Young Blake had now been in Euston
two years, and was, among the boys, decidedly the
most popular fellow in the place. He was a slightly-built
chap; but with muscles like steel wires, and possessed
of wonderful agility and powers of endurance.
He excelled in all athletic sports, was a capital
boxer, and at the same time found little difficulty
in maintaining a good rank in his classes. He
had taken to bicycling from the very first, and quickly
became an expert rider, though he had never gone in
for racing. It was therefore a great surprise,
even to his friends, when, on the very day before
the race meeting, he entered his name for the event
that was to result in the winning or losing of the
Railroad Cup. It would not have been so much
of a surprise had anybody known of his conversation,
a few weeks before, with Eltje Vanderveer, the railroad
president’s only daughter. She was a few
months younger than Rod, and ever since he had jumped
into the river to save her pet kitten from drowning,
they had been fast friends.
So, when in talking of the approaching
meeting, Eltje had said, “How I wish you were
a racer, and could win our cup, Rod,” the boy
instantly made up his mind to try for it. He
only answered, “Do you? Well, perhaps I
may go in for that sort of thing some time.”
Then he began training, so secretly
that nobody but Dan, a stable boy on his uncle’s
place and Rod’s most ardent admirer, was aware
of it; but with such steady determination that on
the eventful day of the great race his physical condition
was very nearly perfect.
He was on hand at the race track bright
and early; for, as captain of the club, Rod had a
great deal to do in seeing that everything went smoothly,
and in starting on time the dozen events that preceded
the race for the Railroad Cup, which came last on
the programme.
While these earlier events were being
run off Snyder Appleby, faultlessly attired, sat in
the grand stand beside his adopted father, and directly
behind President Vanderveer and his pretty daughter,
to whom he tried to render himself especially agreeable.
He listened respectfully to the Major’s stories,
made amusing comments on the racers for Eltje’s
benefit, and laughed heartily at the puns that her
father was given to making.
“But how about your own race,
Mr. Appleby?” asked Eltje. “Don’t
you feel any anxiety concerning it? It is to
be the hardest one of all, isn’t it?”
Immensely flattered at being addressed
as Mister Appleby, Snyder replied carelessly, “Oh,
yes! of course I am most anxious to win it, especially
as you are here to see it run; but I don’t anticipate
much difficulty. Bliss is a hard man to beat;
but I have done it before, and I guess I can do it
again.”
“Then you don’t think Rodman has any chance
of winning?”
“Well, hardly. You see
this is his first race, and experience goes a long
way in such affairs. Still, he rides well, and
it wouldn’t surprise me to see him make a good
third at the finish.”
Eltje smiled as she answered, “Perhaps
he will finish third; but it would surprise me greatly
to see him do so.”
This pretty girl, with the Dutch name,
had such faith in her friend Rod, that she did not
believe he would ever be third, or even second, where
he had once made up his mind to be first.
Failing to catch her real meaning,
Snyder replied: “Of course he may not do
as well as that; but he ought to. As captain of
the club he ought to sustain the honor of his position,
you know. If he doesn’t feel able to take
at least third place in a five-starter race, he should
either resign, or keep out of the racing field altogether.
Now I must leave you; for I see I am wanted.
You’ll wish me good luck, won’t you?”
“Yes,” answered Eltje
mischievously, “I wish you all the luck you
deserve.”
Forced to be content with this answer,
but wondering if there was any hidden meaning in it,
Snyder left the grand stand, and strolled leisurely
around to the dressing-room, lighting a cigarette as
he went.
“Hurry up!” shouted Rod,
who was the soul of punctuality and was particularly
anxious that all the events of this, his first race
meeting, should be started on time. “Hurry
up. Our race will be called in five minutes,
and you’ve barely time to dress for it.”
“Where’s my wheel?”
asked Snyder, glancing over the dozen or more machines
stacked at one side of the room, but without seeing
his own.
“I haven’t seen it,”
answered Rod, “but I supposed you had left it
in some safe place.”
“So I did. I left it in
the club house, where there would be no chance of
anybody tampering with it; for I’ve heard of
such things happening, but I ordered Dan to have it
down here in time for the race.”
“Do you mean to insinuate ”
began Rod hotly; but controlling himself, he continued
more calmly, “I didn’t know that you had
given Dan any orders, and I sent him over to the house
on an errand a few minutes ago. Never mind, though,
I’ll go for your machine myself, and have it
here by the time you are dressed.”
Without waiting for a reply, the young
captain started off on a run, while his adopted cousin
began leisurely to undress, and get into his racing
costume. By the time he was ready, Rod had returned
leading the beautiful machine, which he had not ridden
for fear lest some accident might happen to it.
Then the race was called, and a pistol
shot sent the five young athletes bending low over
their handle-bars spinning down the course. They
all wore the club colors of scarlet and white; but
from Rod’s bicycle fluttered the bit of blue
ribbon that Dan had been sent to the young captain’s
room to get, and which he had hastily knotted to the
handle-bar of his machine just before starting.
Eltje Vanderveer smiled and flushed slightly as she
noticed it, and then all her attention was concentrated
upon the varying fortunes of the flying wheelmen.
It was a five-mile race, and therefore
a test of endurance rather than of strength or skill.
There were two laps to the mile, and for seven of these
Snyder Appleby held an easy lead. His name was
heard above all others in the cheering that greeted
each passing of the grand stand, though the others
were encouraged to stick to him and not give it up
yet. That two of them had no intention of giving
it up, was shown at the end of the eighth lap, when
the three leading wheels whirled past the grand stand
so nearly abreast that no advantage could be claimed
for either one.
Now the cheering was tremendous; but
the names of Rod Blake and Billy Bliss were tossed
from mouth to mouth equally with that of Snyder Appleby.
At the end of nine laps the champion of two years had
fallen hopelessly behind. His face wore a distressed
look, and his breath came in painful gasps. Cigarettes
had done their work with him, and his wind was gone.
The two leaders were still abreast; but Rod had obtained
the inside position, and if he could keep up the pace
the race was his.
Eltje Vanderveer’s face was
pale, and her hands were clinched with the intense
excitement of the moment. Was her champion to
win after all? Was her bit of blue ribbon to
be borne triumphantly to the front? Inch by inch
it creeps into a lead. Now they are coming down
the home stretch. The speed of that last spurt
is wonderful. Nothing like it has ever been seen
at the wind-up of a five-mile race on the Euston track.
Looking at them, head on, it is for a few seconds
hard to tell which is leading. Then a solitary
shout for Rod Blake is heard. In another moment
it has swelled into a perfect roar of cheering, and
there is a tempest of tossing hats, handkerchiefs,
and parasols.
Rod Blake has won by a length, Billy
Bliss is second, Snyder Appleby was such a bad third
that he has gone to the dressing-room without finishing,
and the others are nowhere.
The speed of the winning wheels cannot
be checked at once, and as they go shooting on past
the stand, the exhausted riders are seen to reel in
their saddles. They would have fallen but for
the willing hands outstretched to receive them.
Dan is the first to reach the side of his adored young
master, and as the boy drops into his arms, the faithful
fellow says:
“You’ve won it, Mister
Rod! You’ve won it fair and square; but
you want to look out for Mister Snyder. I heerd
him a-saying bad things about you when he passed me
on that last lap, and I’m afeard he means some
kind of mischief.”