<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XX.<br/> <small>WHILE THE GAME WAS PLAYED.</small></h2></div>
<p>On a jutting ledge far up the side of Ragged Mountain,
where he could overlook the village, harbor, open
sea and hilly country to the westward, a lonely boy sat
astride a spur of the blue rock, gazing downward at a
dark object crawling steadily along the brown thread of
a road which led from the village, crooked about the shores
of the amethyst lake and wound into the distance that
swallowed it from sight.</p>
<p>The boy was Don Scott, who had made feverish haste
to get out of Rockspur ahead of the football team, leaving
his overcoat at the little railroad station which he
passed on the Lobsterville side. From the station he had
followed the railroad to the foot of the mountain, where
he found a dimly-defined path that led him, panting and
toiling, upward to the ledge on which he was now
perched.</p>
<p>At his feet lay Lake Glenwood, seeming near enough
for him to hurl a pebble into it with no great effort, although
he knew it was quite half-a-mile from the foot of
the mountain. His eyes had hastily followed the road
along the shore till they found, far beyond the middle
section of the lake and pursuing the stream that led off
from it, the dark object which he knew was the big buckboard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
carrying the members of the Rockspur Eleven to
Highland.</p>
<p>“There they go!” he panted. “Renwood is with them!
Bentley is with them! and I am here!”</p>
<p>He laughed bitterly, and then became silent as the wind
seemed to bring faintly to his ears the refrain of a familiar
song often sung by the boys on their way to a
game or returning from a victorious contest. He could
not distinguish the words, but the indistinct sound of the
chorus, like a momentary murmur of the wind, was
enough to cause those words to flash across his mind.</p>
<p>“Singing!” he cried, fiercely “Don’t be so sure you’ll
‘win to-day.’ You can’t tell. Anyhow, I hope you won’t!
I hope you’ll be beaten out of your boots!”</p>
<p>He sat there and watched till the buckboard disappeared
along with the brown road that had run to a
hiding place amid the woods and hills. Even then he did
not stir, but long after that he remained on the ledge, yet
without deriving any pleasure from the beauty of the
scene spread out before him in all the enchanting colors
which a river-threaded, lake-dotted, sea-edged landscape
reveals beneath the midday sun of early autumn.</p>
<p>At last he left the ledge and came slowly down the
mountain. He did not follow the path all the way to the
foot of the descent, but turned to the left, skirting the
base of Round Stone Cliff, where pleasure-seekers had
sent great stones shooting and bounding down the face
of the steep declivity, thundering over the lower slope<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
and crashing into the tangled thickets below, tearing
crooked paths through the woods to the point where they
were piled in confusion into a deep, dark ravine.</p>
<p>What if some unseen person, knowing nothing of his
presence below, were to start a huge bowlder rolling
from the top of the cliff as he made his way along its
base! He thought of that and laughed!</p>
<p>“Let ’em come!” he exclaimed. “I can dodge ’em!”</p>
<p>Nothing of the kind happened, however, which, without
doubt, for all of his confidence in his dodging ability,
was fortunate for him.</p>
<p>Beyond the cliff, after forcing his way through dense
and matted thickets, he came out into the Boxberry Pasture,
as it was called by the boys. This was an elevated
spot, where he could still look down on the harbor and
village. The pasture was a mass of stumps and rocks
and knolls, the latter being covered with interwoven
vines, which gave to his nostrils the smell of dried checkerberry,
plumes of which showed here and there in bright
red patches.</p>
<p>Crossing the pasture, he descended to the road that led
away to the Powder Mill Woods, where he felt that he
might be alone for the afternoon. He hoped that he
would not meet on the road any one who knew him, and,
to his satisfaction and relief, he did not.</p>
<p>The woods seemed dark and still when he first entered
them, and a feeling of loneliness beset him; yet there
was a subtle something about the peaceful stillness that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
soothed his troubled spirit with a gentle suggestion of
sadness that, strangely enough, gave him a sensation of
enjoyment.</p>
<p>Beneath his feet, where the trees were thick overhead,
the ground was damp and yielding, giving his footfall
no sound, save when a twig snapped with a muffled noise.
The air that he breathed was sweet with the odor of pine
and balsam and damp earth. The sunshine did not
glare before his eyes, and the dense shadows added to
the tranquillity he sought.</p>
<p>So he wandered through the “dim aisles of the woods,”
and after a time he found they were not so lonely and deserted
as they appeared. He paused to watch a tiny
black-hooded chickadee that was doing all kinds of gymnastic
tricks upon a bush, clinging to the side of a branch
one moment, hanging upside down the next, and constantly
on the move, now and then gleefully crying:
“Chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee.” He sat on a damp and rotting
log and observed a red-headed woodpecker rat-tat-tatting
away at the trunk of an old dead tree and saw a
squirrel skurrying along the ground. And the hours
slipped away with few disturbing thoughts of the football
game that was taking place in Highland.</p>
<p>When he was tired of wandering in the woods, he
sought the favorite spot by the Powder Mill Dam, where
he lay on the ground or sat on the rocks and watched a
speckled trout in a placid pool below the dam. So the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
afternoon passed, the sun dropped low, the shadows deepened
and night drew on.</p>
<p>In the dusk, he returned along the road that led toward
the village, the lights of which were beginning to gleam
through the gloom across the harbor. He did not wish
to appear in the village before the members of the eleven
returned from Highland, and he knew they could not get
back till some time after dark.</p>
<p>Reaching the Highland road, he paused a while, fully
satisfied that neither players nor spectators from Rockspur
had passed on the return journey. He sat on an old
stone wall and waited till two village boys on bicycles,
their lanterns making long white streaks of light on the
road before them, came along from the direction of
Highland. Although it was rather dark for him to make
out who they were by the aid of his eyes, he recognized
them by their voices, as they were talking about the
game while they sped swiftly past toward the crest of
Bloody Hill.</p>
<p>“Skinny Jones and Pug Andrews,” muttered Don, rising
from the wall and making for the road. “They’ve
come in ahead of the others, for Skinny is a scorcher.
