<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIV.<br/> <small>FANNING THE FLAMES.</small></h2></div>
<p>Leon was waiting for Don at the first corner when the
latter started for school the following Monday morning.
As usual, he was puffing a cigarette. The sight of him
angered Don, who would have hurried straight on without
speaking, but Bentley joined him, saying:</p>
<p>“I was watching for you, old man. Got something to
tell you. I went down to the club-room after your dad
came in on us so jerky Saturday night, and I found all
the gang there, weeping over their defeat. It would have
done you good to see them. A big lot of cry-babies!
They had something to say about you, too.”</p>
<p>He had hurried on with his words, being shrewd
enough to observe that the doctor’s son was in no very
agreeable mood, and, as he anticipated, the final statement
aroused Don’s curiosity, although an attempt was
made to conceal it.</p>
<p>“What do you suppose I care what they say about
me!” growled the dark-eyed lad, with a toss of his head.
“They can say any old thing they like.”</p>
<p>But he slackened his pace somewhat and did not try to
shake off his unwelcome companion.</p>
<p>“They were saying every old thing,” asserted Leon. “I
tell you, they gave you a raking down behind your back.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>“That didn’t hurt me any. I wasn’t on their old team,
so they couldn’t blame me for their defeat.”</p>
<p>“But they did, just the same.”</p>
<p>Don stopped short and looked at Bentley, his face
growing hard.</p>
<p>“How the dickens could they do that?” he snapped.</p>
<p>“Why, they said you acted like a fool in getting your
back up and leaving the team. They said they were glad
enough to get rid of you, but they’d ought to have fired
you in the first place. As it was, you left at a bad time,
making it necessary to shift the men around, so there
was no time to get the team back in shape, and, for that
reason, you were responsible for the loss of the game.”</p>
<p>Leon told this lie glibly and with a show of truthfulness
that aroused no suspicion in the mind of the hearer;
but the falsehood did the work Bentley wished it to do,
and the black look deepened on the rather handsome face
of Don Scott, marring his good looks and making his aspect
repellent.</p>
<p>“Who said this, Bentley?” he demanded, harshly.
“Was it that treacherous snake, Renwood?”</p>
<p>“Sure thing,” nodded Leon. “He blames it all onto
you, but he ain’t the only one. The others agreed with
him, and I told them what I thought of it. I don’t often
get right up and speak out in meeting,” the fellow went
on, “but I couldn’t keep still this time, so I said enough
to get them all mad at me. Now, I hear that they’re<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
going to kick me out again. What do you think of that,
Don?”</p>
<p>“I think it serves you right for going back onto the
team,” was the unsympathetic answer.</p>
<p>“What? You say that after I stood up for you? Well,
I never thought such a thing of you, Scott!” Leon assumed
an injured air, giving Don a look of deep reproach.</p>
<p>“The trouble with you is that you’re altogether too
shifty,” said the doctor’s son. “When you do a thing,
stick to it. But I’m not kicking at you. I’d like to hit
Renwood for wagging his mouth about me so much!”</p>
<p>“It’s what you ought to do. Of course he would deny
it, but you know what he is. Why, he even denied to you
that he meant you when he said there were some men on
the team who were no earthly good, but he’s laughed
about it since, saying he didn’t think you’d tumble to
yourself so quickly.”</p>
<p>A sound of grating teeth came from Don’s mouth, delighting
Leon with the knowledge that he had reawakened
to the full extent the hatred of the dark-eyed
youth for Dolph Renwood.</p>
<p>“There’ll come a day of settlement!” Scott panted.</p>
<p>“Now that he is sore on me, you can’t imagine what he
proposes to do,” snickered Bentley. “Why I have it
straight that he’s going to come to you and try to get
you back onto the eleven, just so he can kick me out.”</p>
<p>“Let him come!” cried Don. “That is what I want.
