CHAPTER IV
The Traitor Gets His Deserts
Mr. Morton hesitated a moment, ere he trusted himself to speak.
"Yes," he murmured. "I fear we all suspect the same young man."
"Phin Drayne!" cried Dave, in a voice quivering with anger.
"I didn't intend to name him," resumed the coach. "It's a seriousthing to do."
"To sell out one's school---I should say 'yes'!" choked Darrin.
"No; I meant that it is a fearful thing to accuse anyone untilwe have proof that can't be disputed," added Mr. Morton gravely,though his muscles were twitching as though he had been strickenby palsy.
"Listen," begged Dick, "while Mr. Jarvis tells you all he knowsof this dastardly business."
The Tottenville captain repeated his short tale. Then Coach Mortonasked several rapid questions. But there was no more to be toldthan Dick Prescott already knew.
"I'm tremendously sorry about that envelope," protested Jarvis."I'd give anything to be able to hand that envelope over to you,but I'm afraid I'll never see it again."
"We appreciate your anxiety to help, Mr. Jarvis, as deeply aswe appreciate your manliness in coming to us without an instant'sdelay," replied Mr. Morton, earnestly.
At this moment the office boy entered with the mail sack.
"Mr. Pollock!" he bellowed, tossing the sack down on the editor'sdesk. Then the office boy hurried to the rear of the building,intent on other duties.
Mr. Pollock returned to his desk, opening the mail. The footballfolks in the further corner lowered their voices almost to whispers.
"Letter for you, Dick," called Mr. Pollock, tossing aside an envelope.
Excusing himself, Dick darted over to get his mail. In an instanthe came back, with a flushed face.
"Here's something that may interest you all," whispered Dick,shaking as though fever had seized him.
Mr. Morton took the sheet of paper, from which he read:
_"Dear Old Gridleyites: If the enclosed is a fake, it won't work.If there's really a traitor in your camp you ought to know it.Milton High School doesn't take any games except by the use ofits own fair fighting devices.Decker, Captain,Milton High SchoolFootball Team."_
"And here's a duplicate set of our signals, returned by our Miltonfriends," went on Dick, with almost a sob in his voice. "Fortunately,Mr. Decker thought to preserve the envelope that contained oursignal code. Here is the envelope, addressed in some person'shandwriting."
Coach Morton seized the envelope, staring at it hard. He studiedit with the practiced eye of a school teacher accustomed to overlookingexamination papers in all styles of handwriting.
"The writer has tried to conceal his handwriting," murmured thecoach, rather brokenly. "Yet I think we may succeed in tracingit back and fixing it on the sender."
"Oh!" growled Dave Darrin savagely. "I believe I know on whomto fasten this handwriting right now."
"I have a possible offender in mind," replied Mr. Morton moreevenly. "In a case of this kind we must proceed with such absolutecaution and reserve that we will not be obliged to retract afterwardsin deep shame and humiliation."
"I think I've done all that I can, gentlemen," broke in Mr. Jarvis."I think it is my place, now, to draw out of this painful business,and leave it to you whom it most concerns. But I am happy inthe thought that I have been able to be of some service to you.I will now state that I am authorized to offer to postpone Saturday'sgame, if you wish, so that you may have time in, which to trainup under changed signals."
"If you consent, sir," proposed Dick, turning to the coach, "we'llgo on with Saturday's game just the same. There has been a bigsale of tickets, the band has been engaged, and a good many arrangementsmade that will be expensive to cancel."
"Can you do it?" asked Mr. Morton, looking doubtfully at theeyoung captain of the team. "It's Thursday afternoon, now."
"I feel that we've got to do it, sir," Dick replied doggedly."Yes, sir; we'll make it, somehow."
So the matter was arranged. The Gridleyites followed Jarvis outto the sidewalk, where they renewed their assurances of regardfor the attitude taken by Tottenville High School. Then Jarvishurried away to catch a train home.
"Now, young gentlemen," proposed Mr. Morton, "we'll go home andsee whether we can engender the idea of eating any lunch, afterthis unmasking of villainy in our own crowd. But at half pasttwo promptly to the minute, meet me at the High School. Remember,we've practice on for half past three."
"Of all the mean, contemptible-----" began Darrin, after the submasterhad left them.
"Stop right there, Dave!" begged his chum. "This is the mostfearful thing we've ever met, and we both want to think carefullybefore we trust ourselves to say another word on the shamefulsubject."
