“HAVE you your keys, Roy?” asked Bracebridge. “Yes, here they are.” Henning moved to the end of the table where the drawer was, and picked out the key which was to unlock the table drawer. By this time all were engaged in a general discussion as to the kind of pitcher's cage which should be procured. “I can not make up my mind,” said Roy, as he inserted the key into the lock, “whether to recommend the committee to get a wire backstop, or a canvas one.”He had now opened the drawer and was feeling mechanically for his subscription book. “I think a canvas one will be better because it will not be so hard on the balls, and be less noisy, too. Why! where is my book—Ah! here it is.” He drew out from the drawer the book containing the list of donors. In the back of the book Henning had made a rough sketch of what he supposed was wanted as a pitcher's cage. He showed it to the boys. “Who's the artist?”asked Jack. “Your humble servant,” replied Roy. “H'm! Perspective all out. It looks two miles long. I guess the grease-paint man of last night could do better than that.” “That's what you say, Jack,” answered Roy good-naturedly; "I would like to see you do as well, anyway.” Jack Beecham was not in earnest. Henning had caught him winking to the others while decrying his work. “Well,” continued Roy, as he put his hand again into the drawer, “I would not ask Mr. John Beauchamps—to draw—for me—a—a barn door—Great heavens! Where's that money! I can't feel it anywhere in the drawer,” All this time Henning's forearm was in the drawer and his fingers were nervously searching for the bag. “Give yourself more room. Open the drawer wider, you goose,” said Beecham. Henning pushed back his chair so suddenly that it fell. He pulled out the drawer to its full length. Then taking out the contents of the drawer he put them excitedly on the table. There was a large leather blotter, with pouches, a pad of athletic club letterheads, a lot of spoiled half sheets of foolscap, about a quire of clean paper, and a few small miscellaneous articles. “Did you have the money in a purse?”asked Bracebridge, who could not keep his anxiety out of his voice. “No; it was in one if those yellow bank canvas bags.” “Look again through the pile of papers and be sure it is not there.” They all searched. The money was gone. Those who saw Henning at that moment pitied him from the bottom of their hearts. For a few seconds he stood as one dazed. When he realized the force of the catastrophe which had happened to him he turned ghastly pale. His lips became livid. Around them were distinct white lines. For a moment the six boys stood in perfect Henning stood as one dazed, not at present seeming to realize all of the untoward thing that had happened to him. It seemed to him as if he were under water and could not breathe. He panted for breath. A moment or two later a reaction set in and the blood rushed to his head, making his sight waver and his temples throb, and reddening his face to crimson. He felt as if he were falling forward, yet he remained motionless. “Fetch Mr. Shalford, Ernest, but tell him nothing. Say we want him at once,” whispered Bracebridge to young Winters. The boy slipped out noiselessly and it is doubtful if any one except the last speaker noticed or knew of his departure. In half a minute Mr. Shalford came in. As he pushed the door open he saw the standing group, and began to laugh. “High tragics, eh? Are you all posing for a tableau? Where's the camera? What! What on earth is the matter with you boys? Speak some of you; what has happened?” They certainly did look a lot of frightened boys. Suddenly Roy regained the power of speech. With a full realization of his own predicament he threw up his hands in a despairing attitude. “Oh, oh, oh! I shall be branded as a thief,” Then he dropped on his knees and buried his face in his arms on the table. “That's quite dramat——”again began Mr. Shalford, but suddenly checked himself. He now saw there was something woefully wrong. A moment before Roy Henning had a strong inclination to burst out laughing at his ridiculous position, but his self-control was too great to permit him to give way to the nervous hilarity of misfor Who can blame him? Roy was as yet only a boy, after all. At present he lacked the stability and poise of later years. Fifteen or twenty years later he would have borne the crash of a financial misfortune with a certain kind of equanimity. But he was young yet, living in boy-world, with all a boy's thoughts and feelings. And he wept. Do not blame him. It is more than probable that under the same circumstances you and I, and a hundred others, if we ever had a spark of boy nature, or boy feeling about us, would have done the same, and not thought it derogatory either. Mr. Shalford, putting his hand on Roy's shoulder in a kindly way, said: “What is wrong, Roy? What has happened? Your friends do not want to see you in this way.” The poor boy raised his head from his arm. “It's gone. The money's gone. My character is ruined,” “That is not so, my boy. Be sensible. No one in his senses will ever accuse you. How much was taken?” “All, sir, except seven dollars in my pocket.” “But how much?” “Seventy-two dollars.” “Dear me! dear me! Seventy-two dollars! Why did you keep so large a sum in a place like this, Roy?” “If I had a particle of common-sense I would have taken Bracebridge's advice long ago. He recommended putting it away safely two weeks ago, but “Don't say that, my boy. Come, cheer up. There is not a shadow of moral wrong for you in the whole affair. It's a misfortune for you, truly. You can bear that bravely. We may catch the thief yet.” “Yes; but, sir, I shall be suspected. Many fellows will point the finger at me. Oh!