I’ll tell him a few things!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>They had proceeded up the hill till they were in sight
of the white academy, which showed through the trees
of the grounds. Now, fully satisfied with himself and
what he had done, Bentley stopped, saying:</p>
<p>“Perhaps we’d better not go up together. The fellows
have charged me with carrying things to you, and they
may suspect that I’ve put you onto Renwood’s game.
You go ahead.”</p>
<p>So Don walked on and Leon came up later. Knowing
Bentley as he did, it was rather surprising that the doctor’s
son permitted himself to be deceived by the fellow;
but he was ready to believe almost anything bad of Renwood,
which, with his hatred and prejudice, blinded his
sense of perception.</p>
<p>Renwood had not arrived at the academy and did not
appear till a few moments before the beginning of the
morning session, giving him no opportunity to speak with
Scott, in case he desired to do so. That noon, however,
the coach of the eleven was talking with Chatterton beneath
one of the large oaks near the entrance to the
grounds, when Don came through the gate. Perceiving
Scott, Dolph immediately advanced toward him, calling:</p>
<p>“I’d like to speak with you, Scott, if you’ll wait a
minute. We can talk here without being overheard by
the fellows up by the steps.”</p>
<p>“I have nothing to say to you that I’m not willing anybody
should hear,” declared Don, holding himself in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
check, for Leon’s warning had informed him what was
coming, and he was glad of the opportunity to again express
himself to this fellow whom he hated with all the
intensity of his nature.</p>
<p>“Still, it’s better to talk the matter over out here away
from the others,” said Dolph, rather nervously, his manner
seeming to betray to the boy with the searching eyes
a self-consciousness of guilt. “I am in hopes we can come
to an understanding.”</p>
<p>Don said nothing, but continued to watch Renwood’s
face.</p>
<p>“There is something about me,” Dolph continued,
seeming troubled to find words to express himself, “that
caused you to take a strong dislike to me almost the
first time you saw me. I knew it, for you are not a chap
to conceal your feelings. I have some pride and spirit of
my own, and I’m not the kind of a fellow to try to curry
favor with those who dislike me, for which reason I had
very little to do with you till the football team was organized,
and I was selected as coach. Then it became
necessary for me to have some dealings with you. One
thing I want to claim right here is, that I never tried to
injure you in any way.”</p>
<p>There was curling scorn in the movement of Don’s
lips, but he continued silent, apparently waiting with
some impatience for Renwood to finish. Dolph saw and
understood the expression on the face of his enemy, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
he pretended to take no note of it, hurrying on with
scarcely a break:</p>
<p>“When Sterndale was making up the team, I suggested
that you be tried in the position you were given, one of
the most prominent and difficult places on an eleven. I
had observed that you could run like a deer, could dodge
and handle yourself gracefully, and I fancied you possessed,
or could develop, other requirements that would
make you a first-class man at half. I made one mistake,”
the coach confessed, “for, in instructing the team, I did
not take into consideration the fact that you might be
easily angered, so that you would quit the eleven and refuse
to come back. I don’t think I quite understood you
in that respect. Anyhow, you got mad with me, which
has raised hob with everything. I used you just exactly
the same as I did others on the team, but you seemed to
think I had some spite against you. You were wrong,
Scott; I had nothing in the world against you.”</p>
<p>“By that,” said Don, with a sneer, “I presume you
infer that I was wholly to blame for everything that occurred?
When you jumped on me and made your insulting
remarks to me before the eleven and the whole
crowd of spectators, I had no right to resent it! I should
have curled up and taken it, like a meaching cur! But
I’m not that kind of a huckleberry! I don’t belong to
the whipped-cur breed, Mr. Dolph Renwood!”</p>
<p>“I made a mistake,” Dolph again acknowledged, still<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
speaking calmly. “You must remember that I belonged
to a city team, and that team was coached by a professional.
