<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VII </h2>
<h3> FOXY </h3>
<p>After the expulsion of the master, the Twentieth School fell upon evil
days, for the trustees decided that it would be better to try "gurl"
teachers, as Hughie contemptuously called them; and this policy prevailed
for two or three years, with the result that the big boys left the school,
and with their departure the old heroic age passed away, to be succeeded
by an age soft, law-abiding, and distinctly commercial.</p>
<p>The spirit of this unheroic age was incarnate in the person of "Foxy"
Ross. Foxy got his name, in the first instance, from the peculiar pinky
red shade of hair that crowned his white, fat face, but the name stuck to
him as appropriately descriptive of his tricks and his manners. His face
was large, and smooth, and fat, with wide mouth, and teeth that glistened
when he smiled. His smile was like his face, large, and smooth, and fat.
His eyes, which were light gray—white, Hughie called them—were
shifty, avoiding the gaze that sought to read them, or piercingly keen,
according as he might choose.</p>
<p>After the departure of the big boys, Foxy gradually grew in influence
until his only rival in the school was Hughie. Foxy's father was the
storekeeper in the Twentieth, and this brought within Foxy's reach
possibilities of influence that gave him an immense advantage over Hughie.
By means of bull's-eyes and "lickerish" sticks, Foxy could win the
allegiance of all the smaller boys and many of the bigger ones, while with
the girls, both big and small, his willingness to please and his smooth
manners won from many affection, and from the rest toleration, although
Betsy Dan Campbell asserted that whenever Foxy Ross came near her she felt
something creeping up her backbone.</p>
<p>With the teacher, too, Foxy was a great favorite. He gave her worshipful
reverence and many gifts from his father's store, eloquent of his
devotion. He was never detected in mischief, and was always ready to
expose the misdemeanors of the other boys. Thus it came that Foxy was the
paramount influence within the school.</p>
<p>Outside, his only rival was Hughie, and at times Hughie's rivalry became
dangerous. In all games that called for skill, activity, and reckless
daring, Hughie was easily leader. In "Old Sow," "Prisoner's Base," but
especially in the ancient and noble game of "Shinny," Hughie shone
peerless and supreme. Foxy hated games, and shinny, the joy of those
giants of old, who had torn victory from the Sixteenth, and even from the
Front one glorious year, was at once Foxy's disgust and terror. As a
little boy, he could not for the life of him avoid turning his back to
wait shuddering, with humping shoulders, for the enemy's charge, and in
anything like a melee, he could not help jumping into the air at every
dangerous stroke.</p>
<p>And thus he brought upon himself the contempt even of boys much smaller
than himself, who, under the splendid and heroic example of those who led
them, had only one ambition, to get a whack at the ball, and this ambition
they gratified on every possible occasion reckless of consequences. Hence,
when the last of the big boys, Thomas Finch, against whose solid mass
hosts had flung themselves to destruction, finally left the school, Foxy,
with great skill, managed to divert the energies of the boys to games less
violent and dangerous, and by means of his bull's-eyes and his liquorice,
and his large, fat smile, he drew after him a very considerable following
of both girls and boys.</p>
<p>The most interesting and most successful of Foxy's schemes was the game of
"store," which he introduced, Foxy himself being the storekeeper. He had
the trader's genius for discovering and catering to the weaknesses of
people, and hence his store became, for certain days of the week, the
center of life during the recreation hours. The store itself was a
somewhat pretentious successor to the little brush cabin with wide open
front, where in the old days the boys used to gather, and lying upon piles
of fragrant balsam boughs before the big blazing fire placed in front,
used to listen to the master talk, and occasionally read.</p>
<p>Foxy's store was built of slabs covered with thick brush, and set off with
a plank counter and shelves, whereon were displayed his wares. His stock
was never too large for his personal transportation, but its variety was
almost infinite, bull's-eyes and liquorice, maple sugar and other
"sweeties," were staples. Then, too, there were balls of gum, beautifully
clear, which in its raw state Foxy gathered from the ends of the pine logs
at the sawmill, and which, by a process of boiling and clarifying known
only to himself, he brought to a marvelous perfection.</p>
<p>But Foxy's genius did not confine itself to sweets. He would buy and sell
and "swap" anything, but in swapping no bargain was ever completed unless
there was money for Foxy in the deal. He had goods second-hand and new,
