stretched out in his berth, with his pocketbook tightly wrapped up in his vest under his pillow, and the gold watch which his father had given him when he had graduated from the grammar school last June tucked into the toe of one of his stockings as seeming to him the last place in which a thief would look for it, Dan raised the curtain beside his head and rolled over so that he could look out. It was after eleven o'clock and he knew that he ought to be asleep, but he felt as wide awake as ever he had in his life. The moon had struggled out from behind the big bank of clouds which had hid it and the world was almost as light as day. For awhile, as he watched the landscape slide by, a panorama of field and forest and sleeping villages, his thoughts clung somewhat disconsolately to Graystone and his folks. But before long the excitement which had possessed him for days and which had only left him at the moment of parting crept back, and, although he still stared with wide eyes through the car window, he saw nothing of the flying landscape.

He was going to boarding-school! That was the wonderful, pre-eminent fact at present, and at the thought his heart thrilled again as it had been doing for two months past. And at last the momentous time had really arrived! He was absolutely on his way! The dream of four years was coming true! Do you wonder that his heart beat chokingly for a few minutes while he lay there with the jar and rattle of the train in his ears? When one is fifteen and the long-desired comes to pass life grows very wonderful, very magnificent for awhile.

Ever since Dan had been old enough to think seriously of the matter of his education he had entertained a deep longing for a course at boarding-school. In Graystone it wasn't the fashion for boys to go away from home for their educations; Graystone had a first-class school system and was proud of it; a boy who wanted to go to college could prepare at the Graystone High School as well as anywhere else, declared the Graystone parents; and as for the Eastern schools--well, everybody knew that the most of them were hot-beds of extravagance and snobbishness. This is a belief that unfortunately prevails in plenty of towns beside Graystone. Dan's father was quite as patriotic as any other citizen of the town and held just as good an opinion of its educational advantages. So when, during his second year at the grammar school, Dan had broached the subject of a term at a preparatory school in the East he was not surprised when Mr. Vinton refused to consider it.

"Pooh! Pooh!" scoffed Mr. Vinton, good-naturedly. "What's the matter with our own High School, Dan? Isn't it good enough for you, son?"

Dan tried to explain that it was the school life he wanted to try, and, unfortunately for his argument, mentioned "Tom Brown."

"Tom Brown!" exclaimed his father. "Well, that's a fine story, Dan, but it's all romance. I went to boarding-school myself, and I can tell you I never ran up against any of the things you read about in 'Tom Brown.' No, son, if that's all you want you might as well stay right here in Graystone. You'll find just as much of the 'Tom Brown' romance in High School as you will back East."

Dan wanted to tell his father that the kind of school he wanted to go to was little like the boarding-school which his father had attended. Mr. Vinton's early education had been obtained at the Russellville Academy, an institution whose name was out of all proportion to its importance. Mr. Vinton had been born in one of the smaller towns along the Willimantic River in Connecticut, and Russellville Academy had possessed for him the advantages of proximity and inexpensiveness. The tuition and board was one hundred dollars a year, and on Friday afternoon he could reach home by merely walking twelve miles. Mr. Vinton's schooling had terminated abruptly in the middle of his third year, when the death of his mother--his father had died years before--left him dependent on an uncle living in Ohio. So Russellville Academy was abandoned in favor of a position in the Graystone Flour Mills. To-day Mr. Vinton owned the mills and, for that matter, pretty much everything else in that part of the county. But the fact that he had succeeded in life on a very slim education hadn't made him a scoffer at schools and colleges; on the contrary, he was a firm believer in those institutions and was determined that Dan, who was an only son, should have the best education that money and care could provide.

Dan's private and unexpressed opinion of Russellville Academy wasn't flattering. He believed that his father must have had a pretty forlorn, unpleasant experience there. But Mr. Vinton had come to look back upon his few years of school life through rose-tinted glasses.

"There were only about thirty of us fellows," he would say when in reminiscent mood, "but maybe we had better times for that reason; every fellow knew every other fellow. Why, the first month I was there I fought more than half the school!"

"Did you ever get licked?" asked Dan eagerly.

"Licked!" laughed Mr. Vinton. "Lots of times, son. Why, seems to me as I look back at it, my nose was out of kilter more than half the time!"

"You must have been a set of young barbarians," observed Dan's mother with conviction on one occasion.

"Nothing of the sort, Mary; just a parcel of youngsters full of life. We didn't think anything of a fight; used to make up half an hour afterwards and bandage each other's heads."

"Were the fellows nice?" asked Dan doubtfully.

"Nice? Of course they were, most of them. Still, I guess we had all sorts at the Academy. There was 'Slugger' Boyd and 'Brick' Garrison and 'Fatty' Thomas and--and others like them that maybe you wouldn't just call 'nice.' 'Brick' got his nickname because of a way he had of grabbing up a brick or a stone when it came to a fight. No one cared to fight 'Brick' except in the barn where there weren't any loose stones lying around handy."

"Did you have a nickname, too?" Dan asked.

"Yes, they used to call me 'Kicker.' You know we didn't have any special rules to fight by; every fellow just went at it the handiest way. I was a good kicker; used to jab out with my fist and kick at the same time. I won lots of fights that way, for some fellows can stand any amount of punching on the head or body and quit right away when you get a good one on their shins."

"We wouldn't call that fair fighting nowadays," said Dan uneasily.

"No? Well, fashions change. It was good scientific fighting when I went to school," answered Mr. Vinton smilingly.

"Well, I think your folks must have been crazy to let you go to such a place," said Mrs. Vinton irascibly. "Fighting all the time and living on almost nothing and sleeping on corn-husks and walking twelve miles to get home and nearly freezing to death!"

"Oh, I only came near freezing once," responded Mr. Vinton pleasantly. "But that was a close shave. I guess if Farmer Hutchins hadn't come along just when he did that time--"

"I don't want to hear about it again!" declared Dan's mother. "If that's your idea of having a good time it isn't mine! And you can just believe that no son of mine ever goes to boarding-school!"

"Well, as for that, ma, I dare say boarding-schools have changed some since my day," responded Mr. Vinton.

But in spite of this assertion Russellville Academy remained to Mr. Vinton a typical boarding-school, and remembering how little he had learned there and, when the rose-tinted glasses were laid aside, how many unhappy moments he had spent there, he was resolved in his own mind that his wife's decision was a wise one.

In the end Dan had given up all hope of getting to boarding-school, without, however, ceasing to desire it. In June he had graduated high in his class at the grammar school with every prospect of entering the High School in September. But toward the last of July a conversation had occurred at the dinner table which later put a different complexion on things.

"Well, son, what you been doing to-day?" asked Mr. Vinton, absentmindedly tucking his napkin into his collar, yanking it quickly away again and glancing apologetically at his wife.

"Nothing much, sir. I played baseball for awhile and then 'Chad' Sleeper and Billy Nourse and Frank Whipple and I went over to Saunders' Creek and went in bathing."

Mr. Vinton frowned.

"'Chad' Sleeper, eh? Is that old Dillingway Sleeper's boy?"

"Yes, sir."

"And young Nourse and that Whipple boy, you said, didn't you?"

"Yes, sir."

"See a good deal of those boys, do you? Go around with them a lot, eh?"

"Yes, sir, a good deal."

"I thought Frank Whipple was going to work this summer in his father's store."

"He did start to," answered Dan, "but--I don't know. I guess he didn't like it."

Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page

 

Back to top