You should have heard him talk to us! Why,
there wasn’t a man in the whole bunch that he didn’t
give a tongue-lashing. If I had begun to talk that way
to the boys here——”</p>
<p>“You started in,” declared Don. “Just because a professional
coach could talk that way, you tried to show off
by doing so; but you found out it wouldn’t go in this
town, and so you had to come down some. That’s about
the size of it.”</p>
<p>Renwood’s face had been pale, but now a sudden flush
burned in his cheeks, making it plain that Scott’s words
and bearing were arousing his pride and anger.</p>
<p>“Let’s not talk of that,” he cried, perceiving it would
do no good. “We were beaten at Highland, Saturday,
and the eleven must be strengthened somehow if we are
to stand a show with them when they come here next
Saturday. If we had you back in your old position, I
think there would be a chance of making the team strong
enough to meet those fellows. I confess that I’m sorry
I offended you. I’ll even apologize if you demand it!
I’ll do anything to make the team strong enough to beat
Highland.”</p>
<p>Don laughed harshly. “You don’t know me, Renwood,”
he declared. “I have said I was done with you,
and I mean it. I’ve said I’d show you up as a sneak and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
a traitor, and I meant that, too! I know you for just
what you are. You pretend that you are anxious to beat
Highland. Bah! You’re hand-and-glove with Phil Winston,
the Highland coach. You owe him favors, which
you are trying to pay by throwing down Rockspur. I
know it! That strikes home, doesn’t it! Wait—keep
still! I’m going to say all I have to say to you right here
and now. You must think me a soft fool to come back
onto the team with you after what I know about you!
You know that I know it, too! You know I know you
slashed the suits and cut up the football in the dressing-room
under the grand-stand! Yet you had the crust to
face me and try to paste that onto me! As far as you
have been able you have hurt me, for the most of the boys
are idiots enough to believe I did that job. Now, you
are sore on Bentley because he happened to get a touchdown
in the Highland game, and you want to dump him
off the team. You see that you must do something to
hold your grip with the boys and make them believe you
are trying hard to put a winning eleven on the field, and
so you’ve planned to dump Bent and make a bluff at doing
something all at one lick. Renwood, you’re so thin
I can see through you like window-glass. Some day all
the fellows will see through you. I’ve told you just what
I think of you, and you can chew on it.”</p>
<p>Don was about to turn away, but, panting and pale,
Dolph caught him by the arm, huskily exclaiming:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>“Stop! I’ve got something more to say to you! I
see I’ve made a fool of myself for nothing. I might
have known you were unreasonable and obstinate enough
to keep the thing up. Talk about bluffing! You are the
champion! After stealing my knife right from under my
nose in the club-room, you saw a way to hurt me, as you
fancied, and you went up to the field and slashed the
suits and cut up the football with that knife, which you
left there so that it would seem I did it. Then you told
a preposterous story about encountering me in the room
and tried to make the boys believe I attempted to stab
you. I was willing to overlook all that, not because I
forgave you, but because I was anxious for the good of
the eleven; but now I want to tell you just what I think,
as you have pretended to tell me. You’re a miserable——”</p>
<p>“Dolph! Dolph!” cried a voice, and Zadia, having entered
by the gate, accompanied by other girls, rushed between
the two panting lads, who were about to fly at
each other’s throats. Putting a hand against the breast
of each, she held them apart with all her strength, gasping:
“You shall not! You shall not! Stop this minute.
Remember your promise to me, Don Scott!”</p>
<p>Don did not draw back immediately, but at last he
took his eyes, full of intense rancor, from the face of
Renwood and turned them upon Dolph’s pretty, trembling,
imploring sister. Swiftly he melted before her entreating<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
gaze, but he could not resist the impulse to hurl
a last savage shot at the fellow he hated.</p>
<p>“Some time, Renwood,” he said, “your sister will not
be at hand to come between us. Then look out for yourself!”</p>
<p>With which, he turned toward the academy.</p>
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<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
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