There’s time enough to get over the bridge before the
buckboard comes along.”</p>
<p>But, as he was hurrying down the hill, there was a rattle
of carriage wheels behind him. He looked back and
saw a team come over the crest of the hill.</p>
<p>“That isn’t the buckboard,” he said.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>But it proved to be a carriage driven by no less a person
than Dolph Renwood, who was accompanied by his
sister and Dora Deland. The light from a window of
the railroad station at the foot of the hill shone out and
fell full on Don, so those in the carriage recognized him.</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Scott!” cried a musical voice, “I’m so sorry
we didn’t have you with us! If you had been there, I
truly believe we might have won the game.”</p>
<p>Then the carriage clattered on, and Don turned in to
the station to get his overcoat. He knew now that Rockspur
had lost, but somehow Zadia’s words had seemed to
rob him of the satisfaction he had expected to feel over
such a result.</p>
<p>“She spoke to me!” he murmured; “she spoke to me,
for all that she was with him!”</p>
<p>Obtaining the overcoat, he hastened down through
Lobsterville to the bridge, crossed the river, turned to the
left and hurried past the post-office on the corner, then
made his way home by a back street.</p>
<p>Don dreaded to meet his father, for he knew Dr. Scott
would question him about the game. It was his intention
to make a pretense of being so disgusted over the
result of the game that he did not wish to say anything
about it; but he wondered what he could do in case his
father pinned him down to tell the exact score.</p>
<p>Fortunately, his father was not at home, as he found
after slipping quietly into the house, and he learned from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
his aunt that the doctor had been called to a neighboring
town to consult over a critical case.</p>
<p>“He said he might not get home before eight or nine
o’clock,” said the thoughtful old soul, who had supper
ready to put on the table. “I s’pose you’re awful hungry?
You didn’t get no legs nor arms broke to-day, did you?”</p>
<p>“No, I didn’t get hurt at all.”</p>
<p>“Fortunate—fortunate, indeed! I didn’t know but
you’d come home dead.” Then, after a pause, “I s’pose
you beat the Highlanders?”</p>
<p>“No; they beat us.”</p>
<p>“I declare!” cried Aunt Ella, sympathetically, stopping
half way from the kitchen door to the dining-room table,
the teapot in one hand and a plate of warm rolls in the
other. “Now, that’s too bad! I’m real sorry!”</p>
<p>“And I’m real hungry. Just hustle on the grub, Aunt
Ella, and see me wreak havoc and destruction on it.”</p>
<p>“You don’t seem to feel half as bad about losing as I
thought you would,” said she, as she complied with his
request. “It’s not like you, for you used to feel awful cut
up when you got beat at baseball.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, we’ll even this up with Highland all right
next game,” asserted Don, sitting down to the table.
“It’s no use crying over spilled milk.”</p>
<p>“You never cry, but you do feel bad, and this is the
first time I ever saw you like this. I don’t understand
it.”</p>
<p>Don came near laughing aloud, but repressed the inclination<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
with an effort. When he had satisfied his hunger
he went up to his room. He felt like going out to see
if he could not find somebody to give him the particulars
of the game, but his pride caused him to decide not to
pursue such a course, as he did not wish any of his former
companions to think he would take that much interest
in the affairs of the eleven.</p>
<p>Some boys in Don’s position would have sought the
defeated players for the purpose of jeering at them and
deriding them, and it must be confessed that Scott was
strongly tempted to do so; but he decided that it would
cut them far more if he made a pretension of absolute
and utter indifference, and in this he was right. A person
who can deport himself with an air of indifference and
unconcern toward those whom he dislikes has not only
won a victory over himself and his natural inclinations
to show scorn or hatred for his enemies, but he causes
those enemies to feel that he considers them of such small
consequence that he does not even take the trouble to
become annoyed or offended at them. In the long run,
indifference is a keener weapon than open scorn and
hatred.</p>
<p>So Don remained at home, seeking to pass the evening
as best he could. Wishing to do some writing, and finding
in his desk no pens to suit him, he went down into
his father’s office. Having lighted the hanging lamp, he
sat down at the doctor’s open desk, and there he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
writing busily some time later when a gentle tapping
sounded on the window near his elbow. Looking round,
he saw the outlines of a face close to the glass and recognized
Leon Bentley, who was peering in at him with a
smirking grin of conciliation and friendliness.</p>
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<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
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