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Mrs. Keap wrung her hands. "I was so terribly frightened! You see, Jack will be back to-morrow, and I--was afraid--"
There was a call from Gla.s.s from the training-quarters.
"How can I ever do enough for you? You have averted a tragedy!"
"Don't let Helen know, that's all. If she thought I'd been the head yeller--"
"I won't breathe a word, and I hope you win the race for her sake."
Mrs. Keap pressed the hand of her deliverer, who trudged his lonely way toward the gymnasium, where Gla.s.s was saying:
"'The volley was fired at sunrise.' That means Sat.u.r.day, Bo."
"Larry, you're the best crepe-hanger of your weight in the world."
Larry bent a look of open disgust upon his employer.
"And you're a good runner, you are," said he. "Why, _I_ beat you this morning."
The younger man glanced up hopefully. "Couldn't you beat this cook?"
"You're the only man in this world I can outrun.
"'A tear, a sigh, a last good-bye.'"
"_Shut up!_"
As Gla.s.s consented to do this, the speaker mused, bitterly, "'Early to bed and early to rise.' I wish I had the night- watchman who wrote those words."
"Didn't you never see the sun rise before?"
"Certainly not. I don't stay up that late."
"Well, ain't it beautiful!" The stout man turned admiring eyes to the eastward, and his husky voice softened. "All them colors and tints and shades and stuff! And New York on the other end!"
"I'm too tired to see beauty in anything." As if mindful of a neglected duty, Gla.s.s turned upon him. "What are you waiting for?
Get those dog-beds off your back." He seized the slack of a sweater and gave it a jerk.
"Don't be so rough; I'll come. You might care to remember you're working for me."
"I am working"--Gla.s.s dragged his protege about the room regardless of complaints that were m.u.f.fled by the thickness of the sweaters--"for my life, and I'll be out of a job Sat.u.r.day.
Now, get under that shower!"
CHAPTER XIII
"Do you know, Larry, I'm beginning to like these warm showers; they rest me." As he spoke, Wally took his place beneath the barrel and pulled the cord that connected with the nozzle. The next instant he uttered a piercing shriek and leaped from beneath the apparatus, upsetting Gla.s.s, who rose in time to fling his charge back into the deluge.
"Let me out!" yelled the athlete, and made another dash, at which his guardian bellowed:
"Stand still, or I'll wallop you! What's got into you, anyhow?"
The heads of Stover and Willie, thrust through the door, nodded with gratification.
"It's got him livened up considerable," quoth the former. "Listen to that!" It seemed that a battle must be in progress behind the screen, for, mingled with the gasping screams of the athlete and the hoa.r.s.e commands of the trainer, came sounds of physical contact. The barrel rocked upon its scaffold, the curtains swayed and flapped violently.
"Stand still!"
"It's--it's as c-c-cold as _ice!_"
"Nix! You're overheated, that's all."
"Ow-w-w! Ooo-h-h! I'm dying!"
"It'll do you good."
"He's certainly trainin' him some," said Stover.
"Larry, I've got a cramp!"
"It did harden him," acknowledged Willie.
"What's wrong with you, anyhow?" demanded Gla.s.s.
"It's not _me_, it's the w-w-water!"
Evidently Speed made a frantic lunge here and escaped, for the flow of water ceased.
"It froze d-d-during the night. Oh-h! I'm cold!"
"Cold, eh? Get onto that rubbing-board; I'll warm you."
An instant later the cow-men heard the sounds of a violent slapping mingled with groans.
"Go easy, I say! I'll be black and blue all--LOOK OUT!--not so much in one spot! _Ow_!"
"Turn over!"
"He's spankin' him," said Stover admiringly.
Again the spatting arose, this time like the sound of a musketry fusilade, during which Berkeley Fresno entered by the other door.
"Don't be so brutal!" wailed the patient to his ma.s.seur.
"I'm pretty near through. There! Now get up and dress," ordered the trainer, who, pushing his way out through the blankets, halted at sight of the onlookers.