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"Ten to seven--play!"
And they were so near, too! They _were_ playing well--Grace and Virginia were great--they could have done something if that stupid Home--Oh!
Theodora leaped, missed the ball, but danced up in front of Martha and warded off the girl who slipped in to help her. Martha uttered an impatient exclamation and scowled. The freshmen howled and kicked against the gallery, and as the freshman Home woke out of an apparent lethargy and put the ball in neatly Theodora clapped and cheered with the rest.
"Ten to eight--play!"
There was a scuffle, a fall, and a hot discussion. Two girls grasped the ball, and the captains hesitated. Miss Ka.s.san ran up, and in the little lull Theodora heard from the platform:
"Oh, give it to the freshmen! They deserve it!"
"No, Miss Greer had it!"
"She knocked the girl off it, if that's what--" A rebellious howl from the yellow gallery as Miss Greer bore off the ball, and a man's voice:
"Oh, nonsense! If you don't want 'em to howl, don't let 'em play! The idea--to get 'em all worked up and then say: 'No, young ladies, control yourselves!' How idiotic! I don't blame 'em--I'd howl myself--Jiminy crickets! _Look_ at that girl! Good work! _Good work!_"
"Eleven to eight--play!"
"Good old Suttie! Good girl! Ninety-gre-e-e-en!"
Theodora's mouth was dry, and she ran to the coach for a lemon. The junior's hand shook, and her voice was husky from shouting.
"It's grand--it's grand!" she said quickly. "Martha's mad as a hatter!
See her braid!"
Martha had twisted her pale brown pigtail tightly round her neck, and was calling with little indistinct noises to her sister. Adah Levy was talking to herself steadily and whispering, "_Hurry now, hurry now, hurry now!_" as she doubled and bent and worried the freshman Home out of her senses. Grace Farwell was everywhere at once, and was still only when she fell backwards with a bang that sickened the visiting mothers, and brought the freshmen's hearts into their mouths. A great gasp travelled up the gallery, and the doctor left her seat, but before she reached the players Grace was up, tossed her head, blinked rapidly, and with an unsteady little smile took her place by Alison Greer. And then the applause that had gone before was mild in comparison with the thunder from both galleries, and Miss Ka.s.san looked at her watch uneasily and moved forward.
Now everybody was standing up, and the men were pus.h.i.+ng forward, and only the gasps and bursts of applause and little cries of disappointment disturbed the stillness--the steady roar had stopped.
Theodora knew nothing, saw nothing: she only played. Her back ached, and her throat was dry; Martha's elbow moved like the piston of a steam-engine; her arm, when Theodora pressed against it, was like a stiff bar; she towered above her Guard. It was only a question of a few, few minutes--_could_ they make it "eleven to nine"?
She must have asked the question, for Martha gasped, "No, you won't!"
at her, and her heart sank as Miss Ka.s.san moved closer. The ball neared their basket; the little bow-legged girl ducked under Alison's nose and emerged with it from a chaos of swaying Centres, tossed it to Grace, who dashed to the basket--
"_Time's up!_"
The freshmen shrieked, the Team yelled to its captain: "Put it in! put it in!" The soph.o.m.ore Guards had not heard Miss Ka.s.san, and Grace poised the ball. A yell from the freshmen--and she deliberately dropped it.
"Time's up," she said, with a little break in her voice, and as Miss Ka.s.san hurried forward to stop the play she gave her the ball. Through the tumult a ba.s.s voice was heard: "I say, you know, that was pretty decent! I'm not sure I'd have done that myself!"
And as the a.s.sistant and Miss Ka.s.san retired to compare fouls, and the noise grew louder and louder, the freshman team, withdrawn near the platform, heard a young professor, not so many years distant from his own alma mater, enthusiastically a.s.suring any one who cared to hear, that "That girl was a dead game sport, now!"
For a moment the feeling against Grace had been bitter--the basket was so near! But as the soph.o.m.ores were openly commending her, and as Miss Ka.s.san was heard to say that the Team had played in splendid form and had given a fine example of "the self-control that the game was supposed to teach," they thought better of their captain with every minute.
