The Rover Boys Series. Stratemeyer Edward. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Stratemeyer Edward
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066380823
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"The captain is in his office, I think."

      "Will you please show me to the place?"

      "Certainly."

      The office was a finely furnished apartment just off the main classroom. Tom knocked on the door.

      "Come in," said a cheery voice, and the boy entered to find himself confronted not only by Captain Putnam, but likewise by Josiah Crabtree.

      "Ha! here is the young reprobate now!" cried Crabtree, as, rushing up, he grasped Tom by the arm.

      "You will kindly let go of my arm, Mr. Crabtree," said Tom steadily.

      "You shan't run away again!"

      "That's true — now Captain Putnam is here."

      "So this is Thomas Rover," said Captain Victor Putnam, with something like a twinkle in his clear eyes. "Rover, I have heard a rather serious report about you and your brother Richard."

      "What kind of a report, if I may ask, sir?"

      "Mr. Crabtree says you have been impudent to him, and that when he locked you in the guardroom for breaking the rules you attacked him and knocked him down."

      "He attacked me first. If anybody attacked you, wouldn't you be apt to knock him down — if you could?"

      "That would depend upon circumstances, Rover. If a man attacked me on the street I would certainly endeavor to defend myself to the best of my ability. But you must remember that you are a pupil here, and Mr. Crabtree is one of your masters, appointed by me."

      "I am not a pupil yet, sir — although I hope to be very soon."

      "Why, what do you mean? " demanded Victor Putnam, and now his voice grew stern. Many a boy would have flinched, but Tom had determined to say just what he thought of Crabtree, and he stood his ground.

      "I mean just this, Captain Putnam. I came to Putnam Hall with the best intention in the world of doing my duty as a pupil and becoming a credit to your institution. I hadn't a thought of breaking a rule or being impudent. Before I entered your grounds I thought of a big fire-cracker I had in my pocket, and just for the fun of the thing set the cracker off, as a sort of farewell to the outdoor life so soon to be left behind."

      "Captain Putnam, are you going to listen to such tomfoolery?" interrupted Josiah Crabtree.

      "I believe I have a right to tell my story," answered Tom. "Unless that right is granted, I shall leave the Hall, go back to my guardian, and tell him that I refuse to become a pupil here."

      "You are a pupil already," snarled Crabtree.

      "I am not — and that is just the point I am trying to make," went on Tom to the owner of Putnam Hall. "As soon as the firecracker went off, this man rushed up and demanded an explanation. He was going to lock up my brother first, but I said I had fired the cracker, and so he compelled me to go to the guardroom with him. I was locked in and treated to bread and milk for supper, and he wanted to steal the keys of my trunk and valise from me."

      "Steal!" ejaculated Josiah Crabtree.

      "That is what it amounted to, for the keys and boxes are my property."

      "Mr. Crabtree merely wanted to see that your baggage contained nothing improper," put in Captain Putnam. "There are certain things we do not allow boys to bring into the institution."

      "Then he had a right to keep my baggage out until I was properly enrolled as a pupil. I did not bring in the trunk and bag myself."

      At this Captain Putnam began to smile.

      "I see the point you are trying to make, Rover. You are trying to prove that you were placed under arrest, so to speak, before you were under our authority here."

      "Exactly. I will leave it to you, Captain Putnam, if I was really a pupil when Mr. Crabtree hauled me off to the guardroom?"

      At this plain question the face of the owner of the Hall became a study.

      "You make a very fine distinction, Rover," he answered slowly.

      "Perhaps so, sir; and I do it because I want to begin right here. If I am to be handicapped at the start of my career, what is the use of my trying to make a record for myself?" and Tom looked the master of Putnam Hall full in the face.

      Without a word Captain Putnam held out his hand. "Thomas, you have considerable spirit, but I think your heart is in the right place, and I am willing to try you. Supposing you enroll as a pupil now, and we let bygones be bygones?"

      "With all my heart, sir!" cried Tom, glad to have the whole affair settled so easily.

      "Why, are you going to let the — the young rascal go?" demanded Josiah Crabtree, in amazement.

      "I'm not a rascal, Mr. Crabtree."

      "Yes, you are!"

      "Mr. Crabtree, I have decided to drop the matter," put in Captain Putnam, in a tone which admitted of no dispute, and the head assistant fell back abashed. "Rover says he wishes to make a record for himself, and I am inclined to help him. He starts his term free and clear of all charges against him — and his brother whom you have locked up shall do likewise. Kindly call Mr. Strong."

      "It is a — a most unusual proceeding," growled the head assistant.

      "Perhaps; but we will talk that matter over at another time."

      Josiah Crabtree went out; and in a minute George Strong appeared, and Tom was turned over to him, to sign the roll of the academy and to join Sam, Fred, and the others in the classroom over which Mr. Strong presided.

      "Hullo, you're back," whispered Sam, but no more could be said until recess, when Tom told his story in detail. In the meantime Dick was released.

      "So you met the fellow who stole my watch!" cried the elder brother. "I wish you had got the timepiece."

      "So do I, Dick."

      Dick had been captured by Josiah Crabtree just as he was vaulting the iron fence around the guardroom window. The head assistant had locked him up in the apartment Tom had occupied, and there Dick had remained all night.

      "Oh, Crabtree is a — a terror!" said Dick, later on. "I hope Dora Stanhope's mother never marries him."

      "I'll wager neither of you have heard the last of Crabtree, even if we are not in his classes," remarked Sam. "He will watch for a chance to get even, mark my words."

      "I don't doubt it, Sam," answered Tom. "But let him come on. I intend to do my duty as a cadet, and I am not afraid of him."

      CHAPTER XI

       A ROW IN THE GYMNASIUM

       Table of Contents

      For several days matters moved along smoothly with the Rover boys. In that time their chums, Frank Harrington and Larry Colby, arrived, and these, with Fred, made up the Metropolitan Sextet, as they called themselves — the sole occupants of dormitory No. 6.

      Next to this dormitory was apartment five, occupied by Dan Baxter, Mumps, and six others of the bully's cronies. The two apartments were connected by a door, but this was nailed up.

      So far there had been no open rupture between Baxter and Dick, but there was trouble "in the air," and it was bound to reach a climax sooner or later.

      Fortunately for Dick and his brothers, Captain Putnam had had cadet uniforms to fit them, and the three were now dressed in true military style. The other boys had to wait until uniforms could be made for them.

      The first day at Putnam Hall was spent in assigning the newcomers to the various classes, according to their knowledge. On the second day the three Rover boys were placed in the awkward squad, to learn the military drill.

      The squad was presided over by Corporal Mark King, a youth who was cut out to be a soldier, although his father was a sea captain.