<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE<br/> SECRET PLAY</h1>
<p class="p2 noic">BY</p>
<p class="noi author">RALPH HENRY BARBOUR</p>
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<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br/> <small>“THE COACHLESS WONDERS”</small></SPAN></h2>
<p class="cap">A blue runabout chugged blithely along
Troutman Street, in the town of Clearfield,
one afternoon in mid-September, honking
hoarse warnings at the intersections of other thoroughfares
and rustling the yellow and russet leaves,
which, because of an unprecedently early frost two
nights before, had already sprinkled the pavement.</p>
<p>In the car, clutching the wheel with an assumption
of ease somewhat belied by the frequent frowns
of anxiety which appeared on his face, sat the
proud owner, Richard, or, as some of us already
know him, Dick Lovering. Dick was seventeen
years of age, tall, nice-looking, with dark eyes and
hair and a lean face a trifle more pallid than one
would expect on the driver of an automobile. But
Dick hadn’t had that runabout very long, only about
a fortnight, in fact, which accounted for his anxiety
at street crossings and corners and, possibly, for the
lack of healthy color in his face.</p>
<p>The car was painted a deep and brilliant blue,
and, appropriately enough, had been dubbed by its
owner “Eli Yale,” answering, however, quite as
readily to “Eli.” Its varnish was as yet unmarred
by scratch or blotch and its brass shone resplendently.
To make no secret of it, the car had been presented
to Dick by the members of the Clearfield
Baseball Club at the completion of a successful season
which had netted the club much money. Dick
had been the manager and had conducted affairs so
capably that the gift was well-deserved. The car
had been bought at a bargain, having been used but
a few days by its previous owner, and was proving
a wonderful blessing to Dick, who was very far
from being wealthy enough to purchase such a luxury
himself. Dick, you see, was not as well able to
get about as other boys, for he had been a cripple
all his life. You’d never have suspected it to see him
guiding Eli around the corner of B Street, for to
all appearances he was quite a normal and healthy
lad. But had you looked on the running-board at
the left of the car you’d have seen a pair of crutches
secured there, crutches without which Dick was
quite unable to get around, or had been until the
blue automobile had appeared on the scene.</p>
<p>Morris Brent, who had owned the car first and
whose reckless driving of it had resulted in an upset
and a broken leg, had initiated Dick into the science
of running it and had found him a clever pupil, but
the latter had not yet gained complete confidence and
skill, and so when, just as he was passing the first
house on his right after leaving Troutman Street,
his name was called loudly and unexpectedly, Dick,
glancing startledly about, unintentionally opened the
throttle and Eli fairly bounded forward and was a
quarter of the way down the block before Dick
could bring him to a stop. When the brake was set
and the driver, sighing with relief, looked back along
the tree-bordered street he saw a short and somewhat
stout youth waving and pursuing. Fudge
Shaw—his real name was William, but everyone
outside his family had forgotten the fact—arrived
panting and laughing.</p>
<p>“That was a b-b-bully stop!” he gasped.
(Fudge had an entertaining habit of stuttering in
moments of excitement.) “Going out to the field,
Dick?”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“Yes. Climb in.”</p>
<p>Fudge, attired in football togs, seated himself
with a grunt beside the other, slammed the door and
beamed about him. Fudge had very blue and very
round eyes, so round that he constantly wore an expression
of pleasant and somewhat excited surprise.
