<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br/> <small>LANNY EXPLAINS</small></SPAN></h2>
<p class="cap">Dick was a very busy person those days. He
had not deceived himself into thinking that
coaching the High School Football Team
would entail but little time and effort. His mistake
had been in underestimating the amount of labor and
time involved. Actual outdoor work took up a good
two hours and a half every day save Sunday. Then
at least five evenings a week Lanny and George Cotner,
and often one or other of the players besides,
met at his house and discussed progress, made plans,
corrected mistakes, worked out formations and plays
and conducted a sort of general football conference.
This lasted anywhere from one to two hours, and
after the others had gone Dick had to settle down
at his books. Fortunately the senior year at high
school was, in comparison with the years gone before,
fairly easy, and Dick usually managed to do a
good part of his preparation during the day, between
classes. If he had not he would have been forced to
yield either his position as football coach or his
attendance at the High School!</p>
<p>But even the period in the afternoon and the one
or two hours in the evening did not comprise all the
time given to football, for Dick found that it was
impossible to clear his mind of gridiron affairs at
other moments. They obtruded when he tried to
study, even when he was at his meals and often kept
him awake at night when he should have been asleep.
He was forever pulling out the little black note-book
he carried in a vest pocket and jotting down a memorandum
in it, and he got so he even went off into
thought-trances when folks were talking to him!
As when one evening at supper his sister Grace consulted
him with regard to some problem connected
with the new heating system which he was having
installed in the cottage. Dick listened with apparent
attention, his eyes on his plate, until Grace had finished.
Then he surprised that young lady by looking
up and remarking thoughtfully: “That end-around
play won’t go unless we can keep the ball out of
sight until the runner reaches the line.”</p>
<p></p>
<p>Grace declared that he was losing his mind.</p>
<p>One of Dick’s duties was to follow the progress
of the Springdale High School Team as reflected in
the columns of the <cite>Springdale Morning Recorder</cite>.
The accounts of the team’s practice sessions were
not very voluminous, but they appeared to be reported
by a high school boy and were doubtless, as
far as they went, authentic. Dick usually clipped the
articles from the paper and they were discussed at
the meetings. It was on the Tuesday evening following
the Norrisville game that Lanny again
broached the subject of sending someone to see
Springdale play. “We can’t tell much by this newspaper
stuff,” he said. “We’ve found out who they’ll
probably use against us, but we don’t know what sort
of a game they’re planning. I think we ought to see
them play Benton next Saturday and get a line on
them. Could you go over, Dick?”</p>
<p>“Why don’t you go?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“Why, I suppose I could,” replied Lanny doubtfully.
“Only—well, we play Logan, and Logan has
a pretty fair team, I guess.”</p>
<p>“What of it? McCoy will do well enough. I’d
go along, but I guess one of us had better stay here.
You take Chester with you, Lanny. He’s good at
sizing things up. Besides, that would give you a
chance to watch the backfield and let him watch the
linemen. Kirke can play quarter for us Saturday.”</p>
<p>“But I’d hate to have Logan beat us,” Lanny objected.
“Suppose you and Chester go, Dick.”</p>
<p>Dick smiled and George Cotner chuckled audibly.
Lanny flushed.</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t think that we are going to lose the
game just because I’m not here,” he said. “Only—oh,
I don’t know! I’ll do just as you say, Dick.”</p>
<p>“Then you’ll go; you and Chester,” replied Dick.
“Later on I’ll see them in action myself, but I’d
rather wait until about a week before we play them.
Let me see; who do they meet the Saturday before
they play us?” Dick turned the pages of a scrapbook
and found the Springdale schedule. “Weston
Academy, eh? Where’s that?”</p>
<p>“Up-state,” replied George. “A small school.
Springdale’s evidently looking for an easy game that
day.”</p>
<p>“Then she won’t show much,” mused Dick.
“Still, I could get away that afternoon very nicely,
for we play the grads.”</p>
<p>“I don’t believe they’ll ever get together to play
us,” said George. “Fosdick told me Saturday that
he was having a hard time getting the fellows to
promise. If they don’t we’ll be in a hole. I told
Means last Winter that he couldn’t depend on the
grads for a game.”</p>
<p>“Well, we won’t cross that bridge until we come
to it,” said Dick. “Maybe if the grads don’t turn
up we can find another team to play us. If we can’t
we can have a pretty good afternoon of practice, and
I dare say that will be quite as much good to us.”</p>
<p>“Then you think Chester and I had better go to
Springdale Saturday?” asked Lanny not over-enthusiastically.
