“Swords or pistols!” echoed Duncan, sufficiently aroused to sit up in his chair. “What have swords and pistols to do with it?” “They are the recognized weapons for settling affairs of honor. Perhaps you were ignorant of the fact.” Shirley spoke with scornful dignity. “This isn’t an affair of honor, it’s a mere difference of opinion,” protested Duncan. “You wouldn’t fight over that, I hope.” “I’d fight over insults!” Duncan laughed aloud, reckless of the fact that his laugh added to the affront. “What good does fighting do? If you should wound me with a sword, it wouldn’t make the truth of what I said any less true, and if I should put a bullet into you, it wouldn’t drive out the insult. I say that the man who fights duels is a barbarian. If I fight, I make myself a barbarian.” “Swords or pistols!” insisted Shirley, with a dogged indifference to logic. “Neither,” answered Peck. “Then you are not a gentleman, and are a coward. You have my contempt.” “Hold on there!” exclaimed Peck, dropping his smile and his air of pleasantry. “Who’s calling names now?” “They are names usually applied to a man who insults you and won’t give you satisfaction.” “If you think I owe you satisfaction for our difference of opinion, you must owe me something for calling me a contemptible coward,” announced Duncan, in serious tones. “I’ll propose—” he hesitated, and approached a step nearer Shirley; “I’ll propose bowie-knives!” Shirley recoiled. “I am not used to bowie-knives.” “Nor I to swords and pistols,” said Duncan. The fairness of this answer appealed to the man of honor. “Then we must find some other way,” he said. “Insults can only be wiped out with blood. We’ll play chess, and the one who’s beaten will commit suicide.” At this proposition Duncan stared hard. For a moment he harbored the suspicion that Shirley was chaffing him, not he Shirley. But the boy’s solemn face and tragic manner immediately dispelled this illusion. “I don’t play chess,” Duncan answered with plausible earnestness. “Let’s make it golf, and leave to the one who’s defeated the option of committing suicide or not. We can consider him dead anyway.” “I don’t play golf.” At this point Woods, seeing a chance to bring the deadly affair to a bloodless conclusion, interrupted with a shrewd proposal. “Why not run it off? Both of you can run. Make the course a certain number of times round the wooden track, and let the fellow that’s beaten set up fudges and stuff for the principals and seconds. I call that a very honorable arrangement.” “It isn’t quite regular,” remarked Shirley, doubtfully. “Properly there ought to be some blood shed.” “If I’m beaten, I’ll apologize,” said Duncan. “I think I can accept without that,” said Shirley, with magnanimity. “The one that’s beaten sets up for the crowd; don’t forget that!” Woods interposed. “Whose second am I going to be?” “You can have him and I’ll get some one else, or I’ll take him and you can have some one else.” Duncan was truly generous. “I’ll take him,” said Shirley. “Then, sir, I will send my second to wait upon yours and arrange for the details of the combat. I have the honor, sir, to wish you good afternoon. We shall meet again!” This grand peroration safely and pompously delivered, Duncan stalked solemnly away. So much time had been consumed in this highly interesting interview with Shirley that Duncan postponed until after recitation the pleasure of retailing the whole story to Bruce, and giving him the chance to act as second. On the way home he remembered that Bruce was to be in “I never saw anything so funny as that in the algebra,” remarked Sam, observing his merry room-mate over his reading glasses. “It isn’t in the algebra, it isn’t in any book,” cried Duncan, gleefully. “Nothing like it ever happens in a book. I’m engaged in an affair of honor; I’m going to fight a duel!” “A duel!” exclaimed Sam, aghast. “With whom?” “Oh, a fellow you don’t know, in Odlin House.” “When?” “To-morrow, on the running track behind the gym. Will you be my second?” The invitation was due to a momentary impulse of friendliness. Archer was a track expert and a decent fellow; why not let him in? Duncan stood with hands in trousers pockets, smiling roguishly and watching the expression on Archer’s face. Appalled by the grim picture called up by the word “duel,” and puzzled to reconcile this conception with Peck’s evident gayety, Sam knew not whether to accept or refuse. Then there recurred to his mind the serious incident of the last term, when Kendrick had sprung instantly to his help, and he answered in Kendrick’s own words, “Sure I will!” “That’s right,” said Peck. “There’ll be no end of sport. You see—oh, hang that bell!—I’ll tell you all about it after class.” At half-past two the next afternoon, when the outskirts of the gymnasium were clear of idlers, The third lap proved fierce beyond all expectation. Shirley, game to the last, clenched his fists and lashed himself on. Duncan, stung by the fear of an ignominious end to his adventure, plying his legs to the limit of his strength, with dry mouth and dizzy head panted after his rival. He gained but slowly. On the back stretch he was still five yards behind. As they came down toward the finish line, two wobbly, tottering figures “I’m blest if I know!” answered Woods. “I forgot to see. Who got it, Archer?” “I didn’t notice,” said Sam. “It wasn’t my business to judge the finish. I was getting ready to catch this fellow.” “They were right together anyway. We’ll have to call it a tie,” decided the judge. “That means we don’t get anything,” observed Archer. “We’ll run it—over again—” panted Shirley, over his shoulder, as Woods led him away to the gymnasium. “No, we won’t!” whispered Duncan in a broken It developed in the course of the afternoon that there had been unseen witnesses of the spectacle, and these witnesses not only spread highly colored versions of what they had seen, but also asked rude, saucy questions of the actors. The fellows in Odlin House cleverly pried certain admissions out of Shirley, guessed at what they did not know, and put in circulation a tale which was received with greedy ears and grinning faces. Duncan bounced into 7 Hale in the middle of the evening and planted himself, an outraged victim of treachery, before Archer’s chair. “What did you want to go and blab all this thing for?” he began, glowering fiercely at his room-mate’s startled face. “I didn’t,” replied Sam, quickly. “I haven’t said a word about it.” “It’s all over school. Some one’s been giving it away. They say it was you.” Sam tossed his book upon the table with a Duncan’s wrath gave way to gloom. “Some one’s done it, anyway. They’re all joshing me about it.” “I can’t help that,” said Sam. “What do you care? Laugh it off.” “I’ve been laughing it off. I’ve laughed till my face aches, but that doesn’t make me any happier. Do you know, I could have sworn I was ahead of that fellow at the finish. Why didn’t you keep your eyes open?” “I was thinking of you, not of the race. You looked as if you were all in, ten feet before you got to me. I expected to see you drop.” Sam waited for Peck to reply, but Peck offered no comment. “As a matter of fact,” continued Sam, frankly, “the last time I did notice your positions, Shirley was a good yard ahead.” “I’m dead sure I beat him at the finish,” said Duncan, obstinately. “I wish I’d had Bruce there!” |