So Pretty was permitted to carry his cane; and though he swaggered a little, perhaps, no further attempt was made by the Seniors to take the stick away from him. They had to content themselves with trying to throw water on him from upper windows; but their aim was bad.
XX
Pretty had not been home long on his Christmas vacation before he called at the home of the beautiful girl Enid, who had helped him win so many tennis games, and who was the best of all the best girls he devoted himself to, either in Kingston, Lakerim, or any other of the towns he blessed with his smiling presence.
Enid and Pretty, being great lovers of fresh air, took many a long walk on the country roads about Lakerim.
One day, when the air was as exhilarating and as electric as the bubbles in a glass of ice-cream soda, they took a much longer stroll than usual.
Then they made a sudden decision to turn homeward; for, rounding a sharp bend in the road, they saw coming toward them three burly tramps.
At the sight of these Three Graces both Pretty and Enid stopped short in some little uneasiness. The tramps also stopped short, and seemed to engage in a conversation about the two young people ahead of them on the road.
Pretty, on account of the extreme neatness of his costume, often got credit for being a much richer lad than he was. And Enid also was as careful and as successful in her costumery as Pretty. So the three tramps probably thought they had before them two children of wealth, who would be amply provided with pocket-money. But if they had only known how little the two really had in their possession, the adventure you are about to hear would never have happened.
But while Pretty was flicking the dirt at the end of his toe with his walking-stick, and wondering if he really cared to go any farther, the tramps moved toward him quickly.
Enid, being a girl, was frightened, and did not try to conceal it, but said:
“Oh, Pretty, let’s go home at once!”
Pretty, being a boy, thought he must make a display of courage, even if he didn’t feel it; so, while his heart clattered away in his breast, and he could hardly find breath to speak, he said with some show of composure:
“Yes, Enid; I think we have walked far enough for to-day.”
Then they whirled about and started for home at a good gait. They had not gone far when Enid, glancing back over her shoulder, noticed that the tramps were coming up at a still more rapid walk.
One of them, indeed, called out in a suspiciously friendly tone:
“Hey, young feller, hold up a minute and tell us what time it is, will ye?”
Enid gasped:
“Let’s run, Pretty; come on.”
But Pretty answered with much dignity:
“Run? What for?” And he turned and called back to the tramp: “I don’t know what time it is.”