Part 27 (1/2)

”Sure-and this year, too. You watch and see. I'd like to bet you that Nid'll have a goal to kick to-morrow-yes, and that he'll kick it, too!”

”Don't!” groaned Ned. ”I never could do it!”

”Well,” laughed Laurie, ”I don't bet for money, Kewpie, but I tell you what I'll do. If Ned kicks a goal to-morrow, I'll take you over to the Widow's, and I'll buy you all the cream-puffs you can eat at one sitting!”

”It's a go!” cried Kewpie. ”And if he doesn't, I'll do it to you!”

”Of course,” explained Laurie, in recognition of his brother's look of pained inquiry, ”I'm not making the offer because I think Ned can't do it, or because I don't want him to play. You bet I do! It's because I do want him to, Kewpie. You see, I usually lose bets!”

”All right, you crazy galoot. I've got to beat it. Pinky made us swear by the Great Horn Spoon to be in bed by ten. Good night. Don't let the signal stuff worry you, Nid. It'll come out all right to-morrow. You understand. Night!”

When the door had closed, Laurie laughed and turned to Ned. ”He's a good old scout, isn't he? I say, what's the matter with you, Ned? You look like the end of a hard winter! Cheer up! It may not be true!”

But Ned shook his head, although he tried to smile unconcernedly. ”It'll happen just the way he told, Laurie,” he said, sadly. ”I just know it will! They'll get Pope out of the way, and there'll be a field goal wanted, just as there was Wednesday, and Mulford will send me in!”

”Well, what of it? You'd like that, wouldn't you?”

”I-I'm scared!”

”Oh, piffle, Neddie! You've got nerves, that's all. The night before the battle, you know, and all that! In the morning you'll be as right as rain. Get your clothes off and tumble in. Want me to read a story to you? There's a corker in the 'Post' this week.”

”No, thanks; I guess not. I'd better go to sleep.”

But, although Ned, stifling a desire to sit up and read the corking story himself, put the light out at ten minutes before ten, he lay awake until after midnight and suffered as blue a case of funk as any boy ever did. And when, at length, sleep came, it was filled with visions in which he stood in the center of a vast arena, the object of countless eyes, and tried over and over, and never with success, to kick a perfectly gigantic leather ball over a cross-bar that was higher than the Masonic Temple at home!

The truth is that Ned was over-trained and stale. And the further truth is that when he awoke to as sweet a November morning as ever peered down from a cloudless sky through golden sunlight, he felt, as he phrased it to himself, like a sock that had just come through the wringer!

CHAPTER XIX-NED IS MISSING

Ned ate almost no breakfast, and Laurie noted the fact, but, after a glance at his brother's face, said nothing. After all, he reflected, there were probably others of the squad who were displaying no more appet.i.te this morning. Afterward, on the way to School Hall for their only recitation of the day, he asked off-handedly: ”How are you feeling, Neddie?”

Ned didn't answer at once. When he did, he only replied laconically: ”Rotten!”

”How do you mean, rotten?” Laurie disguised anxiety under flippancy.

”Tummy out of whack? Or is it a case of ingrowing signals?”

”I don't know what the trouble is,” answered Ned seriously. ”I feel perfectly punk. And I-I'm scared, Laurie. I'd give a million dollars if I didn't have to go to the field this afternoon. I wish to goodness I could duck somehow. Say, feel my forehead. Isn't it hot?”

Laurie felt, and shook his head. ”Cool as a cuc.u.mber, you old fakir.

Buck up, Neddie! You'll feel better after a while. Did you sleep all right?”

”I guess so,” replied the other dispiritedly. ”I dreamed a lot. Dreamed I was kicking goals over a bar as high as a mountain. And the ball was as big as a hogshead. And there were about a million folks watching me, and Mr. Cornish was beating a ba.s.s-drum.”

Laurie laughed. ”Some dream, Neddie! Tell you what. After we get out of here, we'll take a nice, long hike. Mulford wants the players to stay outdoors, doesn't he? Didn't you tell me he said you were to walk or something?”

Ned nodded. ”I'm too tired to walk, though, Laurie. Guess I'll get a book and go over to the park. Or go down and jump in the river!”

”Fine idea!” scoffed Laurie. ”What have you got against the river? It never did anything to you, did it?”

Ned, however, refused to smile. ”You don't need to come along,” he said.