fish-hooks and marbles, pot-metal knives with brass handles, slate-pencils
that would "break square," which were greatly desired by all,
skate-straps, and buckskin whangs.</p>
<p>But Foxy's financial ability never displayed itself with more brilliancy
than when he organized the various games of the school so as to have them
begin and end with the store. When the river and pond were covered with
clear, black ice, skating would be the rage, and then Foxy's store would
be hung with skate-straps, and with cedar-bark torches, which were greatly
in demand for the skating parties that thronged the pond at night. There
were no torches like Foxy's. The dry cedar bark any one could get from the
fences, but Foxy's torches were always well soaked in oil and bound with
wire, and were prepared with such excellent skill that they always burned
brighter and held together longer than any others. These cedar-bark
torches Foxy disposed of to the larger boys who came down to the pond at
night. Foxy's methods of finance were undoubtedly marked by ability, and
inasmuch as his accounts were never audited, the profits were large and
sure. He made it a point to purchase a certain proportion of his supplies
from his father, who was proud of his son's financial ability, but whether
his purchases always equaled his sales no one ever knew.</p>
<p>If the pond and river were covered with snow, then Foxy would organize a
deer-hunt, when all the old pistols in the section would be brought forth,
and the store would display a supply of gun caps, by the explosion of
which deadly ammunition the deer would be dropped in their tracks, and
drawn to the store by prancing steeds whose trappings had been purchased
from Foxy.</p>
<p>When the interest in the deer-hunt began to show signs of waning, Foxy
would bring forth a supply of gunpowder, for the purchase of which any boy
who owned a pistol would be ready to bankrupt himself. In this Hughie took
a leading part, although he had to depend upon the generosity of others
for the thrilling excitement of bringing down his deer with a pistol-shot,
for Hughie had never been able to save coppers enough to purchase a pistol
of his own.</p>
<p>But deer-hunting with pistols was forbidden by the teacher from the day
when Hughie, in his eagerness to bring his quarry down, left his ramrod in
his pistol, and firing at Aleck Dan Campbell at point-blank range, laid
him low with a lump on the side of his head as big as a marble. The only
thing that saved Aleck's life, the teacher declared, was his thick crop of
black hair. Foxy was in great wrath at Hughie for his recklessness, which
laid the deer-hunting under the teacher's ban, and which interfered
seriously with the profits of the store.</p>
<p>But Foxy was far too great a man to allow himself to be checked by any
such misfortune as this. He was far too astute to attempt to defy the
teacher and carry on the forbidden game, but with great ability he adapted
the principles of deer-hunting to a game even more exciting and
profitable. He organized the game of "Injuns," some of the boys being set
apart as settlers who were to defend the fort, of which the store was the
center, the rest to constitute the invading force of savages.</p>
<p>The result was, that the trade in caps and gunpowder was brisker than
ever, for not only was the powder needed for the pistols, but even larger
quantities were necessary for the slow-matches which hissed their wrath at
the approaching enemy, and the mounted guns, for which earthen ink-bottles
did excellently, set out on a big stump to explode, to the destruction of
scores of creeping redskins advancing through the bush, who, after being
mutilated and mangled by these terrible explosions, were dragged into the
camp and scalped. Foxy's success was phenomenal. The few pennies and fewer
half-dimes and dimes that the boys had hoarded for many long weeks would
soon have been exhausted had Hughie not wrecked the game.</p>
<p>Hughie alone had no fear of Foxy, but despised him utterly. He had stood
and yelled when those heroes of old, Murdie and Don Cameron, Curly Ross,
and Ranald Macdonald, and last but not to be despised Thomas Finch, had
done battle with the enemy from the Sixteenth or the Front, and he could
not bring himself to acknowledge the leadership of Foxy Ross, for all his
bull's-eyes and liquorice. Not but what Hughie yearned for bull's-eyes and
liquorice with great yearning, but these could not atone to him for the
loss out of his life of the stir and rush and daring of the old fighting
days. And it galled him that the boys of the Sixteenth could flout the
boys of the Twentieth in all places and on all occasions with impunity.</p>
<p>But above all, it seemed to him a standing disgrace that the habitant
teamsters from the north, who in former days found it a necessary and wise
precaution to put their horses to a gallop as they passed the school, in
order to escape with sleighs intact from the hordes that lined the
roadway, now drove slowly past the very gate without an apparent tremor.
