"Been down to the game at M'nop'ly," he explained happily as he flung

breezily into the kitchen and dashed his cap on a chair, "Gee! That ham

smells good! Say, Saxy, whad-ya do with that can of black paint I left

on the door step last Saturday?"

"It's in a wooden box in the corner of the shed, Willie," answered his

Aunt, "Come to supper now. It'll all get cold. I've been waiting most

an hour."

"Oh, hang it! I don't s'pose you know where the brush is--Yes, I'm

coming. Oh, here 'tis!"

He ate ravenously and briefly. His aunt watched him with a kind of

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breathless terror waiting for the inevitable remark at the close:

"Well, I gotta beat it! I gotta date with the fellas!"

She had ceased to argue. She merely looked distressed. It seemed a part

of his masculinity that was inevitable.

At the door he was visited with an unusual thoughtfulness. He stuck his

head back in the room to say: "Oh, yes, Saxy, I might not be home till morning. I might

stay all night some place."

He was going without further explanation, but her dismay as she

murmured pathetically: "But to-morrow is the Sabbath, Willie--!" halted him once more.

"Oh, I'll be home time fer Sunday-school," he promised gaily, and was

off down the road in the darkness, his old wheel squeaking

rheumatically with each revolution growing fainter and fainter in the

night.

But Billy did not take the road to the Junction in his rapid flight.

Instead he climbed the left hand mountain road that met the Forks and

led to the great Highway. Slower and slower the old wheel went, Billy

puffing and bending low, till finally he had to dismount and put a drop

of oil in a well known spot which his finger found in the dark, from

the little can he carried in his pocket for such a time of need. He did

not care to proclaim his coming as he crept up the rough steep way. And

once when a tin Lizzie swept down upon him, he ducked and dropped into

the fringe of alders at the wayside until it was past. Was that, could

it have been Cart? It didn't look like Cart's car, but it was very

dark, and the man had not dimmed his lights. It was blinding. He hoped

it was Cart, and that he had gone to the parsonage. Somehow he liked to

think of those two together. It made his own view of life seem

stronger. So he slunk quietly up to the fork where the Highway swept

down round a curve, and turned to go down across the ridge. Here was

the spot where the rich guy would presently come. He looked the ground

over, with his bike safely hidden below road level. With a sturdy set

of satisfaction to his shoulders, and a twinkle of fun in his eye, he

began to burrow into the undergrowth and find branches, a fallen log,

stones, anything, and drag them up across the great state highway till

he had a complete barricade.




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