"Did you have any a.s.sistance with this problem, Mr. Darrin?" asked Dave"s instructor.

"Yes, sir; a member of the first cla.s.s tried to make it plain to me last night."

"He appears to have succeeded," remarked the instructor dryly.

There was, however, no discredit attached to having received proper a.s.sistance before coming into section.

True to his promise Freeman dropped in every fourth or fifth evening, to see if he could be of any help to the four youngsters. Always he found that he could be.

Even when Thanksgiving came, Dave Darrin did not go to Philadelphia, but remained at the Academy, devoting his time to study.

Dan, in sheer desperation, took in the trip to Philadelphia. He hoped to meet d.i.c.k Prescott and Greg Holmes, but they did not come down from West Point.

On the first day of December, Dan Dalzell"s name was formally reported by the Academic Board in a report to the superintendent which recommended that Midshipman Dalzell be dropped from the rolls for "inapt.i.tude in his studies."

Poor Dan. It was a staggering blow. Yet it struck Dave Darrin just about as hard.

CHAPTER XIV

THE FIRST HOP WITH THE HOME GIRLS

That report was allowed to reach Dan"s ears on a Friday.

On the evening of the day following there was to be a midshipman hop on the floor of the great gym.

Moreover, it was the very hop that Belle Meade and Laura Bentley had finally selected to attend. Mrs. Meade was coming with the girls as chaperon.

"Oh, but I shall feel fine and light hearted for going to the dance!"

muttered Dan miserably. "Facing the kick-off from the Academy, and doing the light hearted and the fantastic toe with the girls."

"I shan"t feel a whole lot more merry myself," sighed Dave, as he gazed affectionately, wistfully at his chum. "Danny, this has. .h.i.t me about as hard as it has you. And it warns me, too, that my turn will probably come next. I don"t stand an awful lot higher in my markings than you do."

"Doesn"t it feel fine to be a bilger?" gulped Dalzell, staring at the floor.

A "bilger," as has been already explained, is a midshipman who has failed and has been dropped.

"Oh, but you"re not a bilger, yet!" cried Darrin, leaping up and resting both hands on his chum"s shoulder.

"What"s the odds?" demanded Dan grimly. "I shall be, after I"ve been before the Board next Monday forenoon at ten o"clock."

"Nonsense! Not if you make a good fight!"

"Fight--nothing!" sighed Dan wearily. "In a fight there"s some one else that you can hit back at. But I won"t have a blessed soul to fight. I"m up against a gang who are all referees, and all down on me at the outset."

"Nonsense," combatted Dave. "You----"

"Oh, that"s all right, David, little giant," returned Dalzell with an attempt at cheeriness. "You mean well, but a fellow isn"t reported deficient unless he"s so far behind that the Board has his case settled in advance. From all I can hear it isn"t once in a camel"s age that a fellow so reported, and ordered before the Board, gets off with anything less than a hard, wet bilge. What I"m thinking of now is, what am I going to pick up as a career when I go home from here as a failure."

If it hadn"t been for the pride he felt in still having the uniform on, Dalzell might not have been able to check the tears that tried to flow.

"Come on," commanded Dave, leaping up, "we"ll run up to the deck above, and see if we can"t find Mr. Freeman in."

"What good will that do?" demanded Dan. "Freeman is a first cla.s.sman, but he hasn"t any particular drag with the Board."

"It won"t do any harm, anyway, for us to have a talk with an older cla.s.sman," argued Dave. "b.u.t.ton your blouse, straighten your hair and come along."

"So it"s as bad as that, is it!" asked Freeman sympathetically, after his cheery "come in" had admitted the unhappy youngsters.

"Yes," replied Dave incisively. "Now, the question is, what can be done about it?"

"I wish you had asked me an easier one," sighed the first cla.s.sman.

"You"re mighty well liked, all through the Academy, Dalzell, and every one of us will hate to see you go."

"But what can be done to ward off that fate?" insisted Darrin as impatiently as a third cla.s.sman might speak to a venerable first cla.s.sman.

"Well, now, I want to think over that," confessed Freeman frankly. "Of course, Dalzell"s record, this term, is in black and white, and can"t be gainsaid. It"s just possible our young friend can put up some line of talk that will extend his time here, and perhaps enable him to pull through. It"s a mighty important question, so I"ll tell you what we"ll do. Of course, the hop comes on for to-morrow night. Let me have until Sunday evening. Meanwhile I"ll talk with some of the other fellows of my cla.s.s. You both come in here Sunday evening, and I"ll have the answer for you--if there"s any possible way of finding one."

With that the chums had to be content. Expressing their grat.i.tude to this friendly first cla.s.sman, they withdrew.

That Sat.u.r.day forenoon Dan did considerably better with the two recitations that he had in hand.

"I got easier questions than usual, I guess," he said to Dave, with a mournful smile.

After Sat.u.r.day dinner, Dave and Dan, having secured permission to visit in Annapolis, steered their course through the gate, straight up Maryland Avenue, through State Circle and around into Main Street, to the Maryland House.

At the desk they sent up their cards to Mrs. Meade, then stepped into the parlor.

Barely two minutes had pa.s.sed when Belle and Laura flew downstairs.

"Mother says she"ll be down as soon as she fancies you"ll care about seeing her," laughed Belle.

"And how are you getting on in your cla.s.ses?" asked Laura Bentley, glancing straight at unhappy Dan.

Both midshipmen had agreed not to mention a word of Dan"s heartache to either of the girls.

Dan gulped hard, though he managed to conceal the fact.

Darrin, however, was ready with the answer:

"Oh, we"re having pretty rough sailing, but we"re both still in our cla.s.s."

Which statement was wholly truthful.

"Up at West Point," Laura continued, "d.i.c.k told us that the first two years were the hardest for a man to keep his place. I fancy it"s just about the same here, isn"t it?"

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