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II

      CAPTAIN INNES RECEIVES

      "What's that awful noise?" asked Clint startledly, looking up from his book.

      It was the evening of the second day of school and Clint and Amy Byrd were preparing lessons at opposite sides of the green-topped table in Number 14 Torrence.

      "That," replied Amy, leaning back until his chair protested and viewing his room-mate under the shade of the drop-light, "is music."

      "Music!" Clint listened incredulously. From the next room, by way of opened windows and transoms, came the most lugubrious wails he thought he had ever listened to. "It–it's a fiddle, isn't it?" he demanded.

      Amy nodded. "More respectfully, a violin. More correctly a viol-din. (The joke is not new.) What you are listening to with such evident delight are the sweet strains of Penny Durkin's violin." Amy looked at the alarm clock which decorated a corner of his chiffonier. "Penny is twelve minutes ahead of time. He's not supposed to play during study-hour, you see, and unless I'm much mistaken he will be so informed before the night is much–"

      "Hey, Penny! Cut it out, old top!"

      From somewhere down the corridor the anguished wail floated, followed an instant later by sounds counterfeiting the howling of an unhappy dog. Threats and pleas mingled.

      "Penny! For the love of Mike!"

      "Set your watch back, Penny!"

      "Shut up, you idiot! Study's not over!"

      "Call an officer, please!"

      But Pennington Durkin was making too much noise on his instrument to hear the remonstrances at first, and it was not until some impatient neighbour sallied forth and pounded frantically at the portal of Number 13 that the wailing ceased. Then,

      "What is it?" asked Durkin mildly.

      "It's only ten minutes to nine, Penny. Your clock's fast again. Shut up or we'll kill you!"

      "Oh!" said Penny surprisedly. "Are you sure? I set my watch–"

      "Oh, forget it! You say that every night," was the wearied response. "How the dickens do you think anyone's going to study with that noise going on?"

      "I'm very sorry, really," responded Penny, "If I'd known–"

      "You never do know, Penny!" The youth outside strode back to his room and slammed the door and quiet prevailed once more. Amy smiled.

      "Poor Penny," he said. "He suffers much in the cause of Art. I refuse to study any more. Close up shop, Clint, and let's talk. Now that you've been with us a whole day, what do you think of us? Do you approve of this institution of learning, old man?"

      "I think I'm going to like it," replied Clint soberly.

      "I do hope so," murmured Amy anxiously. "Still, any little changes you'd like made–"

      "Well, you asked me, didn't you?" laughed Clint. "Besides, how can I help but like it when I am honoured by being roomed with you?"

      "Sarcasm!" hissed Amy. "Time's up!" He slammed his book shut, tossed it on a pile at his elbow, yawned and jumped from his chair. "Let's go visiting. What do you say? Come along and I'll interdoodle you to some of our prominent criminals. Find your cap and follow me."

      "I wish," said Amy, as they clattered down the stairs in the wake of several other boys who had lingered no longer than they after nine o'clock had struck, "I wish you had made the Fifth Form, Clint."

      "So do I," was the reply. "I could have if they'd stretched a point."

      "Um; yes," mused the other. "Stretched a point. Now that's something I never could make out, Clint."

      "What!"

      "Why, how you can stretch a point. The dictionary describes a point as 'that which has position but no magnitude.' Seems to me it must be very difficult to get hold of a thing with no magnitude, and, of course, you'd have to get hold of it to stretch it, wouldn't you? Now, if you said stretch a line or stretch a circle–"

      "That's what you'll need if you don't shut up," laughed Clint.

      "A circle?"

      "No, a stretcher!"

      "What a horrible pun," mourned Amy. "Say, suppose we drop in on Jack Innes?"

      "Suppose we do," replied Clint cheerfully. "Who is he?"

      "Football captain, you ignoramus. Maybe if you don't act fresh and he takes a liking to you he will resign and let you be captain."

      "Won't it look–well, sort of funny?" asked Clint doubtfully as they passed along the Bow.

      "What? You being captain?"

      "No, our going–I mean my going to see him, Won't he think I'm trying to–to swipe?"

      "Poppycock! Jack's a particular friend of mine. You don't have to tell him you want a place on the team, do you? Besides, there'll likely be half a dozen others there. Here we are; one flight."

      They turned in the first entrance of Hensey and climbed the stairs. Innes's room, like Clint's, faced the stair-well, being also Number 14, and from behind the closed door came a babel of voices.

      "Full house tonight," observed Amy, knocking thunderously. But the knocking wasn't heard inside and, after a moment, Amy turned the knob and walked in, followed by Clint. Nearly a dozen boys were crowded in the room and each of the two small beds sagged dangerously under the weight it held.

      "We knocked," said Amy, "but you hoodlums are making so much noise that–"

      "Hi, Amy! How's the boy?" called a youth whose position facing the door allowed him to discover the newcomers. Heads turned and other greetings followed. It was evident to Clint that his room-mate was a popular chap, for everyone seemed thoroughly glad to see him.

      "Come here, Amy," called a big fellow who was sprawled in a Morris chair. Amy good-naturedly obeyed the summons and the big fellow pulled up a leg of the other boy's trousers. "They're grey, fellows," he announced sorrowfully. "Someone's gone and died, and Amy's in mourning!"

      "Grey!" exclaimed another. "Never. Amy, tell me it isn't true!"

      "Shut up! I want to interdoodle my most bosom friend, Mr. Clinton Thayer, of Vay-gin-yah, sah! Clint, take off your hat."

      The merriment ceased and the occupants of the room got to their feet as best they might and those within reach shook hands.

      "That large lump over there," indicated Amy, "is Innes. He's one of your hosts. The other one is Mr. Still; in the corner of the bed; the intelligent-looking youth. The others don't matter."

      "Glad to know you, Thayer," said Jack Innes in a deep, jovial voice. "Hope you can find a place to sit down. I guess that bed near you will hold one more without giving way."

      Clint somewhat embarrassedly crowded on to a corner of the bed and Amy perched himself on an arm of the Morris chair. A smallish, clever-looking fellow across the room said: "You're a punk introducer, Amy. Thayer, my name's Marvin, and this chap is Hall and the next one is Edwards, and Still you know, and then comes Ruddie, and Black–"

      "Red and Black," interpolated Amy.

      "And next to Innes is Landers–"

      "Oh, forget it, Marvin," advised Still. "Thayer won't remember. Names don't matter, anyway."

      "Some names," retorted Marvin, "have little significance, yours amongst them. I did the best I could for you, Thayer. Remember that. What's the good word, Amy?"

      "I have no news to relate," was the grave response, "save that Jordan obtruded his shining cranium as we came in and requested me to inform you fellows that unless there was less noise up here–"

      Jeers greeted that fiction. "I love your phrases, Amy," said Marvin. "'Shining cranium' is great"

      "Oh, Amy is one fine little phraser," said Innes. "Remember his theme last year, fellows? How did it go, Amy? Let me see. Oh! 'The westerning sun sank slowly into the purple void of twilight, a burnished copper disk beyond the earth's horizon!'"

      "I

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