<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXXI.<br/> <small>THE SECOND HALF.</small></h2></div>
<p>Under the grand-stand the perspiring, blood-stained,
dirt-bedaubed young heroes were being rubbed down by
their admiring friends, while outside the Highland
crowd sang pæans of victory.</p>
<p>“We’ll win this game, fellows, just as true as we play
the next half to win,” said Sterndale, undaunted.</p>
<p>He never seemed to lose courage, but some of those
tired fellows hung their heads.</p>
<p>“They can out-kick us,” muttered Rob Linton.</p>
<p>“Well, if we’ve found our weakness there, we must
avoid kicking,” said the captain, guarding his words so
none of the Highlanders would hear. “Perhaps they
don’t know how weak we are.”</p>
<p>“Don’t fool yourself,” grated Scott, flashing a look in
the direction of Renwood. “They were informed of all
our weak points before they came to Rockspur to-day.”</p>
<p>“How do you know that?” demanded Dick, putting
peculiar emphasis on the “you.”</p>
<p>Don realized that this was something he could not explain,
and so he muttered:</p>
<p>“Never mind. I know a thing or two, and I’ve caught
on to some things in this game that ought to be plain
enough to you, Sterndale, if you are not stone-blind.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>“You’re all wrong, Scott, and you’ll find it out,” said
Dick, positively. “The sooner you get over that feeling
the better it will be for you and the team.”</p>
<p>Scott flushed. “Do you mean to hint that I haven’t
done my level best?” he harshly demanded.</p>
<p>“Not a bit of it,” Dick instantly answered. “I don’t
know where we would have been without you. And I’ve
given you chances enough, too.”</p>
<p>“But you gave the ball to Renwood on the third try
when the touchdown was made—and that after my run.”</p>
<p>“It was a trick to bother Highland some. Besides that,
you were tired, and I had sent you against them twice.”</p>
<p>“Tired! Bah! I was over the line ahead of Renwood,
and——”</p>
<p>“I don’t believe I’d got over at all if you hadn’t yanked
me across,” broke in the voice of Renwood himself, who
had overheard Don’s words by accident. “I was stuck
fast when you gave that surge and seemed to pull me
right through Hartford. The entire credit of that touchdown
belongs to you, Scott.”</p>
<p>This was so frank and honest that Don was silenced
for a moment, but he finally muttered:</p>
<p>“Well, I didn’t get it.”</p>
<p>There the matter dropped for a time, the men receiving
notice to get onto the field again, the ten minutes of
rest being over; but Don had not changed his mind in the
least.</p>
<p>The two teams were given tumultuous greetings by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
their respective admirers, and, as they lined up for the
concluding half, it was observed that Rockspur had not
substituted a man, while three new players appeared for
Highland, being Pell at right guard, Hardoak at right
tackle and McCord at right half-back. It was plainly an
attempt to strengthen the right wing of the visiting
eleven.</p>
<p>“Now, git in, boys—git in an’ win!” cried old Uncle
Ike. “Jest show ’em the kind of stuff you’re made of!”</p>
<p>It was Highland’s kick-off, and Walker drove the ball
to Mayfair, who attempted to run with it, but was
downed by Pell and Johnson on the home team’s thirty-five-yard
line. The referee, however, announcing that
Hardoak was off side, the ball was called back, Highland
losing five yards as a penalty. Therefore, it was from
the visitors’ fifty-yard line that Walker made his second
kick, which Carter caught. Once more the game was on
in all its fury, and the tide of battle ebbed and flowed
with heart-breaking irregularity.</p>
<p>Garrison was full of confidence, having been petted and
congratulated and complimented, and seven minutes after
the second half began he made another try to drop-kick a
goal from the field. This time, however, not being favored
by the wind, he missed the goal-posts by two yards,
though he came near enough to give Rockspur something
of a scare.</p>
<p>Sterndale had been nettled by the ineffective kicking
of his team, and, now, with the wind favoring him, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
punted out in a manner calculated to show what he could
do. It was the longest kick of the day, for the ball actually
came down on Highland’s thirty-yard line. One of
the visitors would have gathered it in, but he was checked
by cooler heads, and the leather was permitted to roll on
over the goal line for a touchback, which counted for
nothing.</p>
<p>Highland suddenly seemed to realize that facing the
wind meant different kind of playing, whereupon a time-killing
game was inaugurated right away. It was not
long before Sterndale saw through this, and he resolved
to give the enemy such hot work that they would find
time-killing would not do.</p>
<p>As soon as the ball again came into the possession of
the home team, Dick sent Mayfair against the new men
in the right wing of the Highland line to try the mettle
of those substitutes. The interference was poor, and
Rockspur’s left half-back was blocked without a gain.
