Ben Badger came to the shore edge
of the ice, megaphone in hand announcing in stentorian
tones:
“Our friends are safe –even
jolly. The sports will now go on!”
First on the card was a free-for-all
dash of a half mile, standing start. The trophy
was a regulation target revolver.
Badger, of the first class, and Purcell,
of the sophomore, held the lead and all but tied each
other at the outset. Third in order came Stearns,
the agile little right end of the eleven. When
half the distance had been traveled it was noticed
that Stearns was creeping up on the leaders.
“Look out, Ben, or the little
fellow will get you!” roared friends.
Stearns continued to gain, slowly.
Purcell dropped back to third place. None of
the other eight in the race seemed likely to do anything
effective.
“A little more steam, Ben!”
“Stearns, you can get it!”
In the last eighth of the distance
Stearns made good. Summoning all his football
wind and speed the little right end closed and shot
ahead. Not once in the remainder of the course
did Ben Badger quite catch up with his smaller opponent.
Stearns won by some fifteen yards.
The racers came slowly back, breathing
harder than usual. As soon as jovial Ben felt
equal to the task of further announcing, he picked
up the megaphone, shouting:
“As I didn’t win, all
the further events are postponed!”
There was stupefied silence for a
few moments. Grown people and the students looked
from one to another. Then a guffaw started that
swelled to a chorus of laughter.
“The next event on the card,”
called Ben, satisfied with the effect of his joke,
“is the free-for-all fancy skating event.
The contestants will come before the judges one at
a time. Each entrant is limited to two minutes,
actual time.”
There should have been some girls
entered in this event, but there were none.
Six H.S. boys from the different classes came forward.
“Fred Ripley loses his chance,” muttered
some one.
“He had his chance.
A fellow who prefers to skate into the freeze is
counted out,” replied Thomp.
Just as the contestants were moving
out Greg Holmes came hurrying down to the ice.
“Am I too late?” he called.
“Not if you think you’ve got anything
good,” replied Badger.
Greg promptly proceeded to put on
his skates, covertly watching the performance of the
first fellow to show off. It was good work
that Greg watched, but he thought he could beat it.
“You’ll have to go last
on the list,” nodded Ben, as Greg came skating
up.
Greg merely nodded, though inwardly
he grinned. “That just suits me,”
he told himself. “The fellow who skates
last will be freshest in the minds of the judges.”
When it came Greg’s turn he
avoided most of the fancy figures that the other fellows
had shown off amid much applause. Still, Greg
showed a bewildering assortment of “eights,”
“double-eights” and some magnificent work
along the “turn promenade” order that
Ripley had been doing before the accident.
Then Greg came in, promenading backward on his skates.
“I’m going to fall,”
he called to the judges, “but it will be intentional.”
“Fall it is, then,” nodded
Sam Edgeworth, one of the judges.
Greg was moving jauntily along, still
doing the backward promenade. Suddenly one of
his skates appeared to catch against the other.
Down went Greg, backwards. Despite his announcement
the moment before, a sympathetic murmur went up from
many of the onlookers.
But Greg, sitting down suddenly as
he did, pivoted around like a streak. Throwing
his hands back of his head, he sprang to his feet.
At the first he was doing the forward promenade.
The whole manoeuvre, including the fall, had occupied
barely four seconds. Now, wheeling into the back
promenade Greg glided before the judges.
“Time,” called the holder of the watch.
“I’m willing,” nodded
Greg. “And I’m willing any contestant
who wants should try my stunt before the verdict is
given.”
The conference between the judges
did not last long and Greg got the decision.
“The freshman mile will come
along later,” announced Ben, through the megaphone.
“The committee want to put in a freak race first.”
The “freak” was a quarter
mile, nearly go-as-you-please. In this race
each contestant had on his left skate, but no skate
on the right foot. The contestant who reached
the finish line first won –“even
if he slides on his back,” Ben announced, sagely.
Tom Reade hurried onto the ice as
one of the entrants in this race. He had practiced
it well, and won it easily, securing a silver medal.
Greg’s prize had been a gold medal, but over
this fact Tom allowed himself to feel no envy or disappointment.
Several other events came along in
quick succession. Everyone seemed to forget
that the freshman mile had not yet been skated.
It was called last on the list.
Just as the skaters were moving forward some one
detected a figure hurrying down the slope over the
snow.
“Here comes Dick Prescott!”
“Is he going into the race after all?”
A lively burst of cheers greeted the
freshman as he reached the edge of the ice.
Dick looked as cheery and as rosy
as ever. No onlooker could see that Prescott’s
late adventure had injured him in the least.
“Going to race, Dick?” called some one.
“Surest thing,” laughed
the freshman, “if I can find my skates.
If not, I’m going to try to borrow a pair of
the right size.”
“Here are your skates,”
called Laura Bentley, gliding forward over the ice.
“I picked them up for you, and I’ve been
holding ’em ever since.
“That’s what I call mighty
good of you,” glowed Dick. “Thank
you a thousand times.”
Dick sat down on a wooden box.
He could have had the services of half a dozen seniors
to fasten on his skates, but he preferred to do it
for himself.
Clamps adjusted, and skates tested,
Dick struck off leisurely, going up before the starter
and judges. These were grouped near the starting
line.
“Standing start,” announced
Ben. “Each man exactly to the line.
Pistol signal. False starts barred, and the usual
penalties for fouling. Get on line, all!”
Then the starter moved forward, pistol in hand.
“On your marks!”
“Get set!”
Bang!
Dick, at the left end of the line,
crouched forward somewhat. Nearly the whole of
his right runner rested on the ice. His left
foot was well forward, the toe of the skate dug well
into the ice. His right arm pointed ahead, his
left behind.
Crack! At the sound of the shot
Dick let his right foot spring into the air.
As it came down, ahead, he gave a vigorous thrust
with his left. The style of start was his own,
but it worked to a charm. A hearty cheer went
up when the spectators saw that Dick was leading by
five yards.
At the first turn, however, Prescott’s
adherents –and they were many this
afternoon –felt a thrill of disappointment.
Walter Hewlett, whose skating had been strong and
steady so far, passed Dick at the turn.
“Hardly fair, after all,”
murmured several. “Of course, after
what he’s been through, no matter how much nerve
Prescott may have, he can’t be anything like
up to his usual form.”
Had Dick heard them he would have
smiled. He knew that the skating was warming
him up and taking away whatever of the chill had been
left.
As they neared the second turn the
distance between Dick and Hewlett was about fifteen
yards. The other freshmen were far enough behind
both not to appear to count.
Now Prescott turned on steam.
He reached the second turn only eight yards behind
Hewlett, and that latter freshman made the poorer
turn.
Down the home stretch now! Dick
began to work deep breathing for all he was worth.
Instead of taking slow, deep breaths, he breathed
rapidly, pumping his lungs full of air.
That rapid deep breathing started
his heart to working faster, sent the blood bounding
through his arteries.
It would have been exhausting if carried
out too long. But now, on what was left of the
home stretch, it acted almost like pumping oxygen
into his lungs.
Swiftly the distance melted.
“Hurrah!” rang the yell. “There
goes Prescott ahead!”
Not only ahead, but gaining in the
lead. Five yards to the good, then ten, twelve,
fifteen. Dick Prescott shot over the finish
line a good eighteen yards ahead. Then the victor
came to a stop, panting but happy.
Five minutes later, when all the congratulations
were over, he skated up beside Laura Bentley.
“You saved my skates for me,
Laura, and brought me luck all through. I want
you to have the first ride on that toboggan.”