He also had a good deal of sandy-red hair. He was
ambitious to make the High School Football Team,
was Fudge, and since Spring had refused all entreaties
to have his hair cut. Viewing that mop of
hair one would have doubted the necessity of the
head-guard which he dangled in one hand.</p>
<p>Dick started up again and traveled cautiously yet
briskly through B Street, but not until he had everything
adjusted to his liking and one hand on the
bulb of the horn did he indulge in conversation, although
Fudge, unperplexed by problems of gears
and levers, chattered busily.</p>
<p>“Gordon promised to stop for me,” he confided,
“but he didn’t, and I didn’t know it was so late. I
was writing.”</p>
<p>Fudge paused as though inviting curiosity. Eli
said “Honk! Honk!” hoarsely before he chugged
across Main Street, and Dick asked, “Another
story, Fudge?”</p>
<p></p>
<p>Fudge nodded carelessly. “Yes, and it’s going
to be a peach. It—it’s a detective story, Dick. I
meant it to be just a short one, but it’s turning out
to be quite long. I guess it’ll be a regular novel before
I get through with it. Detective stories are lots
of fun to write. Maybe I’ll read some of this to you
some time, Dick.”</p>
<p>“Thanks,” replied the other gravely. “What’s it
about, Fudge?”</p>
<p>“Oh, about a murder and a peach of a detective
chap named ‘Young Sleuth.’ You see, this old codger
Middleton was found murdered in his library,
surrounded by oodles of money. There was only
one window in the room and that was all barred
over with steel bars. And there was only one door
and that was locked on the inside and they had to
break it open. How’s that for a situation? You
see, having his money all scattered around showed
that he wasn’t killed for that, don’t it? And the
barred window and the door locked on the <em>inside</em>—get
that, Dick? On the <em>inside</em>, mind you!—thickens
the plot a bit, eh?”</p>
<p>“Rather!” agreed Dick, anxiously viewing a
buggy half a block ahead. “How did the murderer
get in, Fudge?”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“Why, you see—well, I haven’t worked that out
yet,” he confessed. “I’ve just got to where the old
millionaire’s beautiful daughter sends for ‘Young
Sleuth’ to unravel the mystery and bring her father’s
murderer to justice. It’s going to be a peach
of a story, all right!”</p>
<p>“Sounds so,” returned Dick, sighing with relief
as the buggy turned to the right into Common
Street. “You must read it to me when you get it
finished. It wouldn’t be a bad idea to get ‘Young
Sleuth’ to work for us here, Fudge, and find a football
coach.”</p>
<p>“That’s right! Isn’t it the limit for Farrell to
leave us like this? I hope they turn him down good
and hard when he comes back in the Spring and
wants to coach the nine again!”</p>
<p>“I guess he couldn’t do anything else, Fudge.
Farrell’s all right. You or I’d do the same thing
probably if we got word that our mother was very
ill in Ireland and wanted to see us. We’d do just
as Joe did; pack up and go back there.”</p>
<p>“Maybe,” agreed Fudge. “But it leaves us in an
awful hole, doesn’t it? Lanny White says he
doesn’t know where to look for a new coach, and
it’s pretty late, too. Mr. Grayson told him he
guessed we’d better try to do without a coach this
Fall. Just as if we could!”</p>
<p>“I suppose it would be hard,” said Dick. “Gordon
said that Lanny had heard of a man in Bridgeport.”</p>
<p>“He didn’t pan out,” replied Fudge. “He was
a man Bert Cable knew, but he hadn’t ever coached
a football team. Now Lanny’s after a chap in
Westport. He coached Torleston High a couple of
years ago. It’s a bum outlook, say what you want.
Lanny’s going to make a dandy captain, but he
can’t coach too. No one could. There’s the First
Team, and the Scrub Team and the Third Squad.
Maybe if Lanny didn’t do any playing himself he’d
get by all right, but what’s the good of a captain
who doesn’t play? Besides, he’s too good a halfback
to lose.”</p>
<p>“It’s too bad,” observed Dick sympathetically as,
having turned into Common Street, he now drew
the runabout to the side of the road where a gate
appeared in the high board fence surrounding the
athletic field. “By the way, where are you going to
play, Fudge?”</p>
<p>“Me?” Fudge grinned. “Oh, I’m out for a
guard position, but I’ll play anything they’ll let me.
I’m versatile, I am, Dick! Say, honest, do you
suppose Lanny’ll give me a show?”</p>
<p>“If you show him,” laughed Dick. “Seems,
though, you might be a bit inexperienced for the
First, Fudge.”</p>
<p>“I don’t expect to get on the First—this year.
I want to make the Scrub Team. They say you
get a lot of fun on the Scrub. Experience, too.
