The High School Freshmen | Page 3

H. Irving Hancock
either!" broke in Laura Bentley,
disdainfully. "Fred Ripley, you accused Dick Prescott of playing off a
lame hand. I know how his hand became crippled. Dick wanted me to
promise not to tell how it happened, but now I'm going to. Wait and
you can hear, both of you."
"I don't want to, I'm sure," rejoined Clara, with a toss of her head.
"Come along, Fred."
This pair of students walked away together. They always did, after
school was out. The Ripleys and the Deanes were neighbors.
The other girls, however, followed Laura, as, with quick, resolute step,
she marched over to where the High School boys still lingered.
"Boys," began Laura, "Mr. Prescott has been accused of pretending
about a hurt hand. I know how he injured it; and, as he did it-----"
"Please don't say any more, Miss Bentley," begged Dick, flushing.
"Yes, I shall," insisted Laura, quietly. "It happened night before last.
Dick Prescott didn't want anything said about it, and neither did the
police, so-----"
"The police?" chipped in several of the High School boys and girls.
"Yes, the police wanted it kept quiet, so they could have a chance to
catch the fellow," Laura hastened on. "But they've had time enough,
now, to catch the rascal, if they're ever going to. You see, it happened

this way: Mother had forty-five dollars on hand that belonged to the
church fair fund. So, night before last, she asked me to take it over to
Miss Bond, the treasurer. I was going through Clinton Street, in one of
the dark spots, when a man jumped out from behind a tree and made a
snatch for the purse that I carried in my hand.
"Well, somehow---I don't just know how," Laura continued, "I
managed to keep hold of the purse and I screamed, of course. Then
some one came running down the street as fast as he could---and Dick
Prescott leaped at the rascal. It was a hard fight---a fearful one."
The girl shuddered even then, in the telling, but she continued: "The
wretch was twice as big as Dick Prescott. I thought Dick was going to
be killed. Twice the fellow broke loose, and started to run, but what do
you think Master Dick was up to?"
"What?" chorused the interested audience.
"Master Dick had his mind set on subduing the robber and holding him
for the police. So he tried to stop the wretch from getting away. At last,
however, the fellow hurled Dick backward, so that he fell. When he got
up he was lame. You all may have noticed that Mr. Prescott limped a
bit yesterday?"
"Yes; he did," confirmed Frank Thompson.
"And his hand was hurt, too---I know that," insisted Laura. "For he
escorted me to Miss Bond's, and then home. When we got there, I
asked my father, who is a doctor, to take Dick into the office. Father
said, afterwards, that Dick's right wrist was sprained, and his ankle
wrenched a bit, too. He said Dick would be doing well to have the full
use of his wrist in a week. Then the police came, when my father
telephoned for them, and the police didn't want anything said for a
while."
"So you, a fourteen-year-old freshie, are going about at night trying to
waylay footpads, are you?" demanded Thompson, resting a friendly
hand on Dick's shoulder. "But why did you keep so close-mouthed,

afterwards?" demanded the first classman.
"Well, for one thing, I guess I was a bit ashamed," confessed Dick,
reddening.
"Ashamed of rushing to beauty's aid?" demanded Frank, laughingly.
"Nothing like it," Dick protested, growing redder still. "I was ashamed
over having let the footpad get away."
"What? And he twice your size?" gasped Thompson. "Fellows, what do
you think of the modest cheek of this freshie! Ashamed because he
couldn't bag a full-sized thug!"
"That kid's the mustard!" broke in another first classman, approvingly.
"That's what he is!" came from others.
"Wow! whoop!"
They began crowding about the confused, blushing freshie, pumping
his uninjured left hand. Then some one shouted:
"He's all right, from the ground up. He's a Gridley boy! He's only a
freshie in years, but he'll get over that. Now, up with Dick Prescott! On
your shoulders! Give him the High School yell!"
Before he could even dodge, this High School freshman found himself
going up in the air. With all consideration for his injured hand the
upper classmen rushed him out of the school grounds, onto the street,
holding him aloft in the post of honor. The other boys followed. Even
the few girls followed, waving their handkerchiefs, while a lusty roar
went up:
"T-E-R-R-O-R-S! Wa-ar! Fam-ine! Pesti-lence! That's us! That's us!
G-R-I-D-L-E-Y---H.S. Rah! rah! rah! rah! _Gri-idley_!"
"What's all that racket back there?" asked Clara Deane,
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