Again this play was tried, but the result was the same,
and Sterndale was forced to kick.</p>
<p>For a second time the big captain of the Rockspur
Eleven booted out a distance annihilator, and for a second
time Highland permitted the ball to roll across the goal
line, which was foxy and scientific defense, showing that
the coaching of Winston had borne excellent fruit. Only
a small number of the spectators appreciated the quality
of the playing they were witnessing, but the Harvard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
coach saw it with satisfaction that he was unable to express.</p>
<p>With the resumption of play, Walker kicked from his
kick-out line, but the oval went out of bounds and Powell
crashed into Ford, who was trying to pick the ball up.
The mute was stretched out for a few seconds, but he
quickly recovered and resumed his place, a grim look of
mingled pain and courage on his face.</p>
<p>“They’re trying to knock us out,” thought Don. “If
they can cripple us, they’ll have the advantage, and they
know it.”</p>
<p>This made him intensely angry, and his dark eyes
glowed with a dangerous fire. He had hoped that Rockspur
would be able to give Highland a severe drubbing,
for all of the supposed treachery of Renwood, but that
hope was growing fainter as the minutes passed and the
home team gained no decided advantage in the second
half. All through the game Powell had shown himself
to be the most dangerous man to encounter in the line of
the visiting team, and now Don fancied the fellow was
using his brute strength in an endeavor to put some of
the Rockspur players out of the game.</p>
<p>With this idea firmly planted in his head, Scott aimed
for Powell in the very next scrimmage. When the energetic
Highlander attempted to shoulder him aside, Scott
lost his temper completely and struck Powell a heavy
blow on the neck.</p>
<p>Instantly the whistle of the keen-eyed referee sounded,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
and, as a penalty for this foul, Rockspur was put back a
distance of ten yards, with an equal advance for the visitors.</p>
<p>“Don’t do a thing like that again, old man!” exclaimed
Sterndale. “We can’t afford it. Hold steady.”</p>
<p>“But don’t you see what that fellow is trying?” palpitated
Don, who already was ashamed of his angry action.
“He’s doing his best to cripple some of our men.”</p>
<p>“Then let him do the fouling,” returned the captain.
“We can’t afford such business.”</p>
<p>There was no time for further words. Scott was
deeply humiliated, for he knew he had, in a burst of ungoverned
anger, done something that seemed to brand
him as a ruffian. And this had happened after he was
beginning to congratulate himself on his ability to control
his passions when he resolutely set about doing so,
for was he not playing football on the same eleven with
the one fellow he hated more than all others in the world—had
he not done his level best to drag that fellow into
the glory of a touchdown?</p>
<p>Now, all in a moment, he realized that very little credit
was due him for holding in check his hatred toward Renwood.
The scales dropped from his eyes, and he saw it
was to avoid humiliation and shame before his father
that he was on the team, not because he had resolved to
restrain the animosity for Renwood that had leaped to
life within him. Of course his father had seen that
wretched blow at Powell, and Don dared not look in his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
direction. He hung his head and was most crestfallen in
appearance.</p>
<p>Before he knew it the Highlanders were smashing
through Rockspur’s right wing, Powell was upon him,
and then he was trampled down as the whirling mass of
humanity swept on like a twisting tornado. When this
storm had passed, a human figure was seen prostrate and
motionless on the torn and trampled turf.</p>
<p>“Scott’s down! He’s hurt! Stop the game!”</p>
<p>Cries of alarm went up, the whistle sounded, and several
men bent over Don.</p>
<p>“Give him air! Where is a doctor?”</p>
<p>Then Dr. Scott hurried onto the field and knelt by his
son, lifting Don’s head to his knee. The boy’s eyes
opened and he gasped painfully, seeming dazed for a
moment.</p>
<p>“Where are you hurt, Don?” asked the doctor, in a
steady voice.</p>
<p>“Hurt? I’m not hur—— It’s my side—and head!”</p>
<p>The injured lad had tried to start up, but a sharp pain
caught him in his side and his head went round and
round, while a black shadow dropped like a curtain before
his eyes. Blood trickled from his nostrils, his father
wiping it away.</p>
<p>“It’s a shame!” grated Sterndale, through his clenched
teeth. “Scott’s strengthened the weak spot on the team
and made the best record of anybody to-day. With him
out, we’re beaten!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>These words were spoken low into the ears of Mayfair
and intended for no other, but they pierced that black
curtain and reached the dazed brain of the boy on the
ground, arousing all his wonderful will-power and bringing
him back from the brink of unconsciousness.</p>
<p>“I’m not knocked out!” he whispered. “Give me some
water! I’ll play this game out if I die for it!”</p>
<p>Water was placed to his lips, his face was wet with it,
and then he got up, with his father’s arm about him.