Dick nodded.</p>
<p>“Yes, I do, Lanny. See what they look like and
how their backfield shapes up. And above all watch
their formations. If they show anything new don’t
miss it. Better jot it down at the time. And find
out if you can whether they’ve got a man who can
kick goals from the field. A good deal will depend
on that. Bring back everything you can, Lanny.
Every little bit helps.”</p>
<p>“All right. You won’t take any chances with
that Logan game, though, will you, Dick?” he
pleaded. “You know they tied us last year.”</p>
<p>“Bother your old Logan game!” laughed Dick.
“If you say much more about it I’ll forfeit it to them!
Seriously, though, Lanny, that game doesn’t mean
much to us, and if I can scrape through without
being absolutely beaten I’ll be satisfied. Just keep
your eyes on the eighteenth of November, Lanny,
and forget about what goes on before.”</p>
<p>“I suppose so,” Lanny agreed, “only—when
you’re captain you sort of like to do the best you can;
make a good showing for the season, you know.”</p>
<p>“A good showing isn’t possible unless we beat
Springdale,” replied Dick emphatically, “and that’s
what we’re working for. I don’t much care if we
lose every game from now till then, if we win that
one. Now let’s get at those plays. This No. 3
won’t work out, I guess. We’re taking too many
men from the right of the line and we’re giving the
play away from the start. There’s one thing we’ve
got to keep in mind, fellows, and that is that the
simpler our plays are the better they’ll work. If we
decide on that formation we’ve talked of our plays
have got to be simple. I don’t mind trying this
No. 6 out in practice if you like, but I don’t cheer
for it much.”</p>
<p>“Just the same, if it did fool them,” suggested
George, “it would fool them badly and we’d make
yards on it.”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“But I don’t think it would fool them,” said Dick.
“Not more than once, anyhow. And there’s no use
learning a play that can be used no more than once
in a game. Frankly, fellows, I don’t set much score
on fancy formations and funny shifts and trick plays.
They don’t pan out well. Of course, if your opponent
is weak you can make anything go, but we’re
planning for Springdale, and Springdale isn’t weak.
She knows a lot of football. Why, that No. 6
would be smeared to the hilt the second time we
tried it, if not the first. With all due regard to you,
Lanny, I’m going to forget that play.”</p>
<p>And Dick rolled the sheet of paper up and tossed
it into the waste-basket.</p>
<p>“Alas, poor child of my brain!” murmured
George.</p>
<p>“Was that yours?” asked Dick. “I thought
Lanny did that.”</p>
<p>“No, mine was that quarterback-run play,” said
Lanny.</p>
<p>“Oh! Well, I’m sorry, George. If you want me
to I’ll try it out.”</p>
<p>“No, don’t bother. I dare say you’re quite right
about it. It <em>is</em> a bit involved.”</p>
<p>“All right. Try again, George. Only keep them
simple. Plays that use only two men are a heap
better than those requiring half a dozen to mess
around and get in each other’s way. Now, here’s
this No. 8. I like that, Lanny. Was that yours?”</p>
<p>Lanny shook his head regretfully. “No, that’s
one that Corwin sprang on us last Fall. I changed
it a bit, that’s all. They pulled it off from a forward-pass
formation, but that seemed to me to limit it a
good deal. I thought it would be a good play to
work from regular formation.”</p>
<p>“I think it would. And if we can get that formation
of ours to working right it would be a good
play to add to that 4 and 5 sequence. We’ll lay it
aside for now, though. What we want for the next
fortnight is about three more plays outside of tackle.
Now let’s get busy.”</p>
<p>The Twenty-fifth of October Fund Committee
met as arranged on Wednesday night, all members
present save Grace Lovering, whose regrets were
formally expressed by Dick.</p>
<p>“She isn’t sick, is she?” asked Louise concernedly.</p>
<p>“Not at all,” replied Dick gravely. “She is in
most robust health. To relieve your kind anxiety,
Louise, I’ll state that to-night is bread-making night
at our house.”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“Oh!” laughed Louise. “That’s it! Can Grace
really make bread, Dick?”</p>
<p>“None better. When last seen she was up to her
elbows in dough.”</p>
<p>“I think that’s awfully clever of her,” said Nell
Sawin. “I wish I could do it. Don’t you, May?”</p>
<p>May Burnham, who had received Dick’s announcement
with surprise, agreed somewhat doubtfully.