So the two chums walked along in silence, soon parting to taketheir different ways home.
At half-past two both chums met Mr. Morton at the High School.The submaster led the way to the office, producing his keys andunlocking the door. They had moved in silence so far.
"Take seats, please," requested Mr. Morton, in a low voice. "I'llbe with you in a moment."
The submaster then stepped over to a huge filing cabinet. Unlockingone of the sections, he looked busily through, then came backwith a paper in his hand.
"I think I know whom you both suspect," began coach.
"Phin Drayne," spoke Dick, without hesitation.
"Yes. Well here is Drayne's recent examination paper in modernliterature. It is, of course, in his own handwriting."
Eagerly the two football men and their coach bent over to compareDrayne's handwriting with that on the envelope that had come backfrom Milton.
"There has been an attempt at disguise," announced Mr. Morton,using a magnifying glass over the two specimens of writing. "YetI am rather sure, in my own mind, that a handwriting expert wouldpronounce both specimens to have been written by the same hand."
"We've nailed Drayne, then," muttered Darrin vengefully.
"It looks like it," assented Mr. Morton. "However, we'll go slowly.For the present I'll put this examination paper with our other'exhibits' and secure them all carefully in my inside pocket.Now, then, let us make our pencils fly for a while in gettingup a revised code of signals."
It was not a long task after all. From the two typewritten copiesDick copied the first half of the plays, Dave the latter. ThenCoach Morton went over the new sheets, rapidly jotting down newfigures that should make all plain.
"Ten minutes past three," muttered coach, thrusting all the papersin his inside pocket and buttoning his coat. "Now, we'll haveto take a car and get up to the field on the jump."
"But, oh, the task of drilling all the new calls into the fellowsbetween now and Saturday afternoon!" groaned Dave Darrin, in atone that suggested real misery.
"We'll do it," retorted Captain Dick. "We've got to!"
"And to make the boys forget all the old calls, so that they won'tmix the signals!" muttered Dave disconsolately.
"We'll do it!"
It was Coach Morton who took up the refrain this time. And itwas Prescott who added:
"We've got to do it. Nothing is impossible, when one must!"
It was just twenty-five minutes past three when the coach andhis two younger companions turned around the corner of the athleticgrounds and slipped in through the gate.
Most of the fellows were in the dressing quarters.
Phin Drayne sat on the edge of a locker chest. One of his feetlay across the knee of the other leg. He was in the act of unlacingone of his street shoes when Coach Morton called to him.
"Me?" asked Phin, looking up quickly.
"Yes," said Mr. Morton quietly. "I want to post you about something."
"Oh, all right; right with you, sir," returned Phin, leaping upand following the coach outside.
"What is it?" asked Phin, beginning to feel uneasy.
"Come along where the others can't hear," replied Mr. Morton,taking hold of Drayne's
nearer elbow.
Phin turned white now. He went along, saying nothing, until Mr.Morton halted by the outer gate.
"Pass through, Drayne---and never let us see your face insidethis gate again."
"But why? What----"
"Ask your conscience!" snapped back the coach. "You'd bettertravel fast! I'm going back to talk to the other fellows!"
Mr. Morton was gone. For an instant Phin Drayne stood there asthough he would brave out this assertion of authority. Then,seized by another impulse, he turned and made rapidly for a town-boundstreet car that was heading his way.
"What's up?" asked two or three of the fellows of Dick Prescott.Perceiving something out of the usual, they spoke in the samebreath.
"Oh, if there's anything to tell you," spoke Prescott, suppressinga pretended yawn, "Mr. Morton may tell you----some time."
But Mr. Morton was soon back. Knocking on the wall for attention,he told, in as few and as crisp sentences as he could command,the whole story, as far as known.
"Now, young gentlemen," wound up the coach, "we must practicethe new signals like wild fire. There's mustn't be a single slipnot a solitary break in our game with Tottenville. And that gamewill begin at three-thirty on Saturday!
"In reverting to Drayne, I wish to impress upon you all, withthe greatest emphasis, that this must be treated by you all withthe utmost secrecy until we are prepared, with proofs, to go further!If it should turn out that we're wrong in our suspicions, we'llturn and give Phineas Drayne the biggest and most complete publicapology that a wronged man ever received."
"All out to practice the new signals!" shouted Prescott, theyoung captain of the team.