But besides all this, he had an instinctive shrinking from Foxy, and
sympathized with Betsy Dan in her creepy feeling whenever he approached.
Hence he refused allegiance, and drew upon himself Foxy's jealous hatred.</p>
<p>It was one of Foxy's few errors in judgment that, from his desire to
humiliate Hughie and to bring him to a proper state of subjection, he
succeeded in shutting him out from the leadership in the game of "Injuns,"
for Hughie promptly refused a subordinate position and withdrew, like
Achilles, to his tent. But, unlike Achilles, though he sulked, he sulked
actively, and to some purpose, for, drawing off with him his two faithful
henchmen, "Fusie"—neither Hughie nor any one else ever knew another
name for the little French boy who had drifted into the settlement and
made his home with the MacLeods—and Davie "Scotch," a cousin of
Davie MacDougall, newly arrived from Scotland, he placed them in positions
which commanded the store entrance, and waited until the settlers had all
departed upon their expedition against the invading Indians. Foxy, with
one or two smaller boys, was left in charge of the store waiting for
trade.</p>
<p>In a few moments Foxy's head appeared at the door, when, whiz! a snowball
skinned his ear and flattened itself with a bang against the slabs.</p>
<p>"Hold on there! Stop that! You're too close up," shouted Foxy, thinking
that the invaders were breaking the rules of the game.</p>
<p>Bang! a snowball from another quarter caught him fair in the neck.</p>
<p>"Here, you fools, you! Stop that!" cried Foxy, turning in the direction
whence the snowball came and dodging round to the side of the store. But
this was Hughie's point of attack, and soon Foxy found that the only place
of refuge was inside, whither he fled, closing the door after him.
Immediately the door became a target for the hidden foe.</p>
<p>Meantime, the Indian war was progressing, but now and again a settler
would return to the fort for ammunition, and the moment he reached the
door a volley of snowballs would catch him and hasten his entrance. Once
in it was dangerous to come out.</p>
<p>By degrees Hughie augmented his besieging force from the more adventurous
settlers and Indians, and placed them in the bush surrounding the door.</p>
<p>The war game was demoralized, but the new game proved so much more
interesting that it was taken up with enthusiasm and prosecuted with
vigor. It was rare sport. For the whole noon hour Hughie and his
bombarding force kept Foxy and his friends in close confinement, from
which they were relieved only by the ringing of the school bell, for at
the sound of the bell Hughie and his men, having had their game, fled from
Foxy's wrath to the shelter of the school.</p>
<p>When Foxy appeared it was discovered that one eye was half shut, but the
light that gleamed from the other was sufficiently baleful to give token
of the wrath blazing within, and Hughie was not a little anxious to know
what form Foxy's vengeance would take. But to his surprise, by the time
recess had come Foxy's wrath had apparently vanished, and he was willing
to treat Hughie's exploit in the light of a joke. The truth was, Foxy
never allowed passion to interfere with business, and hence he resolved
that he must swallow his rage, for he realized clearly that Hughie was far
too dangerous as a foe, and that he might become exceedingly valuable as
an ally. Within a week Hughie was Foxy's partner in business, enjoying
hugely the privilege of dispensing the store goods, with certain
perquisites that naturally attached to him as storekeeper.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />