For the Honor of Randall - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel For the Honor of Randall Part 27 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
The undersigned will dispose of, at auction in the gymnasium to-morrow afternoon, one brand new davenport, upholstered in green plush. Same has never been used, but the present owners desire to dispose of it. It will be sold, without reservation, to the highest bidder.
FRANK SIMPSON.
"Well, I'll be jiggered!" gasped Tom, as he read the notice.
Then they overwhelmed Frank with questions as they began to eat.
CHAPTER XVIII
TOM'S TEMPTATION
"Are you really going to sell it, Frank?"
"Is this a fake?"
"What's the upset price?"
"Honor bright, now! It isn't a joke; is it?"
These were only a few of the questions that were put to the Big Californian, as a crowd of boys filed into the gymnasium the next day after the auction notice had been posted.
"Oh, it's straight all right," answered Frank. "The davenport, which is as new as heart could wish, will be sold to the highest bidder.
We--er--that is I--bought it by mistake. We didn't need it. Our old sofa has been fixed up."
"Oh, but I say Frank," expostulated Tom, when he got a chance to speak to his chum privately. "You could send this back to the store, and get nearly all you paid for it. You won't get half what it's worth, at auction."
"I don't give a hang. I'm going to sell it this way. It will be fun.
Besides, whatever is realized is going into the athletic fund, anyhow.
That'll make bidding higher."
"Maybe it will. But say, you must have struck it rich to blow in all that cash."
"Oh, not so much. I got the davenport at a bargain, anyhow, and I thought it would be just the thing for our room. But I can see, now, that it isn't. Say, there's a good crowd coming, all right."
"There sure is. Have you got it here."
"Yes, I saw Prexy, and explained how it was. He said I could auction it off. Proc. Zane put up a stiff kick, though, but Moses overruled him, and it's going on. I guess the janitor has the old shebang on hand."
"Yes, there it is," answered Tom, as he and his friend entered the gymnasium, and caught sight of the new davenport, supported on two leathered-covered "horses."
The crowd, laughing, talking, chaffing each other and the inseparables, filed into the big room, until it scarce could hold any more. Frank took his place in front of the piece of furniture, and soon the bidding was under way.
It began low, but was spirited enough. Sid, Tom and Phil refrained from raising the bids, but there was no lack of others. By small advances the price crept up to seven dollars. There it hung for a while.
"Seven-fifty!" sung out Shambler.
"Seventy-five!" came from Joe Jackson.
"Eighty," put in another voice, and Phil whispered to Tom:
"The Jersey twins are bidding against each other, and they don't know it. This is rich! Frank will get more than he paid if this keeps on!"
The bidding became more spirited, being confined chiefly to Shambler, and the two twins, the latter, being in separate parts of the big auditorium, not knowing that they were whip-sawing one another.
Finally, when the price reached fourteen dollars and thirty-five cents, the davenport was knocked down to Shambler, who ordered the piece of furniture taken to his room.
"It will do to stretch out on when I come in from a run," he remarked to some of his intimate friends. And, though Tom had no special interest in what became of Frank's "surprise," as it had been dubbed, still the pitcher felt himself wishing that someone else besides Shambler had secured it.
The new student seemed to feel that the purchasing of the davenport from one of the inseparables ent.i.tled him to a closer acquaintanceship with them. For, a few days after the auction, he called at their room, and made himself rather at home.
"Cosy place you've got here," he remarked, blowing cigarette smoke about in clouds. "Quite a collection of antiques."
"Yes, we like old things best," remarked Tom significantly, wondering whether the lines about "old books, and old friends," would recur to Shambler. But it did not seem to.
"Well, it won't be long before we have the Spring games," went on the visitor. "I'll be glad of it, too, for I'm training hard, too hard, I guess. I'm going to have a little recreation to-night. Some friends and I are going in to town. Don't some of you want to come along?"
None of the inseparables accepted the invitation.
"I'm taking chances, too," went on Shambler. "I've been caught two or three times, lately, and Zane warned me that the next time would mean suspension. But I'll chance it. A fellow has to have some fun. Any of you smoke?" and he extended his box of cigarettes.
"It's bad--when you're in training," remarked Phil. "Count us out."
"You, too, Parsons?" asked Shambler. "Say, by the way," he went on, "I met a friend of yours the other night. Miss Tyler, of Fairview. At least she said she knew you. Fine girl."
"Yes," half growled Tom, the blood flushing his face. "I'm going to see if there's any mail," he added quickly, as he left the room.
"Anything wrong?" asked Shambler of the others. "Have I been poaching on his preserves?"
"You'll have to ask him," replied Phil, with significant glances at his chums.
"Not much!" exclaimed the visitor. "I have a notion he has a hasty temper. But aren't any of you coming to town for a lark?"
No one was, evidently, and Shambler soon took his leave. It was some time before Tom returned, and he had no letters. His chums did not bring up the subject of his going out.
Tom, in preparation for the examinations, had permission that night to spend some time in the rooms of a senior who had volunteered to coach him on some points wherein our hero was a bit behind in his cla.s.s. The senior's room was in another dormitory from where Tom and his chums roomed, being across the campus.
It was after midnight when the tall pitcher was on his way back to his own particular part of the college, and, as he was about to open the dormitory main door, with a pa.s.s key with which he had been provided, a dark figure hurried up the steps from the shadow of a statue on the campus, and stood at his side.
"I say!" came in a cautious whisper. "Let me in with you, will you? I overstayed in town, and I don't want to be caught."
"Oh!" exclaimed Tom, wondering for a moment who was speaking, and then he recognized Shambler's voice.
"It's Parsons!" whispered the new student, evidently much relieved. "I'm in luck! I've been waiting here half an hour hoping Zane's light would go out, and that I could bribe one of the janitors, or a monitor, to let me in. But the old Proc. is staying up infernally late. But it's all right now. You have a key; haven't you."