May had always considered household duties
rather below the dignity of one who was so closely
related to the wealthy and influential Brents, but,
observing that Louise seemed to think Grace Lovering’s
accomplishment something to be proud of
instead of ashamed of, she added, with more enthusiasm:
“I think it must be very nice to be able to
do things like that”; and secretly wondered whether
her own views were mistaken. Certainly, she reflected,
none of the others seemed at all shocked
by Dick’s confession.</p>
<p>Presently they got down to business and Louise,
as treasurer, announced the fund now totaled sixty-eight
dollars and eighty cents. “And,” she added,
“I think that’s all we can get from the students.
We’ve seen all the girls except one, who is ill, and
Dick and Gordon have seen most of the boys.”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“All but three,” replied Dick, “and they won’t
subscribe more than a quarter apiece, I guess.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Lanny. “That leaves us about
twenty-one dollars behind then. To-day’s the
eleventh, isn’t it? And Mr. Grayson’s birthday
is the twenty-fifth, and that’s just two weeks
from to-day. When are you planning to buy the
things?”</p>
<p>“I suppose we ought to do it a week ahead,” said
Morris. “It may take three or four days for them
to get here by freight.”</p>
<p>“Maybe longer,” said Dick. “I wouldn’t leave it
much after the fifteenth.”</p>
<p>“The fifteenth is Sunday,” Morris reminded.
“We might go to New York the next day, though.”</p>
<p>“Who’s going?” asked Gordon.</p>
<p>“Louise and May and I, unless some of you fellows
want to go along.”</p>
<p>“I guess none of us could get away,” responded
Dick. “You’ll have to cut recitations, won’t you,
though?”</p>
<p>“Only one. We’ll take the two-twelve train and
that’ll give us nearly three hours before the stores
close. We can get back by eight. If we can get
everything at Marsden’s it won’t take more than an
hour or so. Father agreed last night to advance
what money we need and we’re to pay him back as
fast as we collect from the students.”</p>
<p>“We have almost fifty dollars paid in now,” said
Louise. “So we won’t have to borrow more than
forty from father.”</p>
<p>“How about the expenses of your trip?” Lanny
asked.</p>
<p>“We’ll each pay our own,” replied Louise. “It’s
only fair, because it’s going to be rather fun. I wish
we might all go.”</p>
<p>“It will be all right if I cut practice that day, won’t
it?” asked Morris.</p>
<p>Dick nodded. “For that matter,” he said, “Lanny
and Gordon may go as far as practice is concerned.
There won’t be much hard work on Monday, anyway.”</p>
<p>“Couldn’t you go, Dick?” Louise asked.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid not. I’d have to cut two classes.
Besides, I’m not much good at getting around in the
crowds.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think I’ll go, either,” said Lanny.</p>
<p>“Same here,” said Gordon. “You three will be
enough. The more there are the harder it will be
to agree on things.”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“Now please tell us about your plan, Lanny,” said
Nell eagerly.</p>
<p>“I don’t know whether my plan is good for as
much as twenty-one dollars,” responded Lanny dubiously.
“I think we may be able to get, say, fifteen,
though. The reason I wouldn’t say what it was the
other night was that I had to consult others about
it first; our Head Coach, for one.”</p>
<p>“Cut out the prologue, Lanny,” advised Gordon.
“What’s the scheme?”</p>
<p>“Well, they’ve got a sort of football team across
the river called the North Side Athletics. The fellows
are mill operatives and that chap Danny Shores,
who played ball with us last Summer the time Jack
Tappen was suspended, is captain. I met him a
week or so ago at the post office and he told me about
it. Said they’d like to play us some time. I told
him I was sorry, but that our dates were all filled.
But it occurred to me the other night that the fellows
over there would pay ten or fifteen cents willingly to
see their team play the High School, and there are
a lot of them, you know. So I thought it would be
a good scheme to arrange a game with them a week
from Saturday. We go away that day to play Corwin,
you know. Saturday’s the only day they have
to play. I saw Danny Shores yesterday and he’s
tickled to death about it. I had to tell him why we
wanted to charge admission, but he promised not to
say anything about it. They’re so crazy to play that
they don’t want any part of the gate receipts, and
Danny says we can get three or four hundred people.
