CHAPTER XIX
THE RESULT
Just who would have won in that battle between Fred Martin and SparrowBangs remains one of the unsolved mysteries of Rockledge School.
It was never finished. The quartette of boys had made one mistake.They should have taken a fifth youngster into their confidence and sethim on watch.
Mr. Leith, the head master under Dr. Raymond, always took aconstitutional around the grounds after the midday meal. Not often didhe cross the campus, for he was not a man given to spying upon his youngcharges.
But this day the campus seemed to be deserted. It was a cold day, andmost of the boys had remained indoors to take advantage of the hour ofstudy before afternoon lessons.
He came down the railing that defended the cliff's edge, and he heard,as he approached the notorious "bloody corner," boyish voices.
"That's it, Sparrow! Hit him again!" shrieked one voice.
"Let him hit me--I'll give him as good as he sends!" spoke up anothervoice.
There was the instant sound of blows interchanged. The teacher could notdoubt what was going on.
"Boys! boys! how dare you fight?" he demanded, and strode toward thehedge of hemlock trees, his coattails flapping behind him.
The fight had not continued long. Both boys had removed their coats andvests and caps. They were hard at it indeed when Mr. Leith's voice smoteupon their ears.
"Cheese it!" gasped Shiner. "Leith's onto us!"
With the fear of being apprehended in all their minds, the four boyssprang for the underbrush, on the other side of the corner. They knewwhich way the teacher was coming.
The two belligerents had picked up their discarded clothing, but as theygot under cover Fred gasped:
"Scubbity-_yow_! I've dropped my cap."
"Keep on!" exclaimed Bobby. "I'll get it."
He was so earnest to shield his chum from the result of his wrong doing,that he forgot his own danger. If Fred's cap were found, Mr. Leithwould know it, and Fred would be called upon to explain.
Bobby darted back while the other boys scudded through the bushes. Hesaw the cap on the ground just inside the open space. He sprawled allover it, grabbed it up, and then was stricken motionless and dumb by thevoice of the master who stepped into view:
"Robert! What does this mean?"
Bobby shook all over, but he stuffed the cap into the breast of hisjacket.
"Robert, stand up!" commanded the teacher.
Bobby did so. He looked timidly across at the gentleman. Certainly Mr.Leith was a very stern looking man!
"Come here, Robert," said Mr. Leith.
Bobby crossed the sandlot at a slow crawl. Mr. Leith cleared histhroat, removing his eyeglasses to wipe them. On the instant, as theboy reached the fence, he flung Fred's cap through the rails and outover the edge of the cliff. It disappeared like a shot.
"What was that, sir?" demanded Mr. Leith, putting on the eyeglasses andlooking at Bobby again.
The boy hesitated. The gentleman repeated:
"What was it? I saw you throw something away."
"It--it was a cap," said Bobby.
"A cap? Not your own cap?" exclaimed the teacher, in surprise. "Youhave your own cap on."
"No, sir. Not my own cap," admitted Bobby.
"Whose cap was it, then?"
Bobby was silent. He looked up at Mr. Leith pleadingly. That gentlemanknew well enough what was in the boy's mind. He, too, understood boyspretty well, but he did not believe in handling them just as the oldDoctor did.
"Do you hear me, young man?" he asked, harshly.
"Yes, sir."
"Why do you not answer me?"
Bobby wanted to cry out and plead with him. Mr. Leith had no _right_ toask such a question! That is the way the boy looked at it. The teacherwas tempting him to do the meanest thing in a boy's catalog of sins.
He was asking Bobby to _snitch_!
"I--I can't tell you, sir," stammered the boy.
"You mean you are determined not to tell me?" repeated Mr. Leith.
Bobby was silent, but still looked straight into his face. No frowncould make Bobby Blake drop his eyes in shame.
"Two boys were fighting here just now," said the teacher, slowly andsternly. "Isn't that so?"
"Yes, sir," said Bobby, quietly.
"Barrymore Gray was not here?" asked the other, sharply.
"Oh, no, sir. Barry knew nothing about it, sir," cried Bobby.
"Ah! Indeed? Then this fight was a strictly private affair?"
Bobby looked miserable, but said nothing.
"How many boys were here?"
Bobby wagged his head negatively. "I--I can't tell you, sir."
"Nor the names of the boys who fought?"
"No, sir."
"You know who they are?"
"Oh, yes, sir."
