The High School Boys' Canoe Club by H. Irving (Harrie Irving) Hancock
page 211 of 239 (88%)
page 211 of 239 (88%)
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are feeling a whole lot worse than you are. Don't come! Good
night." "Tyndall is a brick to let us off," sighed Tom gratefully, as he sank down once more. Later on Dick & Co. emerged from the tent, started a fire, and had supper, though they did not pay great attention to the meal. "I wouldn't want to race every day," grunted Reade, as he squatted near the fire after supper. "If we did," Dick retorted, "we'd speedily get over these aches and this stiffness." For an hour or so the boys remained about the fire. Dan Dalzell was the first to slip away to his blankets. Hazelton followed. Then the movement became general. Soon all were sound asleep. Nor did any sounds reach or disturb them for hours. Not one of the sleepers stirred enough to know that the sky gradually became overcast and that there was a distant rumbling of thunder. Hardly had the campfire burned down into the general blackness of the night when an automobile runabout, moving slowly and silently, stole along the roadway. In it sat the son of Squire Ripley. Fred, having brooded for hours over the failure of his scheme to make Dick & Co. lose the canoe race, had at last decided to pay a stealthy, nocturnal visit |
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