—oh! I think I had better go home and give up all my plans.” Give up all his plans! In the bitterness of his heart he thought that all was ruined, that the secret hopes of a vocation were now irretrievably lost, character gone, opportunities wasted. Well, Roy Henning was not the first and will not be the last of those who, when sudden misfortune comes, grow exceedingly pessimistic and want to give up. This was the first great grief of Roy's life. All the petty annoyances he had suffered from Garrett and his undesirable clique sank into insignificance in the face of this overwhelming calamity. Oh, why had he not followed Bracebridge's advice, and, days ago, put the money out of his own keeping! “Yes,” he said again, “I think I had better leave——” “No, no, no, no, Roy,” came the chorus from his friends. “If you do so, now, Roy,” said Mr. Shalford, who motioned silence to the others, “you make the mistake of your life. You give your enemies—I mean those ill-disposed toward you, if there are any—a free field, and unlimited opportunities to vilify you. You can not, you must not go.” “But I must.” “No, no, you must not, Roy.” “But I must, sir. Oh, I can't stand it,” “Well, if you must, think over your friends' sorrow at such a course.” “Sir?”asked the bewildered boy, not at all understanding. “I say, think of our sorrow, your friend's sorrow at such a step. And, Roy, think of your mother's sorrow! A son with a blighted name! Don't you see that by running away now you make a tacit confession of some guilt? No, you must not go,” Long ago Mr. Shalford had surmised what were Henning's intentions and aspirations for a future career. He saw this affair would be an occasion of trying the very soul of the boy before him, and that it would either make or break him. He thought, and correctly, that he knew the character of the youth now in such deep trouble, and he was anxious that he should make no false step. He looked Roy straight in the eye, and said seriously: “Definitely, you must not go,” and then, as calmly as he had spoken before, he made use of a somewhat enigmatic expression: “Eagles live on mountain heights where storms are strongest.” A quick glance from Henning told the prefect that the boy understood him, and the saying also told the boy that the prefect had divined his intention accurately. Mr. Shalford had thought the words and the glance would be understood by himself and Henning only. In this he was mistaken. Two boys, who had overheard Roy's words to the chaplain at the Little Sisters, understood perfectly. “Very well, sir. I stay,” said Roy. “That is right; that is sensible,” said Mr. Shalford, but in a moment Henning burst out, with an agony in his voice that was piteous: “Oh, the shame of being suspected! What shall I do! What shall I do,” “Let me think what is best to do,” said Mr. Shalford, who walked up and down the room once or “What you will do now is this, all of you. You—Henning, Bracebridge, Beecham, and Shealey, will go out at once for a long tramp, buy your dinners somewhere, and do not come home till dark. Have you plenty of money?” “Yes, sir; yes, sir, lots of it,” answered the delighted three who were not in trouble. “I don't think——”began the despondent Henning. “That's right; just now do not think,” said the energetic prefect. “It will do no good. Walk and talk instead. Come home tired out, all of you.” Three out of the group were enthusiastic over the plan. But there were two other very long faces just then. George McLeod and Ernest Winters were not included in the generous proposal. “I say, Mr. Shalford, may not the kids come, too?”asked Tom Shealey. “The kids! Whom do you mean?”and the prefect turned and saw two very disconsolate faces. He thought for a moment. “Let—me—see. Records clear, Ernest? George?” “Yes, sir,” answered the two, their hopes rising. “How were your notes in the Christmas competitions?” “Pretty good, sir, eighty-two,” answered Ernest. “Fine, sir, mine were eighty-nine,” answered McLeod for himself. In the meantime Mr. Shalford had caught Henning's eye. By a slight raising of his eyelids he wordlessly inquired if the company of these smaller “Very well, then,” the prefect said, “I suppose you both may go, too, but it's only another weakness on my part, letting small boys out all day. You big boys must take care of them.” “Whoop,” shouted Ernest vociferously, and even the disconsolate Henning smiled at Ernest's resemblance in voice and manner to Claude, his brother, especially under stress of any pleasurable excitement. “Of course I will set about investigating this money matter at once,” resumed Mr. Shalford, “and you six here had better keep the whole matter a secret, at least for a time.” This injunction was useless. The prefect, this time, had reckoned without his host. At his own exclamation of surprise at the discovery of the theft, several boys who were in the large playroom, crowded around the door, unobserved by the prefect, whose back was toward them. Already the fact was known in the yard to some extent. Already had little excited groups begun to discuss the startling event. |