They can’t say I’m too light, anyway!”</p>
<p>“No, you’re not that,” agreed Dick as, having
stopped the engine, he secured his crutches, placed
the tips on the ground and swung himself from the
car in the wake of Fudge. “Hope you have luck,
anyway.”</p>
<p>Once past the gate Fudge, with a startled “They’ve
begun, Dick!” scurried off, leaving Dick to make
his way toward where a small group of fellows
were standing along the side line watching the first
practice of the season. Returning greetings, Dick
paused and looked around him. The gridiron had
been freshly marked out and the creamy-white lines
shone brilliantly in the afternoon sunlight against
the green turf. Down near the west goal the First
Squad was jogging about in signal practice in charge
of Chester Cottrell, last year’s quarter. Dick noted
that, as composed this afternoon, it was made up
entirely of last year’s first and second string players;
Grover, Horsford, Cable, Haley, Kent, Wayland,
Toll, McCoy, Hansard, Cottrell and Felker. Two
of the regulars were absent from the squad; Lanny
White himself, whom Dick soon espied working with
the green candidates, and Morris Brent, who last
year had played fullback in one or two of the principal
games and was this Fall the logical candidate for
the place. Doubtless, though, Dick reflected, Lanny
was keeping Morris out of the game on account of
his injured leg. Morris’s folks had strongly objected
to the boy’s taking part in football this season and
had appealed to the doctor to support them. The
latter, however, to everyone’s surprise, especially
Morris’s, had declared that he didn’t believe kicking a
football around would hurt that leg. It was evident,
though, that Lanny wasn’t going to take chances,
for Dick saw Morris, sweatered, hands in pockets,
speedily following in the wake of the Third Squad
with Lanny. The Scrubs were having practice by
themselves at the east end of the gridiron, and Dick
wondered who was in charge. With the idea of
finding out, he made his way leisurely along the side
line and, after traversing a few yards, was overtaken
by George Cotner, the manager, a squarely built
and stocky youth of eighteen with an alert countenance.</p>
<p>“Hello, Dick,” greeted Cotner. “Come out to see
the Orphans play?”</p>
<p>“Is that what you call them?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“That or the Coachless Wonders,” was the smiling
response. “Isn’t it the dickens about Farrell?
Mean trick to play on us, I say.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I guess he didn’t mean to play any trick.
Guess he’d much rather have stayed here in Clearfield
and coached the team than have been called
home to see his sick mother.”</p>
<p>Cotner shrugged his shoulders. “If he <em>was</em> called
home,” he said.</p>
<p>“Well, wasn’t he? That’s what I heard. What
do you mean?”</p>
<p>“I mean that Joe wasn’t getting much money
here, as you probably know, Dick, and he’s a pretty
good coach. His contract expired this Fall and it
hadn’t been renewed. The Athletic Committee was
ready to renew it, but Joe didn’t show up. Then
came that letter saying his mother was ill in Ireland
and he was going home to visit her. It just occurred
to me that maybe his mother was another school
somewhere and that he was after more money.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t think that of Joe,” answered Dick,
shaking his head. “Joe was always terribly loyal to
Clearfield, George. Besides, he could easily have
told the Committee if he thought he wasn’t getting
enough salary.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and the Committee would have told him that
he was getting all the school could afford to pay him.
Well, I don’t know anything about it, more than I’ve
been told, but that idea occurred to me. Lanny’s
worried stiff about it. He’s had three different men
on the string and not one of them has been landed.
Two wouldn’t think of the job at the salary and the
third had never done any football coaching. That
was Bert Cable’s man, a fellow over in Bridgeport
named Mooney. I guess we’d been moony if we’d
taken him. It’s tough on Lanny, though. He’s trying
to look after three squads at once and doesn’t
really know what to do with any of them. And now
Grayson is making a talk about getting along without
any coach at all! And some of the grads on the
Committee are more than half agreed with him.
They say we haven’t much money and what we have
we ought to use in fixing the field up and building
a new grandstand. Wouldn’t that jar you? Fancy
trying to turn out a winning eleven without a coach!
And this is our year to beat Springdale—if we’re
ever going to do it again.”</p>
<p>George Cotner scowled across the gridiron a
moment and then continued with his grievance.
“We’ve got pretty fair material this year, too, Dick,
and we ought to come out on top, especially if
Morris Brent comes around in good shape and turns
out the drop-kicker and punter he threatened to be
last year. But we ought to have a good coach to
look after him. Lanny’s afraid to let him practice
for fear something will happen to his bum leg again,
and afraid to keep him out of practice for fear he
won’t get in shape for Springdale. Even if Lanny
could coach the First Team, there ought to be someone
to look after the others. There’s the Scrub down
there running around like chickens with their heads
off, going through signals when they ought to be
handling the ball and learning the a, b, c’s. Harry
Partridge is trying to captain them, but he doesn’t
know anything about it. He’s a good guard, but
he’s never had any responsibility and he’s terribly
unhappy right now. Besides, hang it all, we ought
to be mapping out a campaign. But when I tell
Lanny that he looks wild and runs his hands
through his hair and says he has all he can attend to
without bothering with plans. Why, if we had——”</p>
<p>But Manager Cotner’s speech was rudely interrupted
by a football which, wandering erratically off
the field, collided violently with the small of his back.
