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"Please, sir."
"Well, get your head clear first."
"Let me take it now, sir!"
"All right."
"Hit him harder than he hits you, and grip with your hands," said the voice of Mr. Ware in his ear.
d.i.n.k stood out again. The earth was gradually returning to a state of equilibrium, but his head was buzzing and his legs were decidedly rebels to his will.
The captain, seeing this, to give him time, spoke to McCarty with just a shade of malice.
"Well, Tough, do you want to take it again?"
"Do I?" said McCarty sarcastically. "Oh, yes, most enjoyable! Don't let me interfere with your pleasure. Why don't you try it yourself?"
"Would you rather watch?"
"Oh, no, of course not. This is a real pleasure, thank you. The little devil would dent a freight train."
"All ready, Stover?" said c.o.c.krell.
The players stood in two lines, four yards apart. No one laughed. They looked at Stover, thrilling a little with his communicated recklessness, grunting forth their approval.
"Good nerve."
"The real stuff."
"Pure grit."
"Little devil."
Stover's face had gone white, the eyes had dwindled and set intensely, the line of the mouth was drawn taut, while on his forehead the wind lifted the matted hair like a banner. In the middle of the lane, crowding forward, his arms out, ready to spring, his glance fixed on McCarty, he waited like a champion guarding the pa.s.s.
"All right, Stover?"
Some one near him repeated the question.
"Come on!" he answered.
McCarty's one hundred and seventy pounds came rus.h.i.+ng down. But this time the instinct was strong. He slacked a bit at the end as Stover, not waiting his coming, plunged in to meet him. Down they went again, but this time it was the force of Stover's impact that threw them.
When c.o.c.krell came up, d.i.n.k, altogether groggy, was entwined around one leg of McCarty with a gaunt grin of possession.
They hauled him up, patted him on the back and walked him up and down in the cool breeze. Suddenly, after several minutes, the mist rose. He saw the fields and heard the sharp cries of the coaches prodding on the players. Then he looked up to find Garry c.o.c.krell's arm about him.
"All right now?" said the captain's voice.
Stover hastily put the arm away from him.
"I'm all right."
"Did I give you a little too much, youngster?"
"I'm ready again," said Stover instantly.
c.o.c.krell laughed a short, contented laugh.
"You've done enough for to-day."
"I'll learn how," said d.i.n.k doggedly.
"You know the real things in football now, my boy," said the captain shortly. "We'll teach you the rest."
d.i.n.k thought he meant it sarcastically.
"You will give me a chance, won't you?" he said.
"Yes," said the captain, laying his hand on his shoulder with a smile.
"You'll get chance enough, my boy. Fact is, I'm going to start you in at end on the scrub. You'll get all the hard knocks you're looking for there. You won't get any credit for what you do--but you boys are what's going to make the team."
"Oh, sir, do you mean it?"
"I'm in the habit of meaning things."
"I'll--I'll----" began Stover, and then stopped before the impossibility of expressing how many times his life should be thrown to the winds.
"I know you will," said the captain, amused. "And now, you young bulldog, back to your room and shake yourself together."
"But I want to go on; I'm feeling fine."
"Off the field," said the captain with terrific sternness.
d.i.n.k went like a dog ordered home, slowly, unwillingly, turning from time to time in hopes that his captain would relent.
When he had pa.s.sed the chapel and the strife of the practice had dropped away he felt all at once sharp, busy pains running up his back and over his shoulders. But he minded them not. At that moment with the words of the captain--_his_ captain forever now--ringing in his ears, he would have gone forth gratefully to tackle the whole team, one after another, from wiry little Charlie DeSoto to the elephantine P. Lentz.
Suddenly a thought came to him.
"Gee, I bet I shook up Tough McCarty, anyhow," he said grimly. And refreshed by this delightful thought he went briskly across the Circle.
At the steps Finnegan, coming out the door, hailed him excitedly:
"Hi, d.i.n.k, we've got a Freshman who's setting up to jiggers and eclairs. Hurry up!"
"No," said d.i.n.k.