"It"s worth the time it has cost you," d.i.c.k urged.
"Rush him fellows!" bawled Toby Ross. "Don"t let him escape!"
Indeed, there was no time or chance for getting away. d.i.c.k Prescott was rushed, caught and pinned.
"What"ll we do with him?" rose the chorus.
"To the fountain! Duck him!"
With a cheer the boys started, carrying d.i.c.k along on the shoulders of a few tightly-wedged boys.
d.i.c.k"s chums made no effort to rescue him. Indeed, perhaps they felt that he deserved what was right ahead of him. But they ran along in the press of boisterous lads.
Len Spencer, grinning hard, rushed along at the head of the juvenile mob.
"Boys, you"d better reconsider!" shouted the young reporter.
"Don"t write yourselves down as louts. The man on the clubhouse steps, on account of just what he said, proved himself one of the sages of the ages. Prescott, in telling you just what he said, has performed a public service, if only you fellows were bright enough to comprehend."
"Get out of our way, Spencer!" ordered Spoff Henderson. "As sure as guns we"re going to duck d.i.c.k Prescott in the public fountain."
"If you won"t listen to reason, then," roared Len, using his long legs to put him well in advance of the juvenile mob, "then I"ll use enchantment to spoil your foolish work. You shall not duck Prescott! Hi, pi, yi, animus, hocus pocus! That enchantment will foil you!"
Having reached the fountain, Len drew aside dramatically.
"In with him!" shouted the youngsters.
Then they halted in sheer amazement. For the first time the boys noted that no water was running in the fountain, and that the basin underneath was wholly dry.
"My enchantment has worked," chuckled Len.
"How did you do it?" demanded one puzzled youngster.
"Never mind," Len retorted mysteriously. "Now, if you don"t instantly put d.i.c.k Prescott on his feet and leave him alone, I"ll work an enchantment that will raise hob with every boy who lays as much as a finger on d.i.c.k."
So Prescott was allowed to slide down to his feet. He was laughing, enjoying every moment of the fun.
"We could have run him down to the next fountain," suggested one of the schoolboys.
"It would do you no good, and Prescott no harm," Len retorted dryly. "At three o"clock this afternoon the fire department turned off all of the public fountains in order to clean "em."
Now d.i.c.k"s late tormentors began to feel that they had been badly "sold" all around. After the manner of boys, they grinned sheepishly, then more broadly and finally ended by laughing heartily. But the crowd did not break up at once. All waited, with a vague hope that some kind of mischief would happen.
A smaller boy went by, calling the evening newspaper. Tom Reade bought one and stood at the edge of the crowd, reading.
"Here comes Hi Martin!" called someone. That youth had just turned a corner, swinging from his left hand a pudgy rubber bag of the kind that is used for holding a wet bathing suit.
"h.e.l.lo, Prescott," was Hi"s greeting. "Are you all ready to be left behind in the spray tomorrow?"
"If you can leave me there," d.i.c.k smiled. "Been out for a practice swim, have you?"
"Yes," nodded Hi; "and if you had seen my speed this afternoon you"d have been scared away from the river for to-morrow."
"Well, I hope one of us wins," grinned d.i.c.k.
"One of us?" sniffed Hi. "Of course, one of us has to win when there are only us two in that race. And, after I beat you to-morrow,"
Hi added consequentially, "I"ll be off and away for a good time.
Sat.u.r.day father is going to take our family to New York for three weeks."
"Going to stop at one of the big hotels there?" Reade inquired, looking up from his newspaper.
"Of course we are," Hi rejoined, swelling out his chest. "We shall stop at one of the biggest and finest hotels in the city."
"Then don"t get a room too high up from the ground," advised Tom.
"I"ve just been reading in the evening paper that the city authorities in New York have taken all the elevators out of all the biggest hotels."
"Why?" demanded Hi.
"The paper says it"s because the elevators are considered too dangerous," Tom replied innocently.
"I don"t believe it," scoffed Hi. "Why, how could people get up to their rooms on the fifteenth or eighteenth floor of one of the skysc.r.a.per hotels?"
"Oh, well," Tom replied artlessly, "according to the paper the hotels are all going to be equipped with safety-raisers."
"Safety-razors?" demanded Hi Martin blankly. "You idiot, what good would safety-razors be for getting people up twenty floors in a hotel?"
There was a moment"s pause. Then a few chuckles came, followed by a few more.
"Whoop!" yelled Danny Grin. s.n.a.t.c.hing the bathing suit bag from Hi"s hand, Dalzell got a good hold on the tie strings, then swung the bag, bringing it down on the top of Hi"s head.
"Run along home, Martin!" jeered Dan. "If don"t tumble before bed time, then ask your father how it is that dangerous elevators can be replaced with safety-raisers. Here"s your bag. Scoot---before an idea hits you!"
Red-faced and angry, but still puzzled, Hi s.n.a.t.c.hed at his bathing suit bag and hastily decamped.
"Now he"ll beat you at swimming or die tomorrow," predicted Dave grimly.
Chapter XXIII
WHO WON THE SWIMMING MATCHES?
Thanks to Len Spencer"s interest in schoolboy athletics, there was a goodly crowd gathered at the river bank the next afternoon.
Many people came out in boats. There were at least a dozen launches, including the one that bore Len Spencer, who had been chosen to conduct the races.
The owner of a two room boathouse which adjoined a long wharf had yielded to Spencer"s request for a loan of this property.
In the boathouse the two school teams disrobed and donned their bathing suits.