The Dozen from Lakerim
anely joyful over his success in captaining the scrub football team and wiping the earth up with the varsity, until he was as si
dly rival in football. He planned, in his imagination, the various steps he would take to reorganize the varsity eleven, to which it was evident that he would be elected captain; and he smacked his lips
played so brilliantly and so faithfully that academy after academy went down before them, and they were not even scored against until they met the most formidable rivals of all, the Greenville Academy. Greenville was an old athletic enemy of the Lakerim Club, and Tug looked forward to meeting it with particular delight
is walk to his room that beautiful evening, when all these triumphs we
his door and windows, or even of drawing the curtains. He did not stop to think that hazing had been flourishing about the Academy grounds for some time, and that threats had been made against any of the Lakerim Dozen if they were ever caught alone. He could just keep awake long enough to light his student lamp; then he d
dy. He saw Tug fast asleep, and let him lie undisturbed, though he was tempted to wake him up and say that Tug reminded him of the Sleepi
window. His sleepy eyes seemed to make out a face just disappearing from sight outside. He dismissed his suspicions as the manufactures of sleep, an
e lips smiled maliciously under the black mask,
intruder out, realizing in a flash that
om by the body that belonged to it, and by other faces and other bodi
nd said, with all the c
ellows are in
the answer of the first masker
ehind the mask, and asked rather nervously a questio
you're here, w
ice came deeply from t
t to have a litt
any fun with you," parleye
t; this isn't your picnic-it's ours," was the cheery response of t
have you men got to come into
tle surprise-par
like entertaining any s
rence to us." Again the black fl
per when he saw they were making a
f here, al
laughed uproa
om as if they were football-players trying to down him; but the odds were too great, and before long they overpowered him and tied his wrists behind him; not without difficulty, for Tug had th
he Crows; and he, produced a stout handkerchief. Bu
cry-baby? I'm not go
n his tone that convi
ow