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"A tie! A tie!"
"Now, Oak Hall, one more to win!"
"Rockville! Rockville! One more! One more!"
By this time everybody was thoroughly worked up over the contest. All who had been seated were on their feet and cheering wildly for their favorites.
"Whatever you do, don't let them score again!" said Dave, to his players. "Keep the rubber away from our goal."
"We'll send it down to their goal," answered Shadow.
"So we will!" cried Ben.
"This is our game--we have got to have it," was Phil's response.
"It's win or bust," muttered Roger.
Once more the puck was placed in position. Rockville now played as they had never played before, and twice the disc came dangerously close to the Oak Hall goal. But each time Luke Watson drove it back. Then it came forward swiftly to the other end of the field. Here there was a battle-royal between Mallory and Roger. Dave came whizzing up, and managed to steal the rubber, and sent it to Ben. He got it within three yards of the goal, and then Shadow took hold, and landed it safely in the net.
"Hurrah! One more for Oak Hall!"
"That makes the score four to three!"
"Wake up, Rockville! Six minutes more to play!"
"Now hold 'em!" cautioned Dave, as the puck was brought forth once more.
"Hold 'em, I tell you!"
"We'll do more!" answered Roger, grimly. "That is, if we get the chance."
"Of course--but don't run any risks."
Back and forth flew the rubber disc. Rockville was wild to tie the score. This made one of the players take a "long chance." Roger saw it, and in a twinkling he rushed forward and upset the fellow's calculations, and sent the puck again into the Rockville territory. Then came a rush of players, and back and forth swung the human ma.s.s. Then of a sudden the rubber disc flew up into the air, to land almost at Sam Day's feet.
It was Sam's chance, and like a flash he improved it. Down the icy field went the rubber with Sam behind it.
"Stop him!"
"Send it back!"
Dave was behind Sam, and now he swept ahead. Then came a mix-up with Mallory. But Dave got the puck and sent it straight for the net.
"Another goal for Oak Hall!"
"Two minutes more to play!"
"Rockville can't win now!"
With saddened faces Rockville lined up once more, and again the disc was put in action. The fight was hot, and the puck moved rapidly in the center of the field. Then the whistle blew, and the wonderful contest came to an end.
Final score: Oak Hall 5, Rockville 3.
It was a.s.suredly a well-earned victory, and Dave and his team were warmly praised by all their followers. Even Doctor Clay came up to shake each player by the hand.
"I am proud of you," he said. "This will be quite a feather in the Oak Hall cap."
"Can we celebrate to-night, Doctor?" asked Roger, quickly.
"You can--up to twelve o'clock. But please don't wreck the school building," and the master of Oak Hall smiled indulgently.
"Oh, it was just too lovely for anything!" cried Vera.
"The best ever!" added Mary.
"I got a number of good snap-shots of the game," said Polly Vane, who was quite an amateur photographer. "I'll have the pictures developed and printed, and give each of you copies to take home."
"That will be splendid, Polly," answered Dave. Later on Dave received his set of pictures, and took them to Crumville, where he showed them to Jessie and the others with much pride.
"That contest was harder than the one on the gridiron," remarked Phil, when they were returning to Oak Hall in one of the big sleighs.
"Rockville meant to win," said Buster. "And it looked as if they would win, at first."
"They have a star player in Mallory," said Ben. "But one star doesn't make a team."
"Say, that puts me in mind of a story," began Shadow. "Once three fellows----" But then he broke off short, as a handful of soft snow thrown by Roger took him full in the mouth.
"Keep your stories for to-night, Shadow!" cried Dave. "Now for a song!"
And then the crowd in the sleigh began singing at the top of their lungs.
It was a.s.suredly a grand victory, and that evening the whole school celebrated, with bonfires, singing, and dancing. Dave was called on for a speech. Plum took part in the celebration, for he was not seriously injured.
"And now for the holidays and home!" said Dave, on the following Monday morning. "Just two weeks more of the grind, boys!"
"They'll soon slip by," said Phil.
"Dave, do you imagine that Merwell and Jasniff will return to Rockville?" continued the s.h.i.+powner's son.
"I don't know--perhaps, after a while--when they think I will drop the charge against them."
"Perhaps they are too scared to come back," said Phil.
"They are bad eggs," murmured Dave. But how bad, he was still to learn.
He was to meet Merwell and Jasniff again, and what that pair did to injure him and those he so dearly loved will be told in another volume of this series, to be ent.i.tled: "Dave Porter on Cave Island; or, A Schoolboy's Mysterious Mission." In that book we shall meet Dave and many others of our characters again, and learn the particulars of a happening at Crumville that was as dismaying as it was perplexing.
"Well, let us forget Merwell and Jasniff," said Roger. "Say, that hockey victory has made me feel two years younger."
"That and a letter he got from Laura," murmured Phil.