What do you think of it?”</p>
<p>Morris and Gordon looked puzzled, and the latter
asked: “But how the dickens can we play Danny’s
team here if we’re going away to play Corwin the
same afternoon?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I meant to explain that we’d play the Scrubs
against them; call them the High School Second
Team, you know.”</p>
<p>“I think it will be perfectly dandy!” exclaimed
Louise.</p>
<p>“I shall go and see it,” declared Nell firmly.</p>
<p>“Don’t see,” said Morris, “why you can’t get a
pretty good crowd to it. Not many of the fellows
will go with the team to Corwin, I guess, and they’ll
be glad of a chance to see a game. How much are
you going to charge, Lanny?”</p>
<p>“Dick and I thought ten cents apiece would be
enough. If we got two hundred we’d make twenty
dollars. But I don’t believe we’d get more than a
hundred and fifty. Still, that would mean fifteen
dollars, and maybe we’ll find a way of making up
the other five.”</p>
<p>“Pshaw,” said Gordon, “there’ll be easily two
hundred there! And I think they’ll pay fifteen cents
as quick as ten.”</p>
<p>“They might,” said Dick, “but it’s best not to
take chances. Two hundred at ten cents will be better
than a hundred at fifteen, Gordie.”</p>
<p>“Bet you the North Siders will lick us,” chuckled
Gordon. “The Scrubs haven’t found themselves
yet.”</p>
<p>“They will have by a week from Saturday,” replied
Lanny. “We’re beginning scrimmaging to-morrow
with them.”</p>
<p>“I shall begin to save up my money,” said Nell
gravely. “I’ve just got to see it! Will anyone contribute
a penny, please?”</p>
<p>All the boys donated, and Nell, jingling four
pennies in her hands, pretended to be overcome with
delight.</p>
<p>“There’s a fellow named Tanner,” said Lanny,
“who has a printing press and does pretty good
work with it. I’ll see him and ask him to do some
notices for us that we can put around in the store
windows. I guess he will be willing to do them
for nothing under the circumstances.”</p>
<p>“I know him,” said Gordon. “He’s a particular
crony of Fudge’s. Take Fudge along with you.”</p>
<p>“Then I don’t see but that we’re all right,” said
Louise. “And we needn’t meet again until after
we’ve been to New York. I do hope you will like
what we pick out.”</p>
<p>“We’re sure to,” replied Dick. “The main thing,
though, is for Mr. Grayson to like them!”</p>
<p>“That reminds me,” announced Morris, “that
there will be a charge for carting the stuff from the
freight-house to the school. I dare say Stewart will
do it for a dollar and a half.”</p>
<p>“You don’t want to forget,” reminded Nell, “that
you may get the things cheaper than we estimated
them. I dare say we’ll have quite all the money we
need. Wouldn’t it be splendid if we did and I hadn’t
to pay my three dollars and a half after all?”</p>
<p>The others howled at that and Dick demanded his
penny back. Gordon asked where the furniture was
to be kept until they could smuggle it into the office,
and Morris explained that they were going to have
it taken to the school late in the afternoon, after Mr.
Grayson had gone, and stored in a room in the basement.
He had arranged with the janitor for that.
“And then, the night before, Louise is going to get
the key to Mr. Grayson’s room and we’re going to
move the old furniture out into the hall and put the
new things in.”</p>
<p>“I shall be very busy at home that evening,” murmured
Gordon.</p>
<p>Louise regarded him indignantly. “Indeed you’ll
not, Gordon Merrick! Every one has got to help.
Some of the things will be frightfully heavy.”</p>
<p>“The janitor is going to help us,” said Morris.</p>
<p>“As near as I can make out,” remarked Dick, with
a smile, “almost every one in town has been taken
into the secret except Mr. Grayson. If he doesn’t
know of it already it’s a miracle!”</p>
<p>“We had to tell the janitor,” said Morris. “And
Miss Turner. She’s going to borrow his key for us.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m not objecting,” replied Dick. “But
you’ll have to acknowledge that the chances of keeping
it from Mr. Grayson until the twenty-fifth are
mighty slim.”</p>
<p>“Anyway, I’m pretty sure he hasn’t heard anything
yet,” said Louise. “And—and I don’t believe
he will. It would be too frightfully mean if anyone
told him!”</p>
<p></p>
<p>“Isn’t it—isn’t it getting rather late?” asked
Lanny blandly.</p>
<p>“He’s hinting for refreshments,” said Louise
scornfully. “I believe he only comes to the meetings
for that. Anyway, he won’t like the lemonade because
it isn’t hot.”</p>
<p>“The weather has moderated so much since I
made that unlucky remark that cold lemonade is
quite satisfactory,” answered Lanny. “And I <em>do</em>
hope you have some more of that cake with the underdone
frosting. It lasted me all the way home
Monday night, Louise. I even found some on my
shoes in the morning!”</p>
<p>“You’re horribly insulting,” his hostess laughed.
“I made that cake myself, Lanny, and you ought to
have raved about it!”</p>
<p>“I did—when I found it on my shoes,” drawled
Lanny.</p>
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