CHAPTER XXXIII THE FLEA FLICKER
"Paying me a compliment," Red grumbled to himself, as the third quarterended with no success. "Tried to kill me, that tough egg sent by Angeloand his gang. As if I'd do them any harm playing football!" He wasthoroughly disgusted with himself. What was the trouble? He could not getgoing, that was all. And the game was slipping away, with one morequarter to play.
The fourth quarter began as the third had ended, with the two teamsdriving one another back and forth across the field. Eleven preciousminutes of play passed into eternity. Still no score. And then came achange.
From time to time, as the teams moved toward the center of the field, Redhad stolen a glance at Berley Todd. She had not been home. Apparentlythis game was, for the time, all that mattered. As the young footballstar thought of this a lump rising in his throat all but choked him.
Somehow Berley had secured a place directly behind the rail in the firsttier of seats. Every time Red stole a glance at her he found her sittingthere, sober-faced, tense, expectant. She did not leap and scream asothers did. She did not join in the shouting.
"I'd almost say she was praying," Red told himself. "Wonder if any oneever prayed at a football game?"
Surely if ever there was occasion for sober thoughts over a ball game,this was the time. A thousand, five thousand, perhaps ten thousandfoolish men had been tricked into gambling on what they believed to be asure thing.
"We don't care for them," Drew Lane had said. "If they were the only onesto suffer they should lose. But if they _do_ lose, their families willsuffer; women and children. So Red, you must fight! Fight! _Fight!_"
He _had_ fought. But all in vain. Somehow he could not get into the game.The very weight of responsibility seemed to crush the spirit out of him.
Then, four minutes before the end, a strange thing happened. He wasbeyond the center of the field on the enemy's territory. There was "timeout." He heard a thin voice calling. It was Berley Todd.
"Red," she whispered hoarsely as he came near, "why don't you try theFlea Flicker?" Then she smiled. It was her first smile that day.
There was something about that smile that lifted the heavy burden fromRed's shoulders.
"The Flea Flicker. Why not?"
He had described the play to her while on one of their wild boat ridesbefore the island.
"The Flea Flicker. Four minutes to play. Why not? Why not forget all butthe game? Play for the mere sport of it? Football is sport, not business.The Flea Flicker, that's it!"
He joined his team in a huddle. "The Flea Flicker" was whispered from manto man. A ripple of mirth passed over the weary fighters.
Old Midway had the ball. It was the fourth down. Four minutes to play. Ifthey lost the ball they might never regain it. This play was acomplicated one. What did it matter? Win or lose; the Flea Flicker.
Signals were called. Masters, the fullback, dropped to the rear inposition for a place kick. Red sank to his knee as if to receive theball.
The play was on. The ball was snapped, not to Red but to Masters.Northern players charged. Dwyer, the right half, ignoring his man, stoodup, facing Masters. Red ran wide to the right. Masters pitched the ballto Dwyer. Dwyer tossed it to Red and he was away.
It was strange, the feeling that came over Red Rodgers as he leapedforward. He was not on a football field dodging men, but on the water,heading into waves that threatened to swamp his frail craft. There wasone to the right, a huge one. This way out. Here were two at the left. Aquick turn here, a short twist there, and he was on again. Five, ten,fifteen, twenty, twenty-five yards, he raced forward. The field was clearnow. The crowd was on its feet. They were shouting themselves hoarse. Themiracle had happened. The Red Rover, their idol, was away at last.
"Touchdown! Touchdown!" they screamed. And at last Berley Todd joined inthe cry. "Touchdown! Touchdown!"
Touchdown it was. Then the crowd waited, breathless, for the kick thatpromised a tie or defeat; the crowd waited and lost, for the ball wentwild. The score stood Northern 7; Midway 6.
"Two minutes to play," Red muttered to himself. "Two minutes are enoughfor any man's touchdown." But were they?
Midway called for "time out." As the team dropped to the ground one wordwas passed from man to man.
A moment's rest and they were up again. A hush fell over the great throngas Northern sent the ball soaring high.
Watching as a hunter watches a hawk, Red measured the distance, dashed aclean twenty yards, gathered the ball in his arms and, never pausing,sped on toward the goal line.
It was strange. Only half conscious of his opponents, he passed them oneby one. As one leaped at his feet he swerved and sagged far over. The manmissed. Now three were bunched against him. They formed a pinwheel. Hewas at the center of the wheel. They whirled round and round like sparks.They flew to right and left of him. Again he sped on. One man remained.Red leaped at him, then stopped dead. The man went on his face.
Then, with the thundering roar of a victory mad throng beating on hisears, he fell across the line for a touchdown.
Johnny Thompson and Drew Lane, away up on Passage Island, heard all this,and greeted one another with a solemn handclasp.
"They try for the extra point," the announcer called. What did it matter?The game was won.
"It's good! What matter? The score stands 13 to 7. One minute to play.Time out. The Red Rover is leaving the game."
What did it matter? The game was won.
* * * * * * * *
Tom Howe's mop-up men did their work well. Angelo the impostor and hisband of crooks and kidnapers were sent to jail; not, however, until theirbank accounts were exhausted, their safety boxes emptied, paying back themoney they had hoped to steal.
With a pilot imported from Houghton, Johnny rode in the big amphibianwith Drew's prisoners back to the city. Drew rode alone in the red racer.
As for Red, a cold shower woke him from the half-trance that had carriedhim to victory in one of the famous football games of history. Two dayslater he found himself sitting before a small fire in his own room,meditating on the future. Berley Todd had urged him to visit her in herfather's palatial home. Would he go? She had asked him to go with her toIsle Royale in the good old summer time.
"Isle Royale," he murmured. "The land of dreams." Would he go?
The Grand Old Man was leaving football forever. Should he, too, leave andgo back to the steel mill? Surely life was strange.
A book lay on his lap. It was "Burton's Analytic Geometry." He must digin. He dug.
The morning after his return Drew Lane met Jimmie Drury. "Jimmie," hedemanded, "why did you play the Galloping Ghost?"
"How do you know I did?" Jimmie grinned.
"Come on. Quit your kidding! Own up!"
"Well, you see," Jimmie's smile broadened, "it happened that I was at amasquerade party the night the Red Rover was kidnaped. I had dressed as aghost. I was on my way home when the thing broke. Got out of my taxi andwent after the story, just as I was. When the myth about the GallopingGhost got out, I decided to continue the part. You know the rest."
"Yes, I know. You helped a lot."
"In a case like that," said Jimmie soberly, "every man of us must do hisbest."
So the story ends. There will be another called _Whispers at Dawn_. WillDrew Lane, Johnny, and the others walk through these pages? Who can say?Time moves swiftly. Yesterday's hero is forgotten to-day. To-morrowbrings another. Read and see.
Transcriber's Notes
--Copyright notice provided as in the original printed text--this e-text is public domain in the country of publication.
--Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.
--In the text versions, included italics inside _underscores_ (the HTML version replicates the format of the original.)
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