"Eleven to eight, in favor of Ninety-green--fouls even!" said Miss Ka.s.san, and the storm broke from the gallery. But before it reached the floor, almost, Martha was energetically beating time, and above the miscellaneous babble rose the strong, steady cheer of the soph.o.m.ores:
'Rah, 'rah, 'rah!
'Rah, 'rah, 'rah!
'Rah, 'rah, 'rah!--Ninety-ye-e-e-e-llow!
"Quick, girls! quick!" cried Grace, for Miss Ka.s.san was running toward them with determination in her eye.
'Rah, 'rah, 'rah!
'Rah, 'rah, 'rah!
'Rah, 'rah, 'rah!--Ninety-gre-e-e-e-n!
Then it was all a wild, confused tumult. Theodora had no distinct impressions; people kissed her and shook her hand, and Kathie Sewall carried Grace off to a swarm of girls who devoured her, but not before Martha, breathless from a rapid ride around the floor on the unsteady shoulders of her loyal team, had solemnly extended her hot brown hand to the freshman captain and said, with sincere respect, "That was as good a freshman game as ever was played, Miss Farwell--we're mighty proud of ourselves! Your centre work was simply great! And--and of course we know that that last goal was--was practically yours!"
Theodora had expected to feel so ashamed and sad--and somehow she was so proud and happy! The soph.o.m.ores last year had locked themselves in for one hour and--expressed their feelings; but the freshmen could only realize that theirs was the closest score known for years, and that they had made it against the best team the college had ever seen; that Martha had said that in fifteen minutes more, at the rate they were playing, n.o.body knew what might have happened; that Miss Ka.s.san had said that except in the matter of noise she had been very proud of them; and that Professor Robbins had called their captain a Dead Game Sport!
It would not have been etiquette to carry Grace about the hall, but they managed to convey to her their feelings, which were far from perfunctory, and in their enthusiasm they went so far as to obey the Council's earnest request that the decorations should remain untouched. They cheered Theodora and Virginia and Harriet and the bow-legged girl till you would have supposed them victorious; and when Harriet told Grace, with a little gulp, that it was all up with her, for her mother had said that a second sprained ankle meant no more basket-ball, the little sympathetic crowd brightened, and all eyes turned to Theodora, who breathed hard and tried to seem not to notice. Could it be? Would she ever run out bouncing the ball in that waiting hush?...
They were out of the Gym now, and only the ushers' bonnets, the green and yellow flowers that the Council had _not_ controlled, the crumpled, printed sheets of basket-ball songs, and the little mascots posing for their pictures on the campus made the day different from any other.
"Come and lie down," said somebody, regarding Theodora with a marked respect. "You'll want to get rested before the dinner, you know."
And as Theodora stared at her and half turned to run after Grace, whom Kathie Sewall was quietly leading off, the girl--she was in the house with her--held her back.
"I'd let Grace alone, if I were you," she said. "She's pretty well used up; she hurt her elbow quite badly, but she wouldn't say anything, and Dr. Leach says she'll have to keep perfectly quiet if she wants to be at the dinner--wants to! the idea! But she said _of course_ you were to come. They say they're going to take some of the Gym decorations down.--What! Why, the idea! _Of course_ you'll go!
You're sure to make the Team, anyhow, for that matter! I tell you, Theodora, we're proud of you! It wasn't any joke to step in there and guard Martha Sutton with a score of six to nothing!"
Theodora paused at the steps, her mackintosh half off, her hair tangled about her crimson cheeks, her sleeve dusty from that last mad slide.
"No," she said, with a wave of reminiscence of that sick shaking of her knees, that shrinking from a million critical eyes. "No, it wasn't any joke--not in the least!"
And she climbed up the stairs to a burst of applause from the freshmen in the house and the shrill cry of her room-mate:
"Come on, Theo! I've got a bath-tub for you!"
THE SECOND STORY
_A CASE OF INTERFERENCE_
II
A CASE OF INTERFERENCE
"What I want to know," said the chairman of the committee, wearily, "is just this. Are we going to give the _Lady of Lyons_, or are we not? I have a music lesson at four and a tea at five, and while your sprightly and interesting conversation is ever pleasing to me--"
"Oh, Neal, don't! Think of something for us! Don't you want us to give it?"