"And you refuse to tell me?"
"I--I can't tell!" gasped Bobby, both hands clutched tightly upon thebreast of his jacket. It seemed to him as though the teacher must seethe pounding of his heart.
"Robert," said Mr. Leith, "I do not like such actions as this. I willnot allow a boy to refuse me answers to perfectly proper questions. Goto your class-room. You must not go to the gymnasium, nor out of doorsat all, until I bid you. When you are not in classes, remain in yourdormitory.
"I am disappointed in you, Robert. You have shown yourself to be astudious boy heretofore and not a ruffian."
"Oh, sir--"
"Silence! You may not have been one of the boys fighting; but you wereaiding and abetting a ruffianly encounter between two of yourschoolmates. It cannot be overlooked.
"I had hopes of you, Robert. We all had. Dr. Raymond himself hadcommended your course since you came to Rockledge. But no boy whowishes to stand in the honor class can break the rules of the school andthen refuse to stand the full punishment for his act."
"Oh, Mr. Leith!" cried Bobby, brokenly. "I am not trying to get out ofanything. Truly I'm not! Punish me all you want to, sir, but _don't_ask me to tell on the other boys. I can't do that."
"We shall see, Robert," said the teacher, grimly. "Return to yourclass-room."
Now began a very terrible time for Bobby Blake--or so it seemed to theheartsick boy. He held a secret that he could not speak of, and hisrefusal to reveal it broke down his chances of gaining that Honor Medalon which he had set his hopes.
Of course, it never entered his mind for a moment that he _could_tell--even though the other boys did not realize what he had beenthrough with Mr. Leith, and what his punishment was.
Fred and Sparrow, made friends by the emergency, with Jimmy Ailshine,waited for Bobby in a secure hiding place known to all four; but Bobbydid not come. When they got back to the classroom at half past one,Bobby was there ahead of them.
His face was very red; he may have been crying, but Fred could not tell.The latter slipped a brief note to him:
"Did he catch you?"
Bobby nodded, but did not write back. Fred, after a while, slipped overanother written question:
"Where's my cap?"
This time Bobby replied: "At the foot of the cliff. He doesn't know anyof you. Keep still."
"Good old sport, Bobby," quoth Fred to Sparrow, when recitations wereover and they filed out. "Scubbity-_yow_! that was a soaker you gave meon the jaw. It's sore yet."
"I believe I'm going to have a black eye," revealed Sparrow, with pride.
They went off together, inseparable friends for the time being. Bobbyremained behind, taking his books into the big study.
Mr. Leith did not speak to him again. In fact, nobody came near himbefore supper. When the boys came in, giggling and talking, just asunable as usual to settle down quietly to the meal until an adult eyewas turned threateningly upon them, Bobby entered, too, but with such alump in his throat that he felt that he could scarcely swallow amouthful.
Nobody noticed his condition but
Pee Wee, and he only to seize upon thepudding that Bobby could not touch. "You act as if you had the mumpsand couldn't swallow," whispered the fat boy. "But what you can't eatI'll get rid of for you, Bobby."
Three wistful days passed. Bobby remained indoors, and the boys knewthat he was being punished. Only three knew what for, and they did notknow how much.
"Good old scout, Bobby!" said Shiner, clapping him on the shoulder."Wild horses wouldn't get anything out of you, eh!"
Fred began to eye his chum askance. Thoughtless as the red-haired oneusually was, he began to worry.
Then Mr. Leith called Bobby to him again.
"Will you tell me who was fighting down there at the corner?" he asked.
"Please--please do not ask me, sir!" begged the boy.
"Ahem! you are still stubborn, are you!"
"Ye--yes, sir," said Bobby, not knowing what else to say.
"Very well. I shall keep you indoors no longer. I see that gentle meanswill not cure _your_ trouble. At the last, I should have been tempted tokeep the matter to myself and give you a chance for the medal. But Isee leniency is wasted upon you.
"You may have your freedom, Robert. Nothing you can do now will wipeout the fact that you have deliberately refused to answer my questions.That is all."
_And Bobby Blake forgot the Doctor's office door was unlocked!_
He accepted the punishment of Mr. Leith as final. He knew he had lostall chance of winning the Medal of Honor. Young as he was, it seemed tohim as though his punishment was almost too great for him to bear!
Bobby Blake at Rockledge School; or, Winning the Medal of Honor Page 19