"You didn"t expect me, sir, to include any praise of myself, in my official report?" questioned Darrin.
"You have me there, Mr. Darrin," laughed the commandant, while the lieutenant turned to hide a smile. "I am quite satisfied with your official report, but I wish to ask you some questions, on my own account, about your own experience in rescuing Mr. Page."
This it took some minutes to draw out. Darrin did not balk, nor try to conceal anything, but he had a natural aversion to singing his own praises, and answered questions only sparingly at first.
Yet, at last, the commandant succeeded in drawing out a story, bit by bit, that made the old seadog"s eyes glisten with pride.
"Mr. Darrin," announced the commandant, "from experience and observation, through a rather long life in the Navy, I am able to state that the kind of courage which enables a man go down in drowning with a comrade, sooner than leave the comrade to his fate, is the highest type of courage known among brave men!"
"You must have been aware, Mr. Darrin," added Lieutenant Edgecombe, "that you were taking at least ninety-nine chances in a hundred of offering up your life."
"Gentlemen," replied Dave, rather restless under so much praise, "I have signed under the Flag, to give my life up for it at any time in the line of duty. Does it make very much difference in which year I turn that life over to the Flag?"
"Edgecombe," said the commandant, rather huskily, as the two officers left the hospital, "I am glad--mighty glad--that we didn"t lose Darrin today. We are going to need him in the Navy of tomorrow!"
CHAPTER XXII
THE "BAZOO" MAKES TROUBLE
"Sir, the brigade is formed," reported the brigade adjutant, the next day, as the midshipmen stood in ranks, ready to march into the mess hall.
"Publish the orders," directed the cadet commander.
Then the brigade adjutant rattled off the orders, reading them in a quick monotonous voice.
"For coolness, judgment and remarkable bravery displayed in an accident encounter in the sinking and foundering of a sailboat under his command, which accident was not any way due to his own negligence or incapacity--"
Dave started, then crimsoned, as the brigade adjutant continued reading:
"Midshipman David Darrin, fourth cla.s.s, is hereby specially commended, and his conduct is offered as an example to all his comrades in the brigade of midshipmen."
A moment later the crisp marching orders rang out, and the brigade was marching in by cla.s.ses.
Dave"s face was still flushed, his blood tingling somewhat. It was pleasing, doubtless, to be thus reviewed in orders, but Dave was not unduly elated.
In the Navy, though courage may sometimes be mentioned in orders, not much fuss is made over it. All officers and men in the Navy are expected to be brave, as a matter of course and of training.
Dan, in fact, was more pleased over that one paragraph in orders than was his chum.
"Of course everyone in the Navy must brave," thought Dalzell, to himself. "But old Dave will always be one of the leaders in that line."
In accordance with custom a copy of the order giving Darrin special commendation was mailed to his father, as one who had a right to know and to be proud of his son"s record at the Naval Academy.
Not a doubt was there that the senior Darrin was proud! So many of the elder Darrin"s friends were favored with a glimpse of the official communication received from Annapolis that the editor of the Gridley "Blade," heard of it. Mr. Pollock asked the privilege of making a copy of the official communication, which contained a copy of the paragraph in orders.
Mr. Pollock, however, was not contented with publishing merely a copy of the official communication from the Naval Academy authorities.
The editor printed a column and a half, in all reminding his readers that Midshipman Darrin was one of a recently famous s.e.xtette of Gridley High School athletes who had been famous as d.i.c.k & Co. Not only did Dave receive a flattering amount of praise in print. Dan came in for a lot of pleasant notice also.
Dave received a marked copy of that issue of the "Blade." He fairly shivered as he read through that column and a half.
"Danny boy," shuddered Darrin, pa.s.sing the "Blade" over to his roommate, "read this awful stuff. Then help me to destroy this paper!"
Dan Dalzell read the column and a half, and reddened, grinning in a sickly sort of way.
"Just awful, isn"t it?" demanded Midshipman Dalzell.
"Awful?" muttered Darrin uneasily. "Why that doesn"t begin to describe it. If any upper cla.s.s man should see that paper--"
"He won"t see this copy," proclaimed Dan, beginning to tear the offending issue of the "Blade" into small bits.
In the parlance of Annapolis the newspaper from a midshipman"s home town is known as the "Bazoo." Now, the "Bazoo" has an average inclination to print very flattering remarks about the local representative at Annapolis. While the home editor always means this as pleasant service, the detection of flattering articles by any upper cla.s.s man at Annapolis always means unpleasant times for the poor plebe who has been thus honored in the columns of the "Bazoo."
The torn bits of the Gridley "Blade" were carefully disposed of, but Dave still shivered. Through a clipping agency, or in some other mysterious way, upper cla.s.s men frequently get hold of the "Bazoo."
Four days pa.s.sed, and nothing happened out of the usual.
On the evening of the fifth day, just after the release bell had rung, there was a brief knock at the door. Then that barrier flew open.
Midshipmen Jones, Hulburt and Heath of the second cla.s.s filed gravely into the room, followed by Midshipmen Healy, Brooks, Denton, Trotter and Paulson of the third cla.s.s.
Dave and Dan quickly rose to their feet, standing at attention facing their visitors.
With a tragic air, as if he were an executioner present in his official capacity, Youngster Paulson held out a folded newspaper.
"Mister," he ordered Darrin, "receive this foul sheet. Unfold it, mister. Now, mister, what depraved sheet do you hold in your hands?"
"The Gridley "Blade", sir," replied Darrin, his face crimsoning.
"The--_what_, mister?"
"Pardon me, sir--the Gridley "Bazoo.""
"Have you seen another copy of the "Bazoo" lately, mister?"
"Yes, sir," admitted Dave, his face growing still redder.
"Ah! He saw it--and still he did not die of shame!" murmured Second Cla.s.s Man Jones.
"Shocking depravity!" groaned Midshipman Hurlburt.
"Since you have already scanned the "Bazoo,"" resumed Midshipman Paulson, "you will have no difficulty in finding the page, mister, on which the editor of the "Bazoo" sings his silly praise of you.
Turn to that page, mister."
Dave further unfolded the paper, coming to the page on which the fearful article was printed. As he glanced at it Dave saw that the article had been marked in blue pencil, and many of the paragraphs numbered.