The breathless spectators saw him push that arm off and
step away, staggering a bit, but gathering himself and
growing steadier. Then, after a last moment of hesitation,
the doctor turned away and the players prepared to
resume the game.</p>
<p>The Rockspur yell came over the field, with Scott’s
name exploding at the end like a huge firecracker. It
was a sound to stir the blood, and it seemed to restore the
right half-back of the home team to complete strength.</p>
<p>Then the game was resumed. Don caught a look of
satisfaction from Powell, and he knew the Highland left
tackle felt that he had evened the score.</p>
<p>The pluck of Scott gave Rockspur new life, the onslaught
of the visitors being checked. But time was flying,
and, as yet, no opportunity had arrived for the home
team to make the coveted score. Highland was fighting
beautifully to hold her own till the time was up.</p>
<p>There were many swift changes, but most of the struggle
took place near the middle of the field, and the hopes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
of the Rockspur spectators fell lower and lower as the
second half waned and drew near a close. With every
sharp play by the visitors the bleachers to the left
of the grand-stand heaved with crimson and shrieked
with joy. The bleachers on the other side tried to keep
it up, but a note of doubt and failing confidence had
crept into the cheering. Old Uncle Ike, however, remained
undaunted, declaring over and over that, “Our
boys will git there yit.”</p>
<p>“It’s a shame!” fluttered Dora Deland; “but I felt sure
we’d lose when I heard they’d taken Don Scott back.
Just see how he lost ten yards for us by striking that
Highland fellow!”</p>
<p>“As it happened, that made no difference,” said Zadia
Renwood, immediately. “I think you are unjust to Don
Scott. He has played splendidly.”</p>
<p>“What has he done? He hasn’t made a touchdown.
Dolph did that.”</p>
<p>“After Don Scott’s run had made it possible. Rockspur
owes to Scott the points it has made.”</p>
<p>“You’re just the queerest girl, Zade!” exclaimed Dora.
“You know Don Scott hates your brother.”</p>
<p>“Is that a good reason why I should be unjust to him?
Look! look! He downed that Highland fellow that time!”</p>
<p>Don had been waiting for the opportunity, and, with
the ball tucked under his arm, he shot out from the
midst of the interference, lowered his head and bowled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
Powell over handsomely. He made a gain of ten yards
before being stopped by Walker.</p>
<p>After that, Scott felt a little better, for he had shown
that Highland’s left tackle was vulnerable.</p>
<p>In the next scrimmage Jotham Sprout was put out of
the game with an injured back, and it was necessary to
fill his place with Thad Boland. Boland had the brawn
to stop the gap in the line, but his slowness was well
known to Highland, and they tried to take advantage of
it, which brought the brunt of the battle on the right
wing of the home team and gave Scott all he could do.</p>
<p>With only five minuses of play remaining, neither side
had scored in the second half, and there seemed no prospect
that a further score would be made.</p>
<p>“It’s no use,” said some of the Rockspur spectators.
“We can beat those chaps at baseball, but they are too
much for us in this kind of a game.”</p>
<p>Highland had the ball, and was playing to hold it as
long as possible. Don saw this, and he fairly ached in
his desire to get hold of the leather. The ball was down
for a scrimmage, and he pressed up into the line between
Linton and Boland. He heard the signal and fancied he
understood it. Then Davis snapped back to Fisher, and
Highland’s quarter-back attempted a long pass to Powell,
who had dropped slightly behind the line for the ball.</p>
<p>The play was balked, for right through between Hartford
and Dow shot a pantherish figure, and the oval did
not reach Powell’s clutch. Don Scott had intercepted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
the pass, and he went by Garrison like an express train
overdue and trying to make up time. But the hopes of
the Rockspur spectators were dashed when he was
brought down by Walker on Highland’s forty-yard line.
It seemed that the last chance ended right there.</p>
<p>“Oh, you can’t do it, you know!” sang the visitors on
the bleachers.</p>
<p>Sterndale lost not a second. He tried to get Scott
round Highland’s end, but no gain was made. Next he
gave the ball to Mayfair and smashed into the enemy’s
centre, getting five yards.</p>
<p>Once more the Highlanders became rooted. It was
impossible to jar them. Already some of the visiting
spectators were pressing toward the gate, regarding the
game as won by their team, for but one minute of play
remained. Having given up hope, not a few of the
Rockspurites were leaving the grounds, unwilling to remain
and witness the rejoicing of the victorious Highlanders.</p>
<p>“The boys did well,” they were saying, “but they were
outclassed.”</p>
<p>Then there was a hush. Something was going to happen.
What could it be?</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<div class="chapter">
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
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