By the time he had chased it and returned it at a
round-arm throw to Pete Robey he had lost the
thread of his discourse. The Scrub Team trotted
past at that moment and Dick answered the waving
hand of Gordon Merrick who was playing right half
on that eleven.</p>
<p>“Want to see you after practice,” called Gordon.
“Don’t go away. Important!”</p>
<p>“Me, too!” shouted Will Scott. “I want a ride
home just as much as he does, Dick!”</p>
<p>Dick laughed and turned again to George Cotner
who was ruffling the leaves of the red-covered memorandum
book he carried. “It seems to me,” he said,
“that some one of the graduates ought to come out
and coach.”</p>
<p>“Sure, but there aren’t any; any who know football
well enough to teach it, I mean. And that isn’t
all, either. A coach has got to know how to get the
work out of the fellows, and he’s got to be able to
plan like a—like a regular planner, and scheme like
a regular schemer. Take Joe Farrell, now. Joe
isn’t exactly a brainy fellow, and he isn’t what you’d
call well-educated, but, by Jove, Joe used to have
the whole season all mapped out long before practice
began. When he started he knew just what he was
going to work for, and he worked for it. And got
it—usually.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he was all right,” Dick agreed. “Wish he
was coming back. I suppose, though, if he does
come it’ll be too late for this season. Do you mean,
George, that there isn’t a high school graduate in
Clearfield able to coach the team? It doesn’t sound
possible.”</p>
<p>“Well, name one! Name one and I’ll go and
fetch him out here. All the good players have gone
away, I guess. Lanny and I got a catalogue the
other day and went through the alumnæ and
couldn’t find a football man in the lot; no one we
knew anything about, anyway. Of course, we might
get some of the fellows who are in college to come
back for a few days at a time and help, but that
wouldn’t cut much ice. No, sir, you’ve got to have
someone in charge, someone at the head. Even if he
doesn’t know an awful lot of football he’s <em>there</em>; if
you see what I mean.”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“I understand,” said Dick. “Wish I could think
of someone.”</p>
<p>“So do I. Wish I could. Just to show how
things get by when there’s no one around to take
charge, look at the dummy.”</p>
<p>“I don’t see it,” responded Dick, his gaze traveling
across to where the two uprights and cross-bar stood
empty.</p>
<p>“That’s just it. If Farrell had been here the
dummy would have been up and ready for use. I
never thought of it. Neither did Lanny. He told
the First Squad to go over and tackle and when they
got there there was nothing to tackle. It’s stowed
away in the gym.”</p>
<p>“Life is indeed filled with woe, George,” laughed
Dick.</p>
<p>“Well, it is,” grumbled the other, smiling a little
nevertheless. “Lanny jumped on me because the
old thing wasn’t hung.”</p>
<p>“Well, as manager of the football team—” began
Dick slyly.</p>
<p>“Oh, I know. I ought to have seen to it. But
there you are. I never had seen to it and didn’t think
of it. Everything’s the same way. We haven’t got
balls enough, we’re short of blankets and—and
everything! I’m going to resign if we don’t get a
coach inside of a week!”</p>
<p>“I dare say you will have one,” said Dick soothingly.
“Someone will turn up, you’ll see.”</p>
<p>“Where from?” grunted George. “Maybe you’d
like the job, Dick?”</p>
<p>“Why, I don’t know,” replied the other thoughtfully.
“Perhaps—perhaps I should, George. I
might think it over.”</p>
<p>Cotner laughed, and then, seeing Dick’s sober
countenance, said hurriedly: “Well, I dare say you
could do it, by Jove! The fellows tell me you managed
that baseball club to the King’s taste, Dick.
Still, I don’t suppose you know much football.”</p>
<p>“No more football than baseball, George, and I’ve
never played either.”</p>
<p>“No, of course not.” George shot a puzzled
glance at him. “Well, you knew enough baseball,
it seems. As far as I’m concerned, I’d be mighty
willing to see you try it, Dick!”</p>
<p>“Thanks. Maybe if no one else turns up I’ll apply
for the position.” Dick ended smilingly and George
Cotner wondered how seriously the other meant what
he had said.</p>
<p>“After all,” he said doubtfully, and apparently
with a desire to be pleasant, “a coach doesn’t need
to have been any great shucks himself as a player.
It’s—it’s brains and—leadership that do the business,
I guess.”</p>
<p>“They help, I fancy,” replied Dick, gravely. “I
think Lanny